Abstract

To elucidate the mechanism of impaired pancreatic A cell function in hypoglycemia in diabetics, the effect of long-term strict glycemic regulations on hypoglycemia-induced glucagon secretion was studied. Firstly, the effect of plasma insulin concentrations on suppressing A cell was studied in healthy volunteers by injecting insulin at doses of 0.1 U/kg and 0.3 U/kg. With 0.3 U/kg of insulin, the rate of fall in glycemia and the nadir of blood glucose were made similar to those with 0.1 U/kg of insulin by glucose infusion with artificial endocrine pancreas. Plasma glucagon response after 0.3 U/kg of insulin was significantly suppressed as compared to that after 0.1 U/kg of insulin, demonstrating that not only hypoglycemic stimulus but also plasma insulin concentration were important determinants responsible for glucagon secretion in insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Secondly, effect of strict glycemic control was studied. Short-acting insulin at a dose of 0.1 U/kg was injected in an intravenous bolus form into 12 insulin-dependent (IDDM) and 9 non-insulin-dependent (NIDDM) diabetics before and 1–3 months after strict glycemic control with multiple insulin injections therapy. Before strict glycemic regulations in IDDM, no significant rise in plasma glucagon concentrations was observed during the insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In NIDDM, a rise in plasma glucagon concentrations was observed, though the response was delayed. After strict glycemic regulations, in patients with residual endogenous insulin secretion, the glucagon response to hypoglycemia improved considerably in IDDM and normalized in NIDDM. In IDDM and NIDDM, improvement in glucagon response to hypoglycemia related positively to daily urinary secretion rate of C-peptide. From these experiments, it is clearly shown that blunted hypoglycemia induced glucagon secretion in diabetics is secondary to poor glycemic control, and that the existence of endogenous insulin secretion is essential to glucagon response to hypoglycemia.

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