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Food for Thought: Fluctuations in Brain Extracellular Glucose Provide Insight into the Mechanisms of Memory ModulationYale School of Medicine
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Extensive evidence indicates that peripheral or direct central glucose administration enhances cognitive processes in rodents and humans. These behavioral findings suggest that glucose acts directly on the brain to regulate neural processing, a function that seems incompatible with the traditional view that brain glucose levels are high and invariant except under extreme conditions. However, recent data suggest that the glucose levels of the brains extracellular fluid are lower and more variable than previously supposed. In particular, the level of glucose in the extracellular fluid of a given brain area decreases substantially when a rat is performing a memory task for which the brain area is necessary. Together with results identifying downstream effects of such variance in glucose availability, the evidence leads to new thinking about glucose regulation of brain functions including memory.
Key Words: brain cognition energy demand extracellular glucose hippocampus learning memory neural metabolism
Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews, Vol. 1, No. 4,
264-280 (2002) This article has been cited by other articles:
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