PANCREATIC DIABETES AND HYPOPHYSECTOMY IN THE SNAKE XENODON MERREMII
- 1 November 1960
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Acta Endocrinologica
- Vol. XXXV (III) , 313-323
- https://doi.org/10.1530/acta.0.xxxv0313
Abstract
1. - Total pancreatectomy in Xenodon merremii produces a slight decrease in blood sugar for 1-3 days, and later on a progressive increase until a diabetic level (5-6 times higher than the normal was reached). 2. - Removal of 83-88% of the pancreatic mass produces no changes in the blood sugar level. 3. - Hypophysectomy in fasting snakes produces: progressive decrease of glycaemia, adynamia and death. 4. - Preventive hypophysectomy diminishes the increase in blood sugar after pancreatectomy. Hypophysectomy in diabetic pancreatectomized animals brings about a decrease of the glycaemia. 5. - This snake is sensitive to insulin, the effect being greater in pancreatectomized than in normal animals. 6. - Alloxan produces an initial transitory increase of glycaemia, followed by a marked and lasting hypoglycaemia. Diabetes was not observed. 7. -Carbutamide and tolbutamide produced a decrease in the blood sugar level in normal snakes, but did not diminish it in the pancreatectomized animals. 8. - Glucagon has a powerful and very lasting hyperglycaemic action in the snakes. 9. - The glucose tolerance curve has a long duration in normal snakes and is even more prolonged in the pancreatectomized snakes. 10. - Cortisol had a transitory hyperglycaemic action in normal and totally pancreatectomized snakes. Somatotrophin only has this action in the pancreatectomized animals.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- FURTHER STUDIES ON THE BLOOD GLUCOSE AND PANCREATIC ISLETS OF LIZARDS1Endocrinology, 1958
- Effects of Hormones on Carbohydrate Metabolism in the AlligatorAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1957