Abstract

The relative effects of time versus ambient glucose concentration on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake was estimated by performing 5-h insulin clamp studies in patients with NIDDM. Each experimental subject was studied three times, at steady-state plasma insulin levels approximately 2000 microU/ml, but at different steady-state plasma glucose concentrations (studies A, B, and C). Study A consisted of a 5-h clamp, with plasma glucose level maintained at the basal level of fasting hyperglycemia; study B differed in that the basal level of fasting hyperglycemia was reduced during the first hour to approximately 80 mg/dl, and maintained there for the next 4 h; and study C was carried out by clamping the patient at the basal glucose level for 2 h, lowering the glucose concentration to approximately 80 mg/dl during the third hour, and then clamping at this level for the last 2 h. The glucose metabolic clearance rate (MCR) was calculated from 60 to 120 min and from 240 to 300 min during each study, and the results indicated that values for glucose MCR were time dependent, being significantly greater (20-60%) in the fifth than in the second hour in two (studies A and B) of the three studies. In contrast, glucose MCR was independent of plasma glucose concentration, and relatively constant in each subject, as long as it was measured during the same time period. The time-dependent increase in glucose MCR was associated with an approximate 30% increase in steady-state plasma insulin concentrations when comparing the second and fifth hours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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