Artigo Revisado por pares

Effect of hyperglycemia per se on glucose turnover rates in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes

1993; Elsevier BV; Volume: 42; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0026-0495(93)90177-p

ISSN

1532-8600

Autores

Ole Hother‐Nielsen, Allan Vaag, P. Skøtt, Henning Beck‐Nielsen,

Tópico(s)

Diabetes Management and Research

Resumo

The effect of hyperglycemia, per se, on glucose utilization and hepatic glucose production was reevaluated in eight C-peptide-negative insulin-dependent diabetic patients using primed-continuous noncontaminated 3-3H-glucose infusion and labeled glucose infusates. The night before study, euglycemia was maintained by a variable insulin infusion. During the studies, insulin was infused at basal replacement rates determined as the rate required to maintain euglycemia in the morning. After a 2-hour equilibration period, either plasma glucose level was increased to 12 mmol/L for 4 hours using a variable glucose infusion, or no glucose was infused (control day). On the hyperglycemic day, glucose utilization increased 16% (86 ± 2 to 99 ± 4 mg · m−2 · min−1, P < .02) and glucose production decreased 45% (85 ± 3 to 47 ± 4 mg · m−2 · min−1, P < .01). On the control day, both glucose utilization and glucose production decreased (84 ± 3 to 68 ± 3 and 84 ± 3 to 65 ± 3 mg · m−2 · min−1, respectively; both P < .01). Therefore, comparing rates at the end of the hyperglycemic and control studies, glucose utilization was increased by 45% and glucose production was decreased by 28% in response to hyperglycemia (both P < .01). Thus hyperglycemia, at basal insulin levels enhanced glucose utilization and suppressed glucose production in insulin-dependent diabetic patients. Quantitatively, the enhancement of glucose utilization was more important than the suppressive effect on glucose production.

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