Glucose Turnover and Disposal in Maturity-Onset Diabetes
Open Access
- 1 December 1973
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 52 (12) , 3033-3045
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci107502
Abstract
The glucose turnover rate in maturity-onset diabetes in man has been variously reported as increased, normal, and decreased. The present experiments suggest that these discrepancies may have been due to methodology, and to nonrecognition of a circadian cycle in the glucose turnover rate that is present in health, and marked in diabetes. During the early morning hours the glucose turnover rate in maturity-onset diabetes is increased in proportion to the fasting blood glucose level. It may reach three to four times the rate found in health. During the evening hours the increments are about one-half as great. The glucose outflow rate constant, k, lower in diabetes than in health, is also lower in both groups in the evening than in the morning. An analysis of the relative contributions of glucose overproduction and underutilization to the development of hyperglycemia in maturity-onset diabetes indicates that overproduction is the greater factor. The relative role of underutilization appears to increase as the fasting blood glucose level increases. The circulating glucose oxidation rate in maturity-onset diabetes is only slightly lower than in health, but the fraction oxidized is markedly lower, and only a small fraction is excreted. The principal conclusion is that in maturity-onset diabetes there is a hypertrophied flux of endogenous glucose, most of which is neither oxidized nor excreted. The precursors and the qualitative and quantitative metabolic fates of this excess glucose are unknown.Keywords
This publication has 77 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diurnal variation of oral glucose tolerance in volunteers and laboratory animalsDiabetologia, 1971
- Effects of thyroid disease on glucose oxidative metabolism in man. A compartmental model analysisJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1971
- Cori cycle activity in manJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969
- Circadian rhythms in blood glucose and the effect of different lighting schedules, hypophysectomy, adrenal medullectomy and starvationJournal of Anatomy, 1967
- Gluconeogenesis in the perfused liverThe American Journal of Medicine, 1966
- Glucose Turnover Rates in Pregnant and Non-pregnant SheepNature, 1964
- The Effect of Glucagon on Net Splanchnic Balances of Glucose, Amino Acid Nitrogen, Urea, Ketones, and Oxygen in Man*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1964
- THE VALIDITY OF RATES OF GLUCOSE APPEARANCE IN THE DOG CALCULATED BY THE METHOD OF SUCCESSIVE TRACER INJECTIONS: II. THE INFLUENCE OF INTERMIXING TIME FOLLOWING TRACER INJECTIONCanadian Journal of Biochemistry and Physiology, 1961
- Radioactivity of Blood Carbon Dioxide in Animals oxidizing Glucose labelled with Carbon-14 and Other Labelled SubstancesNature, 1957
- NET SPLANCHNIC GLUCOSE PRODUCTION IN NORMAL MAN AND IN VARIOUS DISEASE STATES 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1950