Abstract
Twenty-four hour profiles of free insulin and blood glucose were determined in 12 healthy controls and 10 insulin-dependent diabetics treated with insulin regimens based on intermediate-acting insulin injected subcutaneously once or twice a day. The diabetics were ambulatory and in a good glycemic control, i.e. without hyperglycemic symptoms or frequent hypoglycemias and with HbA1 less than 9% (reference value 5.9-7.8%). Body weight was normal and median age (32 years) was the same in both groups. Free insulin was determined after polyethylene glycol precipitation of antibody-bound insulin. The controls had a low basal insulin level (median fasting value 3.9 mU/l) and postprandial peaks with a maximum within 30-60 min. There was no rise in plasma free insulin or blood glucose in the early morning hours. The free insulin profiles in the diabetics were highly unphysiological with hyperinsulinemia between the meals and during the night. The highest plasma free insulin value during the 24 hours was reached before lunch (approximately 5-fold compared to normals, p less than 0.01). Postprandially the free insulin concentrations did not reach the peak levels of the normals. After breakfast, blood glucose rose considerably in the diabetics (p less than 0.02 compared to normals) while the rise after lunch and dinner was not higher than in the healthy controls. The difficulties in glycemic control in the diabetic group, i.e. a blood glucose rise after breakfast and hypoglycemias in some patients, could largely be explained by the unphysiological insulin profiles.
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