Abstract
Studies were made on the effect of the enteroinsular axis on amino acid-induced insulin and glucagon secretion during hyperglycaemia in man. The responses of plasma immunoreactive insulin, C-peptide, and immunoreactive glucagon to arginine infusion were investigated in nine healthy subjects after induction of hyperglycaemia by an oral glucose load and by intravenous glucose infusion to produce similar glucose concentrations in the arterialised blood. The plasma immunoreactive insulin and C-peptide levels increased to higher levels after an oral glucose load than after an intravenous infusion of glucose. The incremental areas under the immunoreactive insulin and C-peptide curves during arginine infusion were significantly greater (p less than 0.01) after oral than after intravenous glucose administration. The plasma immunoreactive glucagon level was suppressed equally after oral and intravenous glucose loads. However, during subsequent arginine infusion, the plasma immunoreactive glucagon level rose more in the presence of hyperglycaemia induced by oral than intravenous glucose. The incremental area under the plasma immunoreactive glucagon curve during arginine infusion was 1.6-fold greater after glucose ingestion than after intravenous glucose infusion. These results suggest that the enteroinsular axis has a stimulatory effect on the responses of pancreatic A and B cells to arginine after oral glucose administration.
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