Leblanc H, Rigg L A, Yen S S
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1975 Dec;41(06):1105-9. doi: 10.1210/jcem-41-6-1105.
The inhibitory action of pulses and constant infusion of somatostatin on the secretion of pancreatic and pituitary hormones was studied serially in 7 normal men and 2 untreated acromegalics. In normal men, significant inhibition of basal release of insulin and glucagon was elicited by as little as 1 mug dose of a pulse of somatostatin. Increasing doses of somatostatin (5, 50, 250 and 500 mug) given as a single pulse at weekly intervals produced what appears to be a decreased inhibition of glucagon while no measurable relationship between the dose of somatostatin and the degree of inhibition of insulin was seen. Given during the same day, incremental doses (from 1 to 250 mug) of pulses of somatostain produced a progressive decline in both glucagon and insulin. The elevated basal levels of GH, insulin and glucagon seen in acromegalics, were inhibited by a pulse of somatostatin as little as 2 mug. These inhibitions were sustained during the constant infusion of somatostatin (2.5 mug/min), and a rebound in GH, insulin and glucagon appeared promptly following the infusion.