Is Intestinal Gluconeogenesis a Key Factor in the Early Changes in Glucose Homeostasis Following Gastric Bypass?
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Hayes, Mark Thomas
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Univ Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New ZealandUniv Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Hayes, Mark Thomas
[1
]
Foo, Jonathan
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Univ Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Wakefield Hosp, Wakefield Clin, Wellington, New ZealandUniv Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Foo, Jonathan
[1
,2
]
Besic, Vinko
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Univ Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New ZealandUniv Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Besic, Vinko
[1
]
Tychinskaya, Yulia
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Wakefield Hosp, Wakefield Clin, Wellington, New ZealandUniv Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Tychinskaya, Yulia
[2
]
Stubbs, Richard Strawson
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Univ Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Wakefield Hosp, Wakefield Clin, Wellington, New ZealandUniv Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
Stubbs, Richard Strawson
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Otago, Wakefield Biomed Res Unit, Wellington, New Zealand
[2] Wakefield Hosp, Wakefield Clin, Wellington, New Zealand
In 2008, Troy et al. hypothesised that under fasting conditions, intestinal gluconeogenesis generates glucose levels in the portal vein which trigger the portal sensor to change insulin resistance and that this mechanism contributes to the effects of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In a recent paper, Kashyap et al. (Int J Obes 34(3):426-471, 2010) cited this hypothesis as a potential explanation for the early changes in insulin sensitivity and beta cell function seen after RYGB. We proposed a study to examine this possibility. We simultaneously sampled fasting portal venous blood and central venous blood in 28 patients (eight diabetics and 20 non-diabetics) before and again six days after RYGB surgery in morbidly obese patients, for measurement of glucose levels. We found no significant difference in the glucose levels from the two sites either before or after RYGB in diabetic patients and a small, but significant difference in the post-operative glucose levels from non-diabetic patients (4.2 vs 4.0 mM, p < 0.0001). Direct simultaneous measurement of fasting glucose in portal and central venous blood before and 6 days after RYGB provides no evidence to support the hypothesis that intestinal gluconeogenesis contributes to the resolution of T2DM seen after RYGB.
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页码:759 / 762
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[Anonymous], 2010, INT J OBESITY, DOI DOI 10.1038/ijo.2009.254