W Heller, H E Musil, G Gaebel, V Hempel, W Krug, H J Köhn
{"title":"[Effect of L-carnitine on post-stress metabolism in surgical patients].","authors":"W Heller, H E Musil, G Gaebel, V Hempel, W Krug, H J Köhn","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The positive influence of L-carnitine administration on postaggression metabolism was investigated. Clinical examinations were executed on three groups of patients K1, K2, K3). Comparable surgical operations like stomach- and intestinal- resections were performed on these groups of patients. During the first three days after operation a nutritional diet (parenteral, standardized hypocaloric) with (K2: 2 g; K3: 4g) and without L-carnitine (K1) was given. The effects of L-carnitine administration were evaluated by the following parameters: free fatty acids (FFS), triglycerides (TG), beta-hydroxybutyric acid (beta-OH-BS), acetacetate (ACAC), blood sugar (BZ), insulin (INS), lactate (LAK), pyruvate (PYR), total protein (GE), cholinesterase (CHE), urea production rate (PU), nitrogen of alpha-aminogroups (alpha-AN), nitrogen balance (NB), catabolic index (KI), BUN-Creatinine-quotient (B/K), total carnitine (GC), free carnitine (FC), acetyl carnitine (AC) and also the ratio between acetyl carnitine and free carnitine (AC/FC) in serum and urine. The results show no statistical significance. But they could lead to the following conclusions: Carnitine obviously reduces the insulin resistance. But it does not influence the post-operative perturbation of glucose-utilization. Carnitine reinforces the utilization of long chain fatty acids and thus improves the energy conversion. Carnitine leads to an earlier positive nitrogen balance. By giving 4 g of carnitine a day, already after three days a repletion of tissue deposits is possible, and a dose dependence for carnitine administration exists for the utilization of long chain fatty acids and the repletion of tissue deposits.</p>","PeriodicalId":75931,"journal":{"name":"Infusionstherapie und klinische Ernahrung","volume":"13 6","pages":"268-76"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1986-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Infusionstherapie und klinische Ernahrung","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The positive influence of L-carnitine administration on postaggression metabolism was investigated. Clinical examinations were executed on three groups of patients K1, K2, K3). Comparable surgical operations like stomach- and intestinal- resections were performed on these groups of patients. During the first three days after operation a nutritional diet (parenteral, standardized hypocaloric) with (K2: 2 g; K3: 4g) and without L-carnitine (K1) was given. The effects of L-carnitine administration were evaluated by the following parameters: free fatty acids (FFS), triglycerides (TG), beta-hydroxybutyric acid (beta-OH-BS), acetacetate (ACAC), blood sugar (BZ), insulin (INS), lactate (LAK), pyruvate (PYR), total protein (GE), cholinesterase (CHE), urea production rate (PU), nitrogen of alpha-aminogroups (alpha-AN), nitrogen balance (NB), catabolic index (KI), BUN-Creatinine-quotient (B/K), total carnitine (GC), free carnitine (FC), acetyl carnitine (AC) and also the ratio between acetyl carnitine and free carnitine (AC/FC) in serum and urine. The results show no statistical significance. But they could lead to the following conclusions: Carnitine obviously reduces the insulin resistance. But it does not influence the post-operative perturbation of glucose-utilization. Carnitine reinforces the utilization of long chain fatty acids and thus improves the energy conversion. Carnitine leads to an earlier positive nitrogen balance. By giving 4 g of carnitine a day, already after three days a repletion of tissue deposits is possible, and a dose dependence for carnitine administration exists for the utilization of long chain fatty acids and the repletion of tissue deposits.