Defective free-fatty acid and oxidative glucose metabolism in IDDM during hypoglycemia. Influence of glycemic control
- 1 February 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 39 (2) , 134-141
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.39.2.134
Abstract
To examine the impact of diabetes and its treatment on plasma free-fatty acid (FFA) and oxidative fuel metabolism during hypoglycemia, we combined indirect calorimetry with [3-3H]glucose during a 4-h low-dose insulin infusion (plasma insulin .apprx. 2-fold above basal) in six poorly controlled and nine well-controlled insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients and in six healthy subjects. Diabetic subjects received insulin overnight to maintain euglycemia before study. Although free-insulin levels and counterregulatory hormone responses were similar, the plasma glucose fall was more pronounced in well-controlled diabetic subjects. In well-controlled diabetic and healthy subjects, the small increment in insulin rapidly suppressed plasma FFA and fat oxidation by .apprx. 50% and stimulated carbohydrate oxidation by .apprx. 80%. In contrast, plasma FFA levels did not fall in poorly controlled diabetic subjects, and glucose oxidation was not stimulated. To determine whether this resistance to the antilipolytic effect of insulin occurs in the absence of hypoglycemic counterregulation, we used a sequential low-dose euglycemic insulin clamp (0.2, 0.3, and 0.5 mU .cntdot. kg-1 .cntdot. min-1). In healthy subjects, plasma FFA was nearly maximally suppressed at the lowest insul indose. In contrast, plasma FFA remained persistently elevated in poorly controlled diabetic subjects at each insulin dose. However,the insulin dose-response curve for suppression of plasma FFA was near normal in well-controlled subjects. We conclude that poorly controlled IDDM diabetic patients are resistant to the antilipolytic effects of insulin and show impaired stimulation of glucose oxidation during insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Amelioration of these defects in well-controlled patients may be another factor contributing to the higher risk of hypoglycemia during intensified insulin therapy.Keywords
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