The NPY secretory pattern after an insulin tolerance test (ITT) (0.15IU/kg body weight) was evaluated in 8 normal men. They were infused with normal saline (control test), glucose or fructose. Insulin-induced hypoglycemia produced a significant increment in serum NPY in the control test. The infusion of fructose was unable to change the NPY secretory pattern during insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In contrast, the NPY increase during ITT was completely abolished when the concomitant infusion of glucose prevented insulin-induced hypoglycemia. These results exclude a direct role of hyperinsulinemia in the mechanism underlying the stimulation of NPY secretion during ITT. Furthermore, since glucose but not fructose crosses the blood–brain-barrier (BBB), the NPY increase during ITT appears to be generated by low glucose concentrations at the level of glucosensitive areas located inside the brain.