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Title: Effects of glucocorticoids on lung glutamine and alanine metabolism. Author: Souba WW, Plumley DA, Salloum RM, Copeland EM. Journal: Surgery; 1990 Aug; 108(2):213-8; discussion 218-9. PubMed ID: 2382221. Abstract: The role of the glucocorticoid hormones as possible mediators of the accelerated lung glutamine and alanine release that occurs during critical illness was investigated. Studies were done in adult rats receiving dexamethasone (0.6 mg intramuscularly/100 gm body weight/day for 2 consecutive days; n = 24) or saline solution (controls; n = 20). Measurements were made in the postabsorptive state and amino acid flux was calculated by multiplying pulmonary blood flow by the right ventricular-arterial concentration difference for glutamine and alanine. Lung glutamine release was 703 +/- 184 nmol/100 gm body weight/min in control rats. This release rate doubled in the dexamethasone-treated rats (1476 +/- 256; p less than 0.05). The activity of the glutamine synthetase enzyme increased by 33% in the dexamethasone-treated animals and there was a 50% decrease in lung glutamine content (p less than 0.01). Likewise, dexamethasone accelerated the release of alanine by the lungs twofold (559 +/- 173 nmol/100 gm body weight/min in controls vs 1113 +/- 184 nmol/100 gm body weight/min in dexamethasone-treated rats; p less than 0.05). The increased release of both amino acids was caused by a significant increase in the concentration difference across the lungs and not a change in pulmonary blood flow. Glucocorticoids appear to be key mediators of the accelerated lung amino acid release that characterizes catabolic diseases.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]