Does adrenalectomy alter glucose pool size, turnover rate, and conversion to CO2 in dogs?
Adrenalectomy in dogs does not significantly alter glucose pool size, turnover rate, or its conversion to CO2 in the postabsorptive state.
In view of the small glucose pool size and turnover rate observed in the untreated hypophysectomized dog and the elevation of these parameters after administration of the 11, 17-oxycorticosteroids, experiments were performed to determine glucose pool size and turnover rate in the unanesthetized adrenalectomized dog in the postabsorptive state. The adrenalectomized dog has a glucose pool of nearly normal size and has a nearly normal rate of glucose flow from the liver into the plasma and from the plasma into the tissue cells. Expiration of C 14 O 2 during the C 14 glucose experiments was observed in normal and adrenalectomized dogs and is interpreted on the basis of a three-compartment pool of body bicarbonate as deduced from the C 14 O 2 expiration curve following intravenous injection of HC 14 O 3 – . Most adrenalectomized and some normal dogs have a pattern of C 14 O 2 excretion which indicates that glucose upon entering tissue cells either goes promptly to CO 2 or is directed into pathways such that its carbon does not become CO 2 later on in the course of a 5-hour experiment. The C 14 O 2 data show no clear difference between the normal and the adrenalectomized dog with regard to the conversion of glucose to CO 2 .
Steele et al. (Sat,) studied this question.