The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism

Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University === Under conditions of general body stress, the adrenal medulla is called upon to secrete its hormone, epinephrine. As a result of the influences of this hormone, a variety of changes in the resting physiology of the organism are incurred, which usually aid the indi...

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Main Author: Komrad, Eugene Leslie
Language:en_US
Published: Boston University 2015
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13040
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-130402019-01-08T15:35:41Z The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism Komrad, Eugene Leslie Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University Under conditions of general body stress, the adrenal medulla is called upon to secrete its hormone, epinephrine. As a result of the influences of this hormone, a variety of changes in the resting physiology of the organism are incurred, which usually aid the individual in meeting the stressful challenge. One of the first changes which is known to occur as a result of the action of endogenous or exogenous epinephrine is a generalized hyperglycemia. Although this fundamental observation has been known for half a century, a complete understanding of the mechanism of action is still lacking. In the fasting animal, it could logically result from an increased liver glycogenolysis and/or a decreased glucose uptake by the tissues. A review of the literature has shown that whereas all workers are agreed on an increased liver glycogenolysis as a result of epinephrine activity, they are far from agreement on the latter phase, the glucose uptake. The results of this study indicate that much of the confusion is due to a misuse of terms, for it has been domnstrated that, at least in vitro, the glucose uptake of muscle tissue increases, while the amount of glucose utilized decreases following epinephrine. The extra glucose is stored in the form of hexosemonophosphate. [TRUNCATED] 2015-09-14T20:44:57Z 2015-09-14T20:44:57Z 1953 1953 Thesis/Dissertation b14650733 https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13040 en_US Based on investigation of the BU Libraries' staff, this work is free of known copyright restrictions. Boston University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Thesis (Ph.D)--Boston University === Under conditions of general body stress, the adrenal medulla is called upon to secrete its hormone, epinephrine. As a result of the influences of this hormone, a variety of changes in the resting physiology of the organism are incurred, which usually aid the individual in meeting the stressful challenge. One of the first changes which is known to occur as a result of the action of endogenous or exogenous epinephrine is a generalized hyperglycemia. Although this fundamental observation has been known for half a century, a complete understanding of the mechanism of action is still lacking. In the fasting animal, it could logically result from an increased liver glycogenolysis and/or a decreased glucose uptake by the tissues. A review of the literature has shown that whereas all workers are agreed on an increased liver glycogenolysis as a result of epinephrine activity, they are far from agreement on the latter phase, the glucose uptake. The results of this study indicate that much of the confusion is due to a misuse of terms, for it has been domnstrated that, at least in vitro, the glucose uptake of muscle tissue increases, while the amount of glucose utilized decreases following epinephrine. The extra glucose is stored in the form of hexosemonophosphate. [TRUNCATED]
author Komrad, Eugene Leslie
spellingShingle Komrad, Eugene Leslie
The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
author_facet Komrad, Eugene Leslie
author_sort Komrad, Eugene Leslie
title The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
title_short The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
title_full The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
title_fullStr The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
title_full_unstemmed The influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
title_sort influence of blocking drugs on epinephrine-induced effects on carbohydrate metabolism
publisher Boston University
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13040
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