Intraportal Islet Transplantation: Functional Assessment in Conscious Unrestrained Rats*
- 1 March 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Endocrinology
- Vol. 106 (3) , 791-797
- https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-106-3-791
Abstract
Rats with transplanted pancreatic islets, when compared to normal rats, had a delayed onset of insulin release in response to orally, but not to i.v. administered glucose. While glucose tolerance of the rats with transplanted islets was similar to that of normal controls when the glucose was administered i.v., the tolerance was markedly less when it was administered orally. These tests were carried out using permanently implanted cardiac catheters and chronic oral fistulae and were conducted at a time when the body weight of the transplanted animals had returned to levels similar to those of controls. During the tests the rats were conscious and unrestrained. The difference in the fine control of insulin secretion in transplanted islets from that in the normal pancreas may be due to defective innervation of such islets. These results may have implications for the use of transplanted islets in the control of diabetes mellitus in man. The methods employed can be further used to define other areas in which the response of transplanted islets in rats differs from that of the normal pancreas.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Effects of intrahepatic transplantation of pancreatic islets on hepatic metabolism in the ratMetabolism, 1978
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- On the intrinsic innervation of normal rat liverCell and tissue research, 1976
- Islet Transplantation into Rat Liver:In VitroSecretion of Insulin from the Isolated Perfused Liver andin VivoGlucagon SuppressionEndocrinology, 1976
- Neural Regulation of Insulin Secretion in the DogJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1973