Underestimation of glucose turnover measured with [6-3H]- and [6,6-2H]- but not [6-14C]glucose during hyperinsulinemia in humans
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 38 (1) , 97-107
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.38.1.97
Abstract
Recent studies indicate that hydrogen-labeled glucose tracers underestimate glucose turnover in humans under conditions of high flux. The cause of this underestimation is unknown. To determine whether the error is time-, pool-, model-, or insulin-dependent, glucose turnover was measured simultaneously with [6-3H]-, [6,6-2H2]-, and [6-14C]glucose during a 7-h infusion of either insulin (1 mU.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1) or saline. During the insulin infusion, steady-state glucose turnover measured with both [6-3H]glucose (8.0 .+-. 0.5 mg.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1) and [6,6-2H2]glucose (7.6 .+-. 0.5 mg.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1) was lower (P < .01) than either the glucose infusion rate required to maintain euglycemia (9.8 .+-. 0.6 mg.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1) or glucose turnover determined with [6-14C]glucose and corrected for Cori cycle activity (9.8 .+-. 0.7 mg.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1). Consequently "negative" glucose production rates (P < .01) were obtained with either [6-3H]- or [6,6-2H2]- but not [6-14C]glucose. The difference between turnover estimated with [6-3H]glucose and actual glucose disposal (or 14C glucose flux) did not decrease with time and was not dependent on duration of isotope infusion. During saline infusion, estimates of glucose turnover were similar regardless of the glucose tracer used. High-performance liquid chromatography of the radioactive glucose tracer and plasma revealed the presence of a tritiated nonglucose contaminant. Although the contaminant represented only 1.5% of the radioactivity in the [6-3H]glucose infusate, its clearance was 10-fold less (P < .001) than that of [6-3H]glucose. This resulted in accumulation in plasma, with the contaminant accounting for 16.6 .+-. 2.09 and 10.8 .+-. 0.9% of what customarily is assumed to be plasma glucose radioactivity during the insulin or saline infusion, respectively (P < .01). When corrected for the presence of the contaminant, glucose turnover determined with [6-3H]glucose during insulin infusion (9.5 .+-. 0.6 mg.cntdot.kg-1.cntdot.min-1) no longer differed from either the glucose infusion rate or that determined with [6-14C]glucose. Therefore, the underestimation of glucose turnover during insulin infusion and negative glucose production rates observed with traditional methods to analyze plasma radioactivity and commercially available tracers is the result of an artifactual increase in [6-3H]glucose specific activity. The etiology of the underestimation of glucose turnover with [6,6-2H2]glucose remains to be determined.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dose-response characteristics for effects of insulin on production and utilization of glucose in manAmerican Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 1981
- Adrenergic Mechanisms for the Effects of Epinephrine on Glucose Production and Clearance in ManJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1980
- Measurement of "true" glucose production rates in infancy and childhood with 6,6-dideuteroglucoseDiabetes, 1977
- Turnover and recycling of glucose in man during prolonged fastingMetabolism, 1977
- ESTIMATION OF GLUCOSE TURNOVER WITH STABLE TRACER GLUCOSE-1-C-131977
- Estimation of glucose turnover and recycling in rabbits using various [3H, 14C]glucose labelsAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1976
- Coated Charcoal Immunoassay of InsulinJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1965
- Inhibition by insulin of hepatic glucose production in the normal dogAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1965
- ON THE HORMONAL REGULATION OF CARBOHYDRATE METABOLISM - STUDIES WITH C-14 GLUCOSE1963
- Measurement of Size and Turnover Rate of Body Glucose Pool by the Isotope Dilution MethodAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1956