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Département d'Education Physique, Université de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3C 3J7
Received 9 April 1996; accepted in final form 25 July 1996.
Trabelsi, Fethi, and Jean-Marc Lavoie. Arginine-induced
pancreatic hormone secretion during exercise in rats.
J. Appl. Physiol. 81(6):
2528-2533, 1996.
The aim of the present investigation was to
1) determine whether
arginine-induced pancreatic hormone secretion can be modified during an
exercise bout, and 2) verify whether
the sectioning of the hepatic branch of the vagus nerve can alter the
arginine-induced insulin and glucagon secretion during exercise in
rats. To this end, we studied the effects of an intraperitoneal
injection of arginine (1 g/kg body mass) during an exercise bout (30 min, 26 m/min, 0% grade) on the pancreatic hormone responses. These
effects were determined in one group of sham-operated exercising rats
and compared with three control groups: one group of resting rats, one
group of saline-injected exercising rats, and one group of
hepatic-vagotomized exercising rats. Five minutes after the injection
of arginine, significant (P < 0.05)
increases in insulin, glucagon, and C-peptide concentrations were
observed in exercising as well as in resting rats. These responses were
not, however, altered by the hepatic vagotomy and/or by the
exercise bout. It is concluded that arginine is a potent stimulus of
pancreatic hormone secretion during exercise, even though the
sympathoadrenal system is activated. These results also indicate that a
hepatic vagotomy does not seem to influence arginine-induced
hormonal pancreatic responses and question the role of the putative
hepatic arginoreceptors in the control of the pancreatic hormone
secretion during exercise.
hepatic vagus nerve; insulin; glucagon; C peptide
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