Glenn Thomas C, Martin Neil A, McArthur David L, Hovda David A, Vespa Paul, Johnson Matthew L, Horning Michael A, Brooks George A
1University of California, Los Angeles, Cerebral Blood Flow Laboratory, Los Angeles, California.
2Division of Neurosurgery, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), UCLA Center for Health Sciences, Los Angeles, California.
J Neurotrauma. 2015 Jun 1;32(11):811-9. doi: 10.1089/neu.2014.3482. Epub 2015 Mar 11.
We evaluated the hypothesis that nutritive needs of injured brains are supported by large and coordinated increases in lactate shuttling throughout the body. To that end, we used dual isotope tracer ([6,6-(2)H2]glucose, i.e., D2-glucose, and [3-(13)C]lactate) techniques involving central venous tracer infusion along with cerebral (arterial [art] and jugular bulb [JB]) blood sampling. Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) who had nonpenetrating head injuries (n=12, all male) were entered into the study after consent of patients' legal representatives. Written and informed consent was obtained from healthy controls (n=6, including one female). As in previous investigations, the cerebral metabolic rate (CMR) for glucose was suppressed after TBI. Near normal arterial glucose and lactate levels in patients studied 5.7±2.2 days (range of days 2-10) post-injury, however, belied a 71% increase in systemic lactate production, compared with control, that was largely cleared by greater (hepatic+renal) glucose production. After TBI, gluconeogenesis from lactate clearance accounted for 67.1% of glucose rate of appearance (Ra), which was compared with 15.2% in healthy controls. We conclude that elevations in blood glucose concentration after TBI result from a massive mobilization of lactate from corporeal glycogen reserves. This previously unrecognized mobilization of lactate subserves hepatic and renal gluconeogenesis. As such, a lactate shuttle mechanism indirectly makes substrate available for the body and its essential organs, including the brain, after trauma. In addition, when elevations in arterial lactate concentration occur after TBI, lactate shuttling may provide substrate directly to vital organs of the body, including the injured brain.
我们评估了这样一种假说,即通过全身乳酸穿梭的大幅协同增加来满足受伤大脑的营养需求。为此,我们采用了双同位素示踪技术([6,6-(2)H2]葡萄糖,即D2-葡萄糖,以及[3-(13)C]乳酸),包括中心静脉示踪剂输注以及脑部(动脉[art]和颈静脉球[JB])采血。在获得患者法定代表人同意后,纳入了非穿透性头部损伤的创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者(n = 12,均为男性)。从健康对照者(n = 6,包括1名女性)处获得了书面知情同意书。与之前的研究一样,TBI后葡萄糖的脑代谢率(CMR)受到抑制。然而,在受伤后5.7±2.2天(2至10天)进行研究的患者中,动脉葡萄糖和乳酸水平接近正常,这掩盖了与对照组相比全身乳酸产生增加71%的情况,这一增加主要通过(肝脏+肾脏)葡萄糖产生的增加得以清除。TBI后,乳酸清除的糖异生占葡萄糖出现率(Ra)的67.1%,而健康对照组为15.2%。我们得出结论,TBI后血糖浓度升高是由于体内糖原储备中乳酸的大量动员。这种先前未被认识到的乳酸动员为肝脏和肾脏的糖异生提供了支持。因此,乳酸穿梭机制间接为身体及其重要器官(包括大脑)在创伤后提供了底物。此外,当TBI后动脉乳酸浓度升高时,乳酸穿梭可能直接为身体的重要器官(包括受伤的大脑)提供底物。