2020
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78728-x
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Sampling insulin in different tissue compartments using microdialysis: methodological aspects

Abstract: Sampling the concentration of insulin in human skin using microdialysis is challenging because of low intracutaneous concentrations and low recovery, presumably due to adsorption of insulin to the microdialysis system. In this study, we aimed to (1) measure how the concentration of insulin varies in three different tissue compartments (intracutaneous, subcutaneous and intravenous) and (2) to study how much insulin is adsorbed to the microdialysis catheter membranes and tubing during a typical microdialysis exp… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Microdialysis catheters (100 kDa CMA 71 and 20 kDa CMA 67, 10 mm membrane, M dialysis AB, Stockholm, Sweden) were inserted intracutaneous in the volar skin of the non-dominant forearm, subcutaneous in the periumbilical adipose tissue and intravenous in a peripheral vein in each of the eight subjects. The procedure for insertion of microdialysis catheters has previously been described in detail 8 , 9 , 14 . Before insertion, all catheters were connected to microinjection pumps (CMA 107, CMA AB, Uppsala, Sweden) and perfused for 90 min to ensure adequate function and reduce the risk of obstructing bubbles in the microdialysis tubing.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Microdialysis catheters (100 kDa CMA 71 and 20 kDa CMA 67, 10 mm membrane, M dialysis AB, Stockholm, Sweden) were inserted intracutaneous in the volar skin of the non-dominant forearm, subcutaneous in the periumbilical adipose tissue and intravenous in a peripheral vein in each of the eight subjects. The procedure for insertion of microdialysis catheters has previously been described in detail 8 , 9 , 14 . Before insertion, all catheters were connected to microinjection pumps (CMA 107, CMA AB, Uppsala, Sweden) and perfused for 90 min to ensure adequate function and reduce the risk of obstructing bubbles in the microdialysis tubing.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is partially to increase access to glucose, through a process primarily believed to be mediated by endothelial insulin dependent vasodilation. Measuring the concentration of insulin in the human skin using microdialysis has however appeared to be challenging, because the concentration of insulin in peripheral tissues (intracutaneous and subcutaneous) is low, probably related to decreasing tissue vascularity and blood flow 14 . Altogether, it is known that glucose provocation has microcirculatory effects, partly dependent on the vascular effects of insulin, but the effects on changes in local protein expression are lacking.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%