Ventromedial hypothalamic lesions in rats suppress counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia.

WP Borg, MJ During, RS Sherwin… - The Journal of …, 1994 - Am Soc Clin Investig
WP Borg, MJ During, RS Sherwin, MA Borg, ML Brines, GI Shulman
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1994Am Soc Clin Investig
The central nervous system has been implicated in the activation of counterregulatory
hormone release during hypoglycemia. However, the precise loci involved are not
established. To determine the role of the ventromedial hypoglycemia, we performed
hypoglycemic clamp studies in conscious Sprague-Dawley rats with bilateral VMH lesions
produced by local ibotenic acid injection 2 wk earlier. Rats with lesions in the lateral
hypothalamic area, frontal lobe, sham operated (stereotaxic needle placement into …
The central nervous system has been implicated in the activation of counterregulatory hormone release during hypoglycemia. However, the precise loci involved are not established. To determine the role of the ventromedial hypoglycemia, we performed hypoglycemic clamp studies in conscious Sprague-Dawley rats with bilateral VMH lesions produced by local ibotenic acid injection 2 wk earlier. Rats with lesions in the lateral hypothalamic area, frontal lobe, sham operated (stereotaxic needle placement into hypothalamus without injection), and naive animals served as control groups. The clamp study had two phases. For the first hour plasma glucose was fixed by a variable glucose infusion at euglycemia (approximately 5.9 mM). Thereafter, for an additional 90 min, glucose was either allowed to fall to (a) mild hypoglycemia (approximately 3.0 mM) or (b) more severe hypoglycemia (approximately 2.5 mM). Glucagon and catecholamine responses of lateral hypothalamic area-, frontal lobe-lesioned, sham operated, and naive animals were virtually identical at each hypoglycemic plateau. In contrast, glucagon, epinephrine, and norepinephrine responses in the VMH-lesioned rats were markedly inhibited; hormones were diminished by 50-60% during mild and by 75-80% during severe hypoglycemia as compared with the other groups. We conclude that the VMH plays a crucial role in triggering the release of glucagon and catecholamines during hypoglycemia.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation