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1 Departments of
Pediatrics and Physiology, University of Tulane School of Medicine, New
Orleans, Louisiana 70112;
2 Centre de Recherche et de
l'Innovation sur le Sport,
Received 3 January 1996; accepted in final form 14 August 1996.
Gozal, David, Patrice Thiriet, Jean Marie Cottet-Emard,
Dieudonné Wouassi, Emmanuel Bitanga, André Geyssant, Jean
Marc Pequignot, and Marcel Sagnol. Glucose administration before exercise modulates catecholaminergic responses in glycogen-depleted subjects. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(1):
248-256, 1997.
autonomic system; gluconeogenesis; norepinephrine; epinephrine; dopamine
In glycogen-depleted subjects (GD) a nonlinear
increase in epinephrine (Epi) and norepinephrine (NE) parallels blood
lactate (La) during graded exercise. The effect of glucose
(Glc) supplementation and route of administration on these
relationships was studied in 26 GD athletes who were randomly assigned
to receive 1.3 g/kg Glc by slow intravenous infusion (IV;
n = 9), oral administration (PO;
n = 9), or artificially sweetened
placebo in 1 liter of water (Asp; n = 8) in the 2 h preceding a graded maximal exercise. Performance and La
were similar among the three groups in normal glycogen (NG) or GD
conditions. However, slightly improved performances were observed in GD
compared with NG and were associated with a shift to the right in La
curves. Blood Glc concentrations were higher in IV and PO before
exercise, but they rapidly decreased to lowest levels in IV, gradually
decreased over time in PO, and remained stable in Asp or NG. Insulin
concentrations were highest in IV and lowest in Asp and NG at onset of
exercise, rapidly decreasing in IV and PO although remaining at higher
levels than in Asp or NG. In contrast, higher serum levels of free
fatty acids were measured during exercise in Asp with no significant differences in glucagon or glycerol among the three groups. Free and
sulfated NE increases were smaller in IV than in PO and Asp on
exhaustion. In contrast, free and conjugated Epi were most increased in
IV, with smallest increases in Asp. Dopamine levels were most increased
in IV at exhaustion. We conclude that the changes of Epi and NE
concentrations, associated with the activation of glucoregulatory
mechanisms, including hyperinsulinemia, display different magnitude and
time courses during exercise in GD subjects who receive oral vs.
intravenous load of Glc before exercise. We speculate that the
magnitude of insulin surge after acutely increased Glc before exercise
in GD subjects may exert dissociative effects on adrenal-dependent
glycogenolysis and on sympathetic responses.
0161-7567/97 $5.00
Copyright © 1997 the American Physiological Society
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