Abstract

Schedules of insulin treatment which reliably increased eating in fat-fed diabetic rats were studied for their effect on plasma glucose concentrations. An inverse correlation between intake and plasma glucose was observed in fat-fed diabetics given long-term treatment with protamine-zinc insulin (PZI); however changes in glucose did not account for the differential effect of insulin on food intakes in normal controls or normal and diabetic rats fed a low-fat food. A single injection of 1 U PZI which increased eating in fat-fed diabetics but not normal controls 17–23 hr later did not reduce glucose concentrations from hyperglycemic levels in diabetics during the same time period. Injections of regular insulin increased eating in fat-fed diabetic and normal rats in a comparable fashion, but did not reduce plasma glucose in diabetics as low as in normal animals. The results show that the effect of exogenously administered insulin on food intake in fat-fed diabetics is largely unrelated to changes in circulating glucose levels and suggest that metabolic consequences of insulin treatment other than hypoglycemia may underlie the effect of the hormone on feeding in these animals.

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