Ganda O P, Kahn C B, Soeldner J S, Gleason R E
Diabetes. 1975 Apr;24(4):354-67. doi: 10.2337/diab.24.4.354.
Four healthy adult subjects received intravenous tolbutamide (TOL) at six different doses (twenty-four tests): 0.0625 gm., 0.125 gm., 0.25 gm., 0.5 gm., 1.0 gm. and 1.5 gm. Blood glucose (BG), serum immunoreacctive insulin (IRI) and serum TOL levels were determined before and for 180 minutes after TOL. There was a highly significant correlation of the dose of TOL with the peak IRI (p less than .01), zero to ten minute IRI area (p less than .001), and zero to sixty minute IRI area (p less than .001) and with the decline in BG expressed as zero to sixty minute BG area (p less than .001). Similar significant correlations were observed between levels of TOL and both IRI and BG. At each dose level the IRI response correlated significantly with the BG fall. An additional eighteen subjects received the 1.0 gm. dose. In these, serum TOL levels did not correlate with either BG or IRI. These subjects also received intravenous glucose (0.5 gm. per kilogram body weight). BG levels did not correlate with IRI. However, there were striking correlations between TOL and glucose-stimulated peak IRI (p less than .001), zero to ten minute IRI area (p less than .05). The mean (plus or minus SEM) space of distribution for glucose (G.S.) and tolbutamide (TLS.) was found to be 13.45 plus or minus 0.71 and 6.34 plus or minus 0.31 L., respectively. There was a significant dose-response relationship exists between TOL and IRI. TOL- and glucose-induced IRI secretion dynamics suggest strong similarities between mechanisms of rapid IRI release and/or size of available IRI storage pools.