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Nonoxidative Glucose Consumption During Focal Physiologic Neural Activity
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Citations
26
References
1988
Year
Oxygen MetabolismGlucose UptakeCerebral Vascular RegulationNeurologyMetabolic StateNeurochemistryHuman MetabolismHealth SciencesEnergy HomeostasisBrain Glucose UptakeCerebral Blood FlowNervous SystemNonoxidative Glucose ConsumptionNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyTissue OxygenationNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMetabolismMedicine
Brain glucose uptake, oxygen metabolism, and blood flow in humans were measured with positron emission tomography, and a resting-state molar ratio of oxygen to glucose consumption of 4.1:1 was obtained. Physiological neural activity, however, increased glucose uptake and blood flow much more (51 and 50 percent, respectively) than oxygen consumption (5 percent) and produced a molar ratio for the increases of 0.4:1. Transient increases in neural activity cause a tissue uptake of glucose in excess of that consumed by oxidative metabolism, acutely consume much less energy than previously believed, and regulate local blood flow for purposes other than oxidative metabolism.
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