Glucose effectiveness assessed under dynamic and steady state conditions. Comparability of uptake versus production components.
Open Access
- 15 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 99 (6), 1187-1199
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci119275
Abstract
Glucose tolerance is determined by both insulin action and insulin-independent effects, or "glucose effectiveness," which includes glucose-mediated stimulation of glucose uptake (Rd) and suppression of hepatic glucose output (HGO). Despite its importance to tolerance, controversy surrounds accurate assessment of glucose effectiveness. Furthermore, the relative contributions of glucose's actions on Rd and HGO under steady state and dynamic conditions are unclear. We performed hyperglycemic clamps and intravenous glucose tolerance tests in eight normal dogs, and assessed glucose effectiveness by two independent methods. During clamps, glucose was raised to three successive 90-min hyperglycemic plateaus by variable labeled glucose infusion rate; glucose effectiveness (GE) was quantified as the slope of the dose-response relationship between steady state glucose and glucose infusion rate (GE[CLAMP(total)]), Rd (GE[CLAMP(uptake)]) or HGO (GE[CLAMP(HGO)]). During intravenous glucose tolerance tests, tritiated glucose (1.2 microCi/kg) was injected with cold glucose (0.3 g/kg); glucose and tracer dynamics were analyzed using a two-compartment model of glucose kinetics to obtain Rd and HGO components of glucose effectiveness. All experiments were performed during somatostatin inhibition of islet secretion, and basal insulin and glucagon replacement. During clamps, Rd rose from basal (2.54+/-0.20) to 3.95+/-0.54, 6.76+/-1.21, and 9.48+/-1.27 mg/min per kg during stepwise hyperglycemia; conversely, HGO declined to 2.06+/-0.17, 1.17+/-0.19, and 0.52+/-0.33 mg/min per kg. Clamp-based glucose effectiveness was 0.0451+/-0.0061, 0.0337+/-0.0060, and 0.0102+/-0.0009 dl/min per kg for GE[CLAMP(total)], GE[CLAMP(uptake)], and GE[CLAMP(HGO)], respectively. Glucose's action on Rd dominated overall glucose effectiveness (72.2+/-3.3% of total), a result virtually identical to that obtained during intravenous glucose tolerance tests (71.6+/-6.1% of total). Both methods yielded similar estimates of glucose effectiveness. These results provide strong support that glucose effectiveness can be reliably estimated, and that glucose-stimulated Rd is the dominant component during both steady state and dynamic conditions.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced glucose effectiveness associated with reduced insulin release: an artifact of the minimal-model methodAmerican Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 1996
- Nandrolone, a 19-nortestosterone, enhances insulin-independent glucose uptake in normal men.Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1996
- Free Fatty Acid as a Link in the Regulation of Hepatic Glucose Output by Peripheral InsulinDiabetes, 1995
- Metabolic characteristics of African descendants: a comparative study of African-Americans and Ghanaian immigrants using minimal model analysisDiabetologia, 1995
- Insulin Sensitivity Accounts for Glucose and Lactate Kinetics After Intravenous Glucose InjectionDiabetes, 1995
- Assessment of insulin action and glucose effectiveness in diabetic and nondiabetic humans.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- A New Technique for Maintaining and Monitoring Conscious, Stress-free Rabbits in a Steady State: Its Use in the Determination of Glucose KineticsQuarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology and Cognate Medical Sciences, 1980
- Quantitative estimation of insulin sensitivity.American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 1979
- Transport of glucose from blood to brain.Physiological Reviews, 1979
- Insulin Control of Glucose Metabolism in ManJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1975