Literature DB >> 30860883

Rapid changes in the microvascular circulation of skeletal muscle impair insulin delivery during sepsis.

Nicholas A Mignemi1, P Mason McClatchey1, Kameron V Kilchrist2, Ian M Williams1, Bryan A Millis3,4, Kristen E Syring1, Craig L Duvall2, David H Wasserman1,5, Owen P McGuinness1,5.   

Abstract

Sepsis costs the healthcare system $23 billion annually and has a mortality rate between 10 and 40%. An early indication of sepsis is the onset of hyperglycemia, which is the result of sepsis-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle. Previous investigations have focused on events in the myocyte (e.g., insulin signaling and glucose transport and subsequent metabolism) as the causes for this insulin-resistant state. However, the delivery of insulin to the skeletal muscle is also an important determinant of insulin action. Skeletal muscle microvascular blood flow, which delivers the insulin to the muscle, is known to be decreased during sepsis. Here we test whether the reduced capillary blood flow to skeletal muscle belies the sepsis-induced insulin resistance by reducing insulin delivery to the myocyte. We hypothesize that decreased capillary flow and consequent decrease in insulin delivery is an early event that precedes gross cardiovascular alterations seen with sepsis. This hypothesis was examined in mice treated with either lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or polymicrobial sepsis followed by intravital microscopy of the skeletal muscle microcirculation. We calculated insulin delivery to the myocyte using two independent methods and found that LPS and sepsis rapidly reduce insulin delivery to the skeletal muscle by ~50%; this was driven by decreases in capillary flow velocity and the number of perfused capillaries. Furthermore, the changes in skeletal muscle microcirculation occur before changes in both cardiac output and arterial blood pressure. These data suggest that a rapid reduction in skeletal muscle insulin delivery contributes to the induction of insulin resistance during sepsis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  inflammation; insulin resistance; leukocyte adhesion; microvascular flow; quantitation of microvascular flow; sepsis; shunt flow

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30860883      PMCID: PMC6620574          DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00501.2018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0193-1849            Impact factor:   4.310


  58 in total

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