Abstract
We have compared insulin responses to L-arginine before and during dexamethasone treatment in healthy subjects, previously classified as subjects with either high or low insulin response according to a standardized glucose infusion test. Arginine stimulation was administered as a 150 mg/kg bolus followed by 10 mg.kg-1.min-1 to six subjects with high insulin response and to seven subjects with low insulin response. Before dexamethasone treatment the incremental insulin level during 0-10 min of arginine was higher in subjects with high (36.5 +/- 6.8 microU/ml) than in subjects with low response (14.5 +/- 2.3 microU/ml), p less than 0.01 for difference. Dexamethasone treatment (6 mg/day for 60 h) markedly enhanced the insulin response to arginine in subjects with high response (+99% 0-30 min) but failed to affect the subjects with low response (+4% 0-30 min). The C-peptide response to arginine exhibited similar differences between groups. Decreased responsiveness to arginine in subjects with low insulin response, especially during dexamethasone treatment, suggests a Beta-cell capacity defect although a decreased potentiating-sensing effect of glucose cannot be completely ruled out.
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