Metabolic influences on satiety in rats receiving parenteral nutrition

Food intake is reduced during parenteral nutrition (PN) proportionally to the amount of calories or composition of the solution infused. The relative importance of infused glucose and lipid, 50 and 30% of PN kilocalories, respectively, in reducing food intake during PN was examined. Glycolysis, fatt...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physiology: endocrinology and metabolism 1994-02, Vol.266 (2), p.R381-R387
Hauptverfasser: Beverly, J L, Meguid, M M, Yang, Zhong-Jin, Yue, Mao-Xing, Fetterman, B L
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Food intake is reduced during parenteral nutrition (PN) proportionally to the amount of calories or composition of the solution infused. The relative importance of infused glucose and lipid, 50 and 30% of PN kilocalories, respectively, in reducing food intake during PN was examined. Glycolysis, fatty acid oxidation, or both were acutely disrupted with 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG) and mercaptoacetate (MA). Rats receiving intravenous infusions of saline or a PN solution providing 100% of total daily calories (PN-100) received a single intraperitoneal injection of saline, 2-DG, and/or MA during the early light phase. 2-DG (1.4 or 2.2 mmol/kg) did not initiate feeding in PN-100 rats, although hyperglycemia was evident in all rats 1 h after 2-DG. Food intake of PN-100 rats after MA (0.4 mmol /kg) was similar to 50% that of control rats. When 2-DG (1.4 mmol/kg) and MA (0.4 mmol/kg) were administered concomitantly, PN-100 and control rats consumed the same amount of food. During PN-100, rats appeared to be more sensitive to losing metabolic energy derived from lipid than from glucose. (DBO)
ISSN:0193-1849