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Plasma beta endorphin immunoreactivity: effects of sustained hyperglycemia with and without prior exercise
Authors:P A Farrell  K J Mikines  F W Bach  B Sonne  H Galbo
Abstract:Seven healthy untrained men were studied to determine if sustained hyperglycemia is a stimulus to enhanced plasma levels of beta endorphin (beta-EP) and if so whether prior exercise affects that enhancement. After an overnight fast hyperglycemic glucose clamps were performed on 3 separate days: after prior rest, 2 h after exercise, and 48 h after exercise. Subjects exercised on a bicycle ergometer for 1 h at 150 W (64% VO2 max). Plasma glucose concentration was elevated in 4 continuous sequential stages to 7, 11, 20 and 35 mM with each stage lasting 90 min. Plasma glucose concentrations did not differ for each subject across the three clamps. beta-EP immunoreactivity was measured in arterialized venous blood samples using a specific and sensitive radioimmunoassay. Resting beta-EP at basal glucose concentrations was 3.8 +/- 0.7 fmol X ml-1 (mean +/- se) and prior exercise either 2h (3.2 +/- 0.5 fmol X ml-1) or 48 h (4.3 +/- 0.7 fmol X ml-1) before a clamp study did not effect these levels, (p greater than 0.05). At no time during the 3 hyperglycemic clamps did plasma levels of beta-EP differ significantly from resting values. At the highest level of hyperglycemia (35 mM) beta-EP was 3.1 +/- 0.2, 4.9 +/- 0.6 and 4.8 +/- 0.7 fmol X ml-1 in the resting, 2h and 48 h post exercise clamp studies respectively. The significance of these data is that this lack of a response is in distinct contrast to elevations of this peptide found during hypoglycemic states. We conclude that sustained hyperglycemia is not a stimulus to enhanced secretion of beta-EP into plasma and this lack of a response is not effected by prior exercise.
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