Abstract
Glucose tolerance does not improve to the normal level after dialysis; however, our studies showed that the insulin receptor binding to erythrocytes of nondiabetic patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) on hemodialysis was more than that in normal subjects. To understand this apparent anomaly in insulin receptor action and glucose metabolism, we investigated insulin degradation-a postreceptor event of insulin binding-in erythrocytes from CRF patients and compared it with that of normal subjects. We studied insulin degradation by erythrocytes from each of eight CRF patients and five normal subjects. The average hyperbolic insulin degradation curve for the CRF patients showed lower activity and a right-handed shift compared to the curve for the normal subjects. The average maximum degradation of insulin in the CRF patients was significantly lower than that of normal subjects. The number of erythrocytes required to produce 50% of maximum insulin degradation was significantly greater in these patients than that in the normal subjects. Furthermore, a linear correlation was observed between the duration of dialysis and maximum percent of insulin degradation in the CRF patients. Clinical implications of these findings are unclear at the present time. However, the insulin-degrading activity in erythrocytes may be reflective of that in other body tissues.
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