scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The glycogenolytic response to stimulation of the splanchnic nerves in adrenalectomized calves.

A. V. Edwards, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 211, Iss: 1, pp 109-124
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The effects of stimulation of the peripheral ends of one or both splanchnic nerves have been investigated in adrenalectomized calves at different ages and showed positive results.
Abstract
1. The effects of stimulation of the peripheral ends of one or both splanchnic nerves have been investigated in adrenalectomized calves at different ages. 2. During the first 24 hr after birth unilateral splanchnic nerve stimulation led to a prompt rise in the plasma glucose concentration and this response was more than doubled when both nerves were stimulated simultaneously. Under these latter conditions hyperglycaemia was found to be associated with a measurable loss of glycogen from the liver. 3. Both the glycogenolytic and hyperglycaemic effects of splanchnic stimulation became more pronounced with age; at 5 weeks of age liver glycogen was depleted by approximately 2/3 and plasma glucose raised by about 200 mg/100 ml. after stimulation of the right splanchnic nerve for 9 min. 4. Splanchnic stimulation also caused a rise in mean arterial blood pressure and haematocrit during the period of stimulation at all ages studied; the rise in haematocrit was greatest in the oldest animals. 5. The hyperglycaemic response to splanchnic stimulation persisted after pancreatectomy and was also demonstrated in calves in which the whole of the portal effluent blood flow was collected during splanchnic stimulation. The plasma from blood collected in this way had no apparent hyperglycaemic effect when infused into a branch of the mesenteric vein in recipient calves. 6. In adrenalectomized calves in which the liver had been partially denervated before stimulation both the hyperglycaemic and the glycogenolytic responses were substantially reduced, although the rise in haematocrit was unaffected, during stimulation of both splanchnic nerves. 7. It is concluded that glycogenolysis occurs in the liver as a result of stimulation via the hepatic innervation in the new-born calf and that this response increases with age during the first few weeks after birth.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Fuels, Hormones, and Liver Metabolism at Term and during the Early Postnatal Period in the Rat

TL;DR: The changes in levels of the endocrine pancreatic hormones at birth were appropriate in time, magnitude, and direction to be implicated as prime regulators of the metabolic response during the neonatal period in the rat.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on the role of adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate in the hepatic actions of glucagon and catecholamines.

TL;DR: The hypothesis is discussed in terms of the hypothesis that glucagon and catecholamines act in the liver by increasing the concentration of free, metabolically active cyclic AMP, and that this represents only a small fraction of the total tissue cyclicAMP.
Journal ArticleDOI

Central nervous system regulation of liver and adipose tissue metabolism

TL;DR: It has been shown that the VMH acts as a regulatory centre for lipolysis in adipose tissues by modulating activation of the sympathetic nervous system, probably through a mechanism mediated by sympathetic innervation of this tissue.
Patent

Electric modulation of sympathetic nervous system

TL;DR: In this article, a method for the treatment of obesity or other disorders, by electrical activation or inhibition of the sympathetic nervous system, was described for the purpose of reducing food intake and increasing energy expenditure.
Patent

Dynamic nerve stimulation for treatment of disorders

John D. Dobak
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe devices and methods for the treatment of obesity or other disorders by electrical activation or inhibition of nerves using an electrode, which can be accomplished by stimulating a nerve using an electric motor controller.
Related Papers (5)