2 research outputs found

    How the Selfish Brain Organizes its Supply and Demand

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    During acute mental stress, the energy supply to the human brain increases by 12%. To determine how the brain controls this demand for energy, 40 healthy young men participated in two sessions (stress induced by the Trier Social Stress Test and non-stress intervention). Subjects were randomly assigned to four different experimental groups according to the energy provided during or after stress intervention (rich buffet, meager salad, dextrose-infusion and lactate-infusion). Blood samples were frequently taken and subjects rated their autonomic and neuroglycopenic symptoms by standard questionnaires. We found that stress increased carbohydrate intake from a rich buffet by 34ā€‰g (from 149 Ā± 13 g in the non-stress session to 183 Ā± 16ā€‰g in the stress session; P < 0.05). While these stress-extra carbohydrates increased blood glucose concentrations, they did not increase serum insulin concentrations. The ability to suppress insulin secretion was found to be linked to the sympatho-adrenal stress-response. Social stress increased concentrations of epinephrine 72% (18.3 Ā± 1.3 vs. 31.5 Ā± 5.8ā€‰pg/ml; P < 0.05), norepinephrine 148% (242.9 Ā± 22.9 vs. 601.1 Ā± 76.2ā€‰pg/ml; P < 0.01), ACTH 184% (14.0 Ā± 1.3 vs. 39.8 Ā± 7.7ā€‰pmol/l; P < 0.05), cortisol 131% (5.4 Ā± 0.5 vs. 12.4 Ā± 1.3 Ī¼g/dl; P < 0.01) and autonomic symptoms 137% (0.7 Ā± 0.3 vs. 1.7 Ā± 0.6; P < 0.05). Exogenous energy supply (regardless of its character, i.e., rich buffet or energy infusions) was shown to counteract a neuroglycopenic state that developed during stress. Exogenous energy did not dampen the sympatho-adrenal stress-responses. We conclude that the brain under stressful conditions demands for energy from the body by using a mechanism, which we refer to as ā€œcerebral insulin suppressionā€ and in so doing it can satisfy its excessive needs
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