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High-physiological and supra-physiological 1,2- 13 C 2 glucose focal supplementation to the traumatised human brain.

Matthew G StovellDuncan J HoweEric P ThelinIbrahim JallohAdel E HelmyMathew R GuilfoylePeter GriceAndrew MasonSusan Giorgi-CollClare N GallagherMichael P MurphyDavid K MenonT Adrian CarpenterPeter J HutchinsonKeri Lh Carpenter
Published in: Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (2023)
How to optimise glucose metabolism in the traumatised human brain remains unclear, including whether injured brain can metabolise additional glucose when supplied. We studied the effect of microdialysis-delivered 1,2- 13 C 2 glucose at 4 and 8 mmol/L on brain extracellular chemistry using bedside ISCUS flex , and the fate of the 13 C label in the 8 mmol/L group using high-resolution NMR of recovered microdialysates, in 20 patients. Compared with unsupplemented perfusion, 4 mmol/L glucose increased extracellular concentrations of pyruvate (17%, p = 0.04) and lactate (19%, p = 0.01), with a small increase in lactate/pyruvate ratio (5%, p = 0.007). Perfusion with 8 mmol/L glucose did not significantly influence extracellular chemistry measured with ISCUS flex , compared to unsupplemented perfusion. These extracellular chemistry changes appeared influenced by the underlying metabolic states of patients' traumatised brains, and the presence of relative neuroglycopaenia. Despite abundant 13 C glucose supplementation, NMR revealed only 16.7% 13 C enrichment of recovered extracellular lactate; the majority being glycolytic in origin. Furthermore, no 13 C enrichment of TCA cycle-derived extracellular glutamine was detected. These findings indicate that a large proportion of extracellular lactate does not originate from local glucose metabolism, and taken together with our earlier studies, suggest that extracellular lactate is an important transitional step in the brain's production of glutamine.
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