Glucagon: Role in the Hyperglycemia of Diabetes Mellitus
- 14 February 1975
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 187 (4176), 544-547
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1089999
Abstract
Glucagon suppression by somatostatin reduces or abolishes hyperglycemia in dogs made insulin-deficient by somatostatin, alloxan, or total pancreatectomy. This suggests that the development of severe diabetic hyperglycemia requires the presence of glucagon, whether secreted by pancreatic or newly identified gastrointestinal A cells, as well as a lack of insulin. Glucagon suppression could improve therapeutic glucoregulation in diabetes.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Somatostatin: Hypothalamic Inhibitor of the Endocrine PancreasScience, 1974
- EFFECTS OF GROWTH-HORMONE RELEASE-INHIBITING HORMONE ON CIRCULATING GLUCAGON, INSULIN, AND GROWTH HORMONE IN NORMAL, DIABETIC, ACROMEGALIC, AND HYPOPITUITARY PATIENTSThe Lancet, 1974
- Hypothalamic Polypeptide That Inhibits the Secretion of Immunoreactive Pituitary Growth HormoneScience, 1973
- The effect of experimental insulin deficiency on glucagon secretionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1971
- Studies of pancreatic alpha cell function in normal and diabetic subjectsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1970
- Light and Electron Microscope Observations on the Islets of Langerhans in Carassius carassius longsdorfiiArchivum histologicum japonicum, 1970
- Action of Streptozotocin on Insulin and Glucagon Responses of Rat IsletsHormone and Metabolic Research, 1970
- Pancreatic Glucagon Secretion in Normal and Diabetic SubjectsThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1969
- Structural evidence for glucagon producing cells in the intestinal mucosa of the ratDiabetologia, 1968
- IMMUNOASSAY OF ENDOGENOUS PLASMA INSULIN IN MANJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1960