Stroke, Vol 23, 564-568, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
C Robertson, JC Goodman, RG Grossman, M Claypool and A White
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Conventional diets may cause hyperglycemia in
patients with neurological injuries. The purpose of this study was to
examine the effect on the severity of cerebral infarction of replacing
carbohydrates as the primary dietary source of nonprotein calories.
METHODS: Sixty-nine Long-Evans rats were either fasted for 24 hours, fed
isocaloric amounts of a control diet containing 51.5% of the calories as
carbohydrates, or fed one of five experimental diets before middle cerebral
artery occlusion for 45 minutes. In the experimental diets, 60% of the
carbohydrate calories were replaced with one or more of the following
substrates: 1,3-butanediol, triacetin, tributyrin, and long- and
medium-chain triglycerides. RESULTS: The plasma glucose concentration in
the fasted animals was 6.4 +/- 1.1 mumol/ml. In the animals receiving the
control diet, which contained the greatest number of carbohydrate calories,
plasma glucose was 9.1 +/- 1.4 mumol/ml. The 1,3-butanediol diet resulted
in an intermediate plasma glucose concentration averaging 7.8 +/- 1.3
mumol/ml. Plasma beta- hydroxybutyrate levels were elevated in the fasted
group and with the 1,3-butanediol diet. Plasma acetate levels were
increased with the diets supplemented with triacetin. The smallest infarct
volume (53 +/- 43 mm3) was found in the fasted group and the largest (162
+/- 56 mm3) in the control diet group. Infarct volumes that were
significantly smaller were found with the 1,3-butanediol diet (98 +/- 41
mm3) and with the triacetin/tributyrin diet (105 +/- 53 mm3). The volume of
the infarct was directly related to the plasma glucose concentration before
ischemia (n = 69, r = 0.47, p less than 0.01), but not to plasma lactate,
ketone body, or acetate levels. CONCLUSIONS: It may be possible to develop
a diet for patients with neurological injuries using noncarbohydrate
calorie sources, such as 1,3-butanediol, triacetin, or tributyrin, that
would supply systemic caloric and protein requirements without the adverse
effect of conventional diets.
ARTICLES
Dietary nonprotein calories and cerebral infarction size in rats
Department of Neurosurgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex. 77030.
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