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The effects of testosterone on insulin sensitivity in male rats

189

Citations

17

References

1992

Year

Abstract

In order to examine the effects of testosterone (T) on insulin sensitivity, male rats were castrated or sham-operated, and exposed to low or high doses of T to substitute normal or to produce high serum T concentrations. Insulin sensitivity was followed by euglycaemic, hyperinsulinaemic glucose clamp measurements. An index of insulin-stimulated glucose transport was obtained in the white gastrocnemius (WG), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), red gastrocnemius (RG) and soleus (SOL) muscles after a bolus dose of [2-3H]deoxyglucose (2-DOG) when steady state was obtained in the clamp measurements. Glycogen synthesis was followed similarly with [U-14C]glucose as a labelled precursor after isolation of glycogen in the muscles mentioned, and in the liver. Castration and high T were followed by a marked insulin resistance in the clamp measurements. This was paralleled by a diminished insulin stimulation of glucose incorporation into glycogen down to about 50% of control values, apparently equally pronounced in all muscles but not found in liver glycogen synthesis. 2-DOG uptake was diminished by castration in the WG and RG muscles but was unaffected by high doses of T. Substitution of castrated rats with a low dose of T, restoring their serum T concentrations to the normal range, completely abolished these perturbations of insulin sensitivity. It is concluded that T is an important regulator of muscular insulin sensitivity, which seems to be highest in a 'window' of normal serum T concentrations.

References

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