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Department of Surgery L, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark.
We wished to study the effects of intravenous glucose/ insulin infusion to brain-dead pigs on the hepatic glycogen content. Four groups of 40-kg pigs were studied: brain-dead and control pigs given isotonic saline or glucose/insulin (7.5 mg glucose/kg/min, 1.25 mU insulin/kg/ min) (n = 5 to 10 in each group). Brain death was induced by inflating a balloon placed in the epidural space. In brain-dead pigs given saline, liver glycogen decreased from 45 +/- 11 mmol/g DNA (mean +/- SEM) to 7 +/- 3 mmol/ g DNA after 6 hours. Thereafter, it increased to 28 +/- 9 mmol/g DNA after 9 hours (P = .05 compared with the 6-hour measurement). These changes were accompanied by transient increases in plasma adrenaline, glucose, free fatty acids (FFA), and glucagon. Following glucose/ insulin infusion, hepatic glycogen increased steadily and was approximately double after 12 hours (P < .01) in both brain-dead and in non-brain-dead pigs. In brain-dead pigs, the increases in the aforementioned blood measurements were smaller following glucose/insulin infusion than following saline infusion. However, studies of longer duration will be needed to examine these effects on a time scale that is relevant to human organ donors. In conclusion, the decrease in hepatic glycogen content after brain death could be prevented by intravenous glucose/insulin infusion probably because of a reduction of the adrenaline response to the induction of brain death.
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