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Quantitative aspects of glucose metabolism in pregnant and nonpregnant sheep
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1963
Year
NutritionGlucose Turnover RatesMammalian PhysiologyGynecologyTotal Glucose TurnoverExhaled Co 2Glucose MetabolismMaternal NutritionPublic HealthMetabolic StateAnimal PhysiologyAnimal NutritionMaternal HealthEndocrinologyEnergy MetabolismAnimal SciencePhysiologyDiabetesFeed IntakeBlood Glucose MonitoringMetabolismMedicine
Labeled glucose was infused into four groups of ewes: nonpregnant fed; nonpregnant fasted; twin-pregnant fed; and twin-pregnant hypoglycemic and ketonemic. Mean glucose pool sizes were 157 and 127 mg/kg in nonpregnant and pregnant ewes, respectively, with decreased values in both fasting and hypoglycemia. Nonpregnant animals had glucose turnover rates averaging 4.0 g/hr (0.22 g/hr·kg 3/4 ) when fed and only 2.7 g/hr (0.15 g/hr·kg 3/4 ) after fasting. These values were only 60–80% of that of pregnant sheep, implying that glucose utilization due to twin-pregnancy was 20–40% of the total. The mean glucose space was about 27% of the body weight, indicating predominantly extracellular distribution of glucose even in hypoglycemia. In all animals about 8–10% of the exhaled CO 2 was found to be derived from glucose oxidation and about one-third of the total glucose turnover was used for CO 2 production. Comparisons of these data to values obtained from other mammals indicated further that there is a lower rate of glucose oxidation and metabolism in ruminants.