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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Potential diabetes ; glucose tolerance tests ; insulin ; growth hormone ; free fatty acids ; paradoxical growth hormone responses ; cortisone premedication
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Serum growth hormone, immunoreactive insulin, plasma fatty free acids and blood sugar were measured during oral glucose, cortisone primed oral glucose and intravenous glucose tolerance tets and during intravenous tolbutamide test in 25 normal and 24 potential diabetic (offspring of two diabetic parents) males, closely matched for weight and age. Only potential diabetics with normal blood sugar levels during the oral, cortisone-primed and intravenous glucose tolerance tests were selected for study.-Mean serum, growth hormone concentrations were significantly higher in the potential diabetic group at one or more intervals in each of the tests. The potential diabetic group showed a paradoxical rise in growth hormone during the first 60 min of the oral glucose tolerance test and to a less marked degree in the cortisone-primed oral glucose tolerance test.-Serum insulin was significantly reduced in these potential diabetics (who had been selected for their normal carbohydrate tolerance) during the oral, cortisone-primed and intravenous glucose tolerance test but not during the tolbutamide test. The presence of normal blood sugar responses and reduced insulin levels suggested increased sensitivity to endogenous insulin in the potential diabetic group, despite elevations in serum growth hormone.-Abnormal growth hormone responses occurred in 50% of the potential-diabetic group and an abnormal response in one test was usually associated with abnormal responses in each of the other types of tests.-When the potentialdiabetics were subdivided into those with (‘responders’) and those without (‘non-responders’) an abnormal growth hormone response, it was the ‘responders’ who as a group showed increased sensitivity to endogenous insulin. Thus the abnormal growth hormone responses observed appeared to be associated with acute insulin-like effects, rather than the more usual diabetogenic action of growth hormone.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Glucose ; free fatty acids ; oxygen consumption ; respiratory quotient ; insulin ; cortisol ; triiodothyronine ; thyroxine ; ketone bodies ; energy ; balance ; insulin-dependent diabetes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Turnover rates of glucose and free fatty acids were measured, using3H-glucose and14C-1-palmitic acid as tracers, in insulin-requiring diabetic patients at presentation and after insulin treatment. Correlations were sought with rates of substrate oxidation, determined independently from respiratory exchange, and with plasma hormone concentrations. The rates of appearance of glucose and of free fatty acids were increased in the diabetics to 17.6 and 10.2 μmol min−1 kg−1 respectively. Both rates fell to normal (13.3 and 7.1 μmol min−1 kg−1) after insulin. In the untreated state there was an inverse relationship between the rates of utilisation of glucose and free fatty acids (r=0.61; p〈0.05). It is suggested that this relationship represents the impairment of peripheral glucose utilisation by free fatty acids and by ketone bodies in vivo, so far only demonstrated in vitro. The tracer calculated rates of glucose utilisation correlated well over a wide range with the respiratory quotient in untreated diabetics, while respiratory quotient was inversely related to free fatty acid turnover rates. In untreated diabetics plasma cortisol and 3,3′, 5′-triiodothyronine (rT3) were increased whereas thyroxine and 3,5,3′-triiodothyronine (T3) were decreased. 3,5,3′-Triiodothyronine concentration was closely related to the metabolic clearance rate of glucose (p〈0.05), while cortisol concentrations correlated with glucose production (p〈0.02) and blood ketone body concentration (p〈0.02). It is concluded that glucose overproduction is the major contributor to the hyperglycaemia of untreated diabetes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1041
    Keywords: propranolol ; practolol ; betaxolol ; hypoglycaemia ; free fatty acids ; glycerol
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Six healthy male volunteers received equivalent intravenous beta-blocking doses of propranolol, practolol and betaxolol (SL75212) or saline at weekly intervals Sixty minutes later 0.1 unit/kg insulin was given intravenously. 2. In all studies, maximum hypoglycaemia (mean 1.2 mmol/l) was reached thirty minutes after insulin. Recovery from hypoglycaemia was delayed with propranolol but practolol and betaxolol had no effect. 3. Propranolol blocked the tachycardia and widening of pulse pressure seen in saline treated subjects. It also blocked the rebound rise in free fatty acids (FFA) and glycerol concentrations that followed the nadir of hypoglycaemia. 4. Neither practolol nor betaxolol had significant effects on pulse rate or blood pressure but betaxolol resembled propranolol in blocking the rebound rise in FFA and glycerol, while practolol blocked the rise in glycerol alone. 5. The magnitude of the rise in growth hormone following hypoglycaemia was similar in all groups, but the peak was earlier after practolol and betaxolol.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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