The first phase insulin response to intravenous glucose is highly reproducible
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Diabetologia
- Vol. 33 (10) , 631-634
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00400209
Abstract
To determine the reproducibility of the first phase insulin response to intravenous glucose, ten normal subjects underwent two intravenous glucose tolerance tests separated by at least two weeks. Intravenous dextrose (0.3 g/kg) was administered over 2 min by continuous infusion and arterialised-venous samples were taken from a retrogradely cannulated hand vein in the opposite arm. Within subjects, median coefficient of variation for the 3 min insulin was 4.0% (range 1.2–24.3%) and median coefficient of variation for the 0–10 min area was 6.7% (range 1.7–18.8%). These coefficients of variation are close to those of the assay itself (< 10%). Despite this, between subject responses varied by greater than sixfold. In conclusion, contrary to previous reports the intravenous glucose tolerance test is highly reproducible. This makes it a very valuable tool for further studies of the pathogenesis of diabetes.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- INTER AND INTRA INDIVIDUAL VARIABILITY OF ACUTE INSULIN-RESPONSE DURING INTRAVENOUS GLUCOSE-TOLERANCE TESTS1989
- Sensitive and specific two-site immunoradiometric assays for human insulin, proinsulin, 65-66 split and 32-33 split proinsulinsBiochemical Journal, 1989
- Duplicates or Singletons?—An Analysis of the Need for Replication in Immunoassay and a Computer Program to Calculate the Distribution of Outliers, Error Rate and the Precision Profile from Assay DuplicatesAnnals of Clinical Biochemistry: International Journal of Laboratory Medicine, 1989
- Between and within subject variation of the first phase insulin response to intravenous glucoseDiabetologia, 1988
- Type I (insulin dependent) diabetes: a disease of slow clinical onset?BMJ, 1987
- Pre-Type I Diabetes: Linear Loss of Beta Cell Response to Intravenous GlucoseDiabetes, 1984
- The definition of chemical diabetesMetabolism, 1973
- Acute and steady-state insulin responses to glucose in nonobese diabetic subjectsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Estimation of arterial PO2, PCO2, pH, and lactate from arterialized venous bloodJournal of Applied Physiology, 1972