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CARBOHYDRATE AND ENERGY METABOLISM IN PERINATAL RAT BRAIN: RELATION TO SURVIVAL IN ANOXIA
Authors:T. E. Duffy    S. J. Kohle   R. C. Vannucci
Affiliation:Department of Neurology, Cornell University Medical College, New York, NY 10021, U.S.A.
Abstract:The ability of rats of different ages to survive exposure to anoxia was correlated with rates of high energy phosphate consumption (metabolic rates) of the fore-brain. Fetal rats at term, delivered by hysterotomy following maternal decapitation, survived in nitrogen at 37°C twice as long as 1-day-old neo-nates, 5 times longer than 7-day-old rats, and 45 times longer than adults. During ischemia induced by decapitation, the cerebral concentrations of the labile energy reserves (ATP, ADP, P-creatine, glucose and glycogen) and of lactate were determined in fetuses, 1- and 7-day post-natal animals. From the changes, the cerebral energy use rates were calculated to be 1·57 mmol/kg/min in fetuses, 1·33 mmol/kg/min in 1-day-olds and 2·58 mmol/kg/min in 7-day-olds. Maximal rates of lactate accumulation during ischemia, as a measure of glycolytic capacity, were comparable in fetuses and neonates, but were about twice as great in 7-day-old rats. It is concluded that in post-natal animals survival in anoxia and cerebral energy consumption are inversely, and nearly quantitatively, related. However, the reduced cerebral energy requirement cannot entirely account for the greater anoxic resistance of fetuses.
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