Plasma Glucagon after Total Resection of the Pancreas in Man

Abstract
Serial measurements of plasma "true glucagon" (PG) and of glucagon-like immunoreactive materials (GLI) were carried out during and after total resection of the pancreas in a 62-year-old man with calcified pancreatitis. The postoperative course of this patient was uneventful and diabetes was well controlled. PG disappeared from the blood within 30 min after resection of the pancreas. In spite of the evidence that no pancreatic tissue was present in the abdomen, PG was detected again in the blood from 18 hr after total pancreatectomy until the ninth postoperative day. However, plasma PG did not rise following infusion of arginine during the fourteenth postoperative week. After an initial decrease, plasma GLI rose abruptly on the second postoperative day and remained elevated thereafter. The fluctuations of plasma PG and GLI were not parallel.