In vivo metabolic changes as studied longitudinally after ventromedial hypothalamic lesions

Abstract
Ventromedial hypothalamic (VMH)-lesioned rats were tested 1 and 6 wk after the lesions to determine, by euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamps, their tissue response to insulin. One week after the lesions, total glucose metabolism was more sensitive and responsive to insulin than in age-matched controls. In the two groups, hepatic glucose production was suppressed at almost identical insulin concentrations (approximately 550 microU/ml). Six weeks after the VMH lesions, the increased insulin responsiveness of total glucose metabolism disappeared and glucose metabolism became less insulin sensitive (right, shifted dose-response curve) than that of control animals. Furthermore, hepatic glucose production of VMH-lesioned rats was now inhibited by 45% at most and at the supraphysiological insulin concentration of 16,000 microU/ml, while it was totally suppressed by 550 microU/ml of the hormone in age-matched controls. This defect was accompanied by a lack of decrease in plasma glucagon levels during the clamps carried out at maximal insulin concentration. In summary, in a first phase after VMH lesion, rats are hypersensitive and hyperresponsive to insulin; and in a later phase, when obesity is well established, VMH-lesioned rats become insulin resistant and are characterized by a decreased in vivo sensitivity and responsiveness of liver and muscles to the hormone.