Abstract

In the present study we aimed to reproduce and extend our recent finding that insulin infusion modifies the glucose response to mental stress and to determine whether the altered glucose response, i.e. glucose uptake, may be explained by a rise in forearm blood flow (FBF). The subjects were borderline hypertensive; there was one former blood pressure measurement > or =140/90 mm Hg, but otherwise they were healthy 21-year-old men. In the first series (n = 18) the subjects were exposed to a 5-min mental arithmetic stress test prior to (MST-1) and at the end of (MST-2) 120 min of hyperinsulinemic glucose clamp. Blood glucose was unchanged (0.067+/-0.05 mmol/l, p = 0.24) during MST-1 and decreased (-0.37+/-0.09 mmol/l, p = 0.001) during MST-2. Blood glucose also decreased in a second series (n = 28) in which the subjects were exposed to MST after 120 min of glucose clamp (-0.33+/-0.09 mmol/l , p = 0.001), and FBF increased from 4.4+/-0.4 to 7.7+/-1.1 ml/min/100 ml (p<0.0001). Glucose was unchanged (p = 0.48) in response to MST in a saline time control group (n = 8). However, FBF increased in response to MST from 3.7+/-0.5 to 7.0+/-1.2 ml/min/100 ml (p<0.01). The increase in FBF averaged 3.3 ml/min/100 ml in both groups. Serum insulin remained unchanged in response to MST in controls, but decreased in response to MST during insulin infusion in both series (p = 0.04 and p = 0.004, respectively). The fall in glucose in response to MST during insulin infusion correlated with glucose disposal rate (GDR) (r = -0.40, p = 0.034, n = 28) and inversely with fasting insulin (r = 0.52, p = 0.004, n = 28). Thus, insulin infusion alters the glucose response to mental stress, i.e. there is a decrease in blood glucose concentration concomitant with an increased uptake. This glucose uptake is unrelated to FBF, but related to higher skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity and inversely to the fasting insulin level. Our data therefore suggest that infused insulin modifies the stress response through a mechanism at the tissue level. It may be speculated whether insulin counteracts unfavourable effects of mental stress and sympathetic activation on glucose metabolism.

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