4.5 Article

Oral [C-13] glucose and endogenous energy substrate oxidation during prolonged treadmill running

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 3, Pages 1255-1260

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00437.2001

Keywords

exogenous glucose; stable isotopes; liver glucose production; muscle glycogen utilization; insulin; blood glucose

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Six male subjects were studied during running exercise (120 min, 69% maximal oxygen consumption) with ingestion of a placebo or 3.5 g/kg of [C-13]glucose (similar to2 g/min). Indirect respiratory calorimetry corrected for urea excretion in urine and sweat, production of (CO2)-C-13 at the mouth, and changes in plasma glucose C-13/C-12 were used to compute energy substrate oxidation. The oxidation rate of exogenous glucose increased from 1.02 at minute 60 to 1.22 g/min at minute 120 providing similar to24 and 33% of the energy yield (%En). Glucose ingestion did not modify protein oxidation, which provided similar to4-5%En, but significantly increased glucose oxidation by similar to7%, reduced lipid oxidation by similar to16%, and markedly reduced endogenous glucose oxidation (1.25 vs. 2.21 g/min between minutes 80 and 120 respectively). The oxidation rate of glucose released from he liver (0.38 and 0.47 g/min, or 10-13%En at minutes 60 and 120, respectively), and of plasma glucose (1.30-1.69 g/min, or 34 and 45%En and 50 and 75% of glucose oxidation) significantly increased from minutes 60 to 120, whereas the oxidation of muscle glycogen significantly decreased (1.28 to 0.58 g of glucose/min, or 34 and 16%En and 50 and 25% of glucose oxidation). These results indicate that, during moderate prolonged running exercise, ingestion of a very large amount of glucose significantly reduces endogenous glucose oxidation, thus sparing muscle and/or liver glycogen stores.

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