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Title: Fetal insulin and placental 3-O-methyl glucose clearance in near-term sheep. Author: Jodarski GD, Shanahan MF, Rankin JH. Journal: J Dev Physiol; 1985 Aug; 7(4):251-8. PubMed ID: 3900188. Abstract: It is difficult, if not impossible, to measure the placental transfer of glucose directly because of placental glucose consumption and the low A-V glucose difference across the sheep placenta. We have approached the problem of quantifying placental hexose transfer by using a nonmetabolized glucose analogue (3-O-methyl glucose) which shares the glucose transport system. We have measured the clearance by using a multisample technique permitting least squares linear computing to avoid the errors implicit in the Fick principle. The placental clearance of 3-O-methyl glucose was measured in the control condition and after the administration of insulin to the fetal circulation. A glucose clamp technique was used to maintain constant transplacental glucose concentrations throughout the duration of the experiment. A control series was performed in which the only intervention was the infusion of normal saline. In these experiments the maternal and fetal glucose concentrations remained constant as did the volume of distribution of 3-O-methyl glucose in the fetus. The maternal insulin concentration remained constant and fetal insulin concentration changed from 11 +/- 2 microU/ml to 355 +/- 51 microU/ml (P less than 0.01). In the face of this large increase in fetal plasma insulin, there was no change in the placental clearance of 3-O-methyl glucose. In the control condition the clearance was 14.1 +/- 1.0 ml/min per kg and this was 13.8 +/- 1.0 ml/min per kg in the high insulin condition. Fetal insulin may change placental glucose flux by decreasing fetal plasma glucose concentrations but does not do so by changing the activity of the glucose transport system.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]