Abstract

Increases in metabolic rate and core temperature are common responses to severe injury. We have investigated the hypothesis that these responses are due to increases in substrate cycling. A substrate cycle exists when opposing, nonequilibrium reactions catalyzed by different enzymes are operating simultaneously. At least one of the reactions must involve the hydrolysis of ATP. Thus, a substrate cycle both liberates heat and increases energy expenditure, yet there is not net conversion of substrate to product. In studies in volunteers (n = 18) and in patients with severe burns who were in a hypermetabolic state (n = 18), we used stable-isotope tracers to quantify substrate cycling in the pathways of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis and a cycle involving the simultaneous breakdown and synthesis of stored triglyceride (triglyceride-fatty acid cycle). The total rates of triglyceride-fatty acid and glycolytic-gluconeogenic cycling were elevated in the patients by 450 and 250 percent, respectively (P less than 0.01). An infusion of propranolol in the patients greatly reduced triglyceride-fatty acid cycling but did not affect gluconeogenic-glycolytic cycling. We conclude that increased substrate cycling contributes to the increased thermogenesis and energy expenditure following severe burns and that the increased triglyceride-fatty acid cycling is due to beta-adrenergic stimulation.

Keywords

TriglycerideGluconeogenesisCyclingFatty acidSubstrate (aquarium)Internal medicineEndocrinologyGlycolysisThermogenesisBeta oxidationMedicineChemistryBiochemistryMetabolismAdipose tissueCholesterolBiology

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Publication Info

Year
1987
Type
article
Volume
317
Issue
7
Pages
403-408
Citations
467
Access
Closed

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Robert R. Wolfe, David N. Herndon, Farook Jahoor et al. (1987). Effect of Severe Burn Injury on Substrate Cycling by Glucose and Fatty Acids. New England Journal of Medicine , 317 (7) , 403-408. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198708133170702

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DOI
10.1056/nejm198708133170702