Unstable diabetic state produced by a small dose of streptozotocin in rats
West Indian med. j
; 41(4): 146-9, Dec. 1992.
Article
in English
| MedCarib
| ID: med-15382
Responsible library:
JM3.1
Localization: JM3.1; R18.W4
ABSTRACT
A diabetic state was induced with a single intraperitoneal dose (45 mg/kg) of streptozotocin in rats. Their fasting blood glucose concentrations oscillated between 12.7 ñ 1.9 mmol/l and 4.6 ñ 0.6 mmol/l during 35 days of monitoring. Their body weights were also reduced, while controls gained weight, although food consumption was not significantly different. Also, within the first «-hour of the oral glucose tolerance test, blood glucose concentration increased in the diabetic and the control rats, but only in the control rats was there a simultaneous increase in serus IRI concentration (7.2 ñ 8 x 10 to the 2nd power pmol/l to 27.0 ñ 5.2 x 10 to the 2nd power pmol/l) which, like the blood glucose concentration, subsequently fell to fasting level in the control rats. In the diabetic rats, however, it was not until the following hour of the tolerance test that serum IRI concentration increased (3.4 ñ 0.3 x 10 to the 2nd power pmol/l to 65.0 ñ 12.5 x 10 to the 2nd power pmol/l) and blood glucose concentration began to fall. By the end of the test in the diabetic rats, blood glucose concentration fell but remained significantly higher than the control value. Additionally, no pancreatic tumours were identified in these diabetic rats. The results therefore suggest that an unstable diabetic state was produced by streptozotocin because the treshold for insulin secretion by glucose was increased, while the production of insulin by the pancreas was not significantly affected (AU)
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Collection:
International databases
Database:
MedCarib
Main subject:
Blood Glucose
/
Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental
Limits:
Animals
Language:
English
Journal:
West Indian med. j
Year:
1992
Document type:
Article