1982
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.1982.tb08689.x
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Regional Blood‐Brain Barrier Permeability to Amino Acids After Portacaval Anastomosis

Abstract: The influx of phenylalanine, tryptophan, leucine, and lysine across the blood-brain barrier of individual brain structures was studied in rats 7--8 weeks after a portacaval shunt or sham operation. The method involved a brief infusion of labeled amino acid in tracer quantity and quantitative autoradiography. The clearance rates of phenylalanine, tryptophan, and leucine were increased in proportion to each other in every region examined, but not by the same factor. Tryptophan clearance increased the most (about… Show more

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Cited by 120 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…The higher concentrations in the TPN rats result from the high concentrations of these amino acids in the infused TPN solution (Table 1). Steady-state blood leucine concentration in the TPN rats, 0.79 ± 0.04 jimol/g (n = 4), is severalfold higher than that reported for normal rats, 0.14-0.18~.tmol/g (Mans et al, 1982(Mans et al, , 1984. Although plasma glycine concentration is also high, glycine does not measurably penetrate the blood-brain barrier (Oldendorf and Szabo, 1976), and its concentration in the brain of TPN rats is near-normal.…”
Section: Time Course Of Increase In Brain ['5n] Glutamatementioning
confidence: 83%
“…The higher concentrations in the TPN rats result from the high concentrations of these amino acids in the infused TPN solution (Table 1). Steady-state blood leucine concentration in the TPN rats, 0.79 ± 0.04 jimol/g (n = 4), is severalfold higher than that reported for normal rats, 0.14-0.18~.tmol/g (Mans et al, 1982(Mans et al, , 1984. Although plasma glycine concentration is also high, glycine does not measurably penetrate the blood-brain barrier (Oldendorf and Szabo, 1976), and its concentration in the brain of TPN rats is near-normal.…”
Section: Time Course Of Increase In Brain ['5n] Glutamatementioning
confidence: 83%
“…The brain glutamine levels in these rats are -11-15 j.Lmol/g, and their plasma and brain glucose levels are mostly within the normoglycemic range until 14-16 weeks (Dejoseph and Hawkins, 199 1;Hawk ins et al, 1993) (Tables 3-6). When the glue method (Mans et al, 1982) is used to construct the porta caval shunt, ammonia and glutamine levels in brain are usually about twice as high (i.e., -0.8-1.3 and 21-24 j.Lmol/g, respectively; Table 6) as those ob tained when the suture method is used; brain glu tamine levels are positively correlated with brain and plasma ammonia contents (Williams et aI., 1972). Brain glucose levels and glucose distribution ratios in these rats are either normal or about half normal (see next section).…”
Section: Traits Of Portacaval-shunted Ratsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1983);Rigotti et al (1985); (6) Giguere and Butterworth (1984), Butterworth and Giguere (1986); Butterworth et al (1988);Girard and Butterworth (1992); (7) Holmin and Siesj6 (1974); (8) Mans et al (1982Mans et al ( , 1983aMans et al ( ,b, 1984aMans et al ( ,b, 1986aMans et al ( , 1990; White and Mans (1984).…”
Section: Lumped Constant In Shunted Ratsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ammonia was estimated in the non-radioactive plasma sample and amino acids were measured in plasma and brain. The permeability-to-surface area products, measure of transport, of tryptophan and leucine were calculated in accordance with Mans et al (1982 The rats were left in restraining cages for 1 h to recover from the effects of surgery. Arterial blood was sampled and the plasma separated by centrifugation.…”
Section: Experimental Designmentioning
confidence: 99%