Influence of antecedent carbohydrate intake on the biphasic insulin response to intravenous glucose
- 1 December 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 24 (12) , 1072-1080
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.24.12.1072
Abstract
The insulin secretory response to a sudden and sustained intravenous glycemic stimulus was measured in three groups of dogs whose antecedent carbohydrate intake ranged from zero to 300 or more grams daily. Insulin outflow rate from the pancreaticoduodenal vein was measured every minute for ten minutes, then at increasing intervals through sixty minutes. It was found that starvation erased the first phase of the biphasic insulin response shown by dogs on ordinary carbohydrate intake and that high-carbohydrate intake abolished the trough between the two phases. The data suggest that, during truly physiologic stimulation of insulin secretion, the latter represents the final stage of a continuum of hormonal synthesis, storage, and release, rather than emanating from one of two separate pools of fast-versus-slow insulin secretion.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Plasma Insulin Responses to Oral and Intravenous Glucose: Studies in Normal and Diabetic Subjects*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1967
- Insulin Secretion in Response to Glycemic Stimulus: Relation of Delayed Initial Release to Carbohydrate intolerance in Mild Diabetes Mellitus*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1967
- Plasma Insulin Responses to Glucose and Tolbutamide of Normal Weight and Obese Diabetic and Nondiabetic SubjectsDiabetes, 1966
- Coated Charcoal Immunoassay of InsulinJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1965
- IMMUNOASSAY OF ENDOGENOUS PLASMA INSULIN IN MANJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1960
- THE NECESSITY OF A STANDARD PREPARATORY DIETThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1940