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Hepatic Sugar Metabolism Measured by PET/CT in Patients and Healthy Subjects

Completed
Conditions
Liver Cirrhosis
Interventions
Procedure: Liver vein catheter
Registration Number
NCT01369979
Lead Sponsor
University of Aarhus
Brief Summary

The investigators wish to determine the lumped constant (LC), which is a correction factor necessary for converting measurements of hepatic FDG metabolism (measured by PET) to those of regular glucose in patients with cirrhosis and healthy subjects.

Working hypothesis

* LC for FDG in liver tissue is not significantly different from unity in healthy subjects

* LC for FDG in liver disease is significantly different from LC in healthy liver

* Insulin changes the LC for FDG in liver tissue, but not by the same factor in liver disease and healthy subjects.

Detailed Description

The LC for FDG is determined in 8 patients with liver disease and 8 healthy volunteers with and without glucose-clamp on two different days at 3-5 week intervals. The individual order of the two examinations will be randomized. The subjects fast overnight before the examination but are allowed to drink water and take usual medication.

When arriving at the PET centre, venflons are placed in a cubital vein in both arms and an ICG infusion is started in one of them. On the day with the glucose-clamp, an infusion of insulin and glucose is started in the second venflon. Next, an artflon is placed in one radial artery and a lever vein catheteter is placed via an introducer catheter in the left femoral vein under sterile conditions and local anesthetic (Lidocaine). The position of the liver vein catheter is checked with fluoroscopy.

On each experimental day, a bolus of 200 MBq FDG + 25 μCi \[3H\] glucose (diluted with saline up to 10 ml) is given intravenously at the start of a 60-min PET scan of the liver. Blood samples from a peripheral artery and a liver vein are collected for determination of blood concentrations of FDG and \[3H\]glucose at appropriate intervals.

In the experiment with glucose-clamp, an intravenous infusion of insulin (0.6 mU/kg/min) is given and blood glucose is measured every 10 min and kept constant at around 5 mM by infusing 20% glucose (infusion rate adjusted according to blood glucose).

During each study, the hepatic blood flow rate is measured by giving an intravenous infusion of indocyanine green (ICG) and collecting arterial and liver vein blood samples (Fick's principle).

Blood samples are analyzed for concentrations of FDG (gammacounter), \[3H\]glucose (liquid-scintillation counter), glucose (enzymatic assay) and ICG (spectrophotometric).

When the experiment is finished, all infusions are terminated and the liver vein catheter is removed and hemostasis ensured by manual compression (10 minutes) and bed rest for 30 minutes before the subject is allowed to stand. The artflon is then removed and hemostasis ensured by manual compression (10 minutes). Finally, the venflons are removed.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
13
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age between 40 and 70 years
  • BMI between 20 and 26
Read More
Exclusion Criteria
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Glucose intolerance
  • Medical treatment of portal hypertension
  • People who have underwent surgery for obesity
  • Pregnancy
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Patients with chronic liver diseaseLiver vein catheterInclusion criteria * Age between 40 and 70 years * BMI between 20 and 26 Exclusion Criteria * Diabetes mellitus * Glucose intolerance * Medical treatment of portal hypertension * People who have undergone surgery for obesity * Pregnancy
Healthy subjectsLiver vein catheterInclusion criteria * Age between 40 and 70 years * BMI between 20 and 26 Exclusion Criteria * Diabetes mellitus * Glucose intolerance * Medical treatment of portal hypertension * People who have undergone surgery for obesity * Pregnancy
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Aarhus University Hospital, PET-centre

🇩🇰

Aarhus C, Denmark

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