Gamboa Alfredo, Okamoto Luis E, Arnold Amy C, Figueroa Rocio A, Diedrich André, Raj Satish R, Paranjape Sachin Y, Farley Ginnie, Abumrad Naji, Biaggioni Italo
From the Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Departments of Medicine (A.G., L.E.O., A.C.A., R.A.F., A.D., S.R.R., S.Y.P., G.F., I.B.), Pharmacology (S.R.R., I.B.), Biomedical Engineering (A.D.), and Surgery (N.A.), Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.
Hypertension. 2014 Oct;64(4):867-74. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.114.03738. Epub 2014 Jul 7.
Obesity is an important risk factor for the development of insulin resistance. Initial compensatory mechanisms include an increase in insulin levels, which are thought to induce sympathetic activation in an attempt to restore energy balance. We have previously shown, however, that sympathetic activity has no beneficial effect on resting energy expenditure in obesity. On the contrary, we hypothesize that sympathetic activation contributes to insulin resistance. To test this hypothesis, we determined insulin sensitivity using a standard hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp protocol in obese subjects randomly assigned in a crossover design 1 month apart to receive saline (intact day) or trimetaphan (4 mg/min IV, autonomic blocked day). Whole-body glucose uptake (MBW in mg/kg per minute) was used as index of maximal muscle glucose use. During autonomic blockade, we clamped blood pressure with a concomitant titrated intravenous infusion of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N-monomethyl-L-arginine. Of the 21 obese subjects (43±2 years; 35±2 kg/m(2) body mass index) studied, 14 were insulin resistant; they were more obese, had higher plasma glucose and insulin, and had higher muscle sympathetic nerve activity (23.3±1.5 versus 17.2±2.1 burst/min; P=0.03) when compared with insulin-sensitive subjects. Glucose use improved during autonomic blockade in insulin-resistant subjects (MBW 3.8±0.3 blocked versus 3.1±0.3 mg/kg per minute intact; P=0.025), with no effect in the insulin-sensitive group. These findings support the concept that sympathetic activation contributes to insulin resistance in obesity and may result in a feedback loop whereby the compensatory increase in insulin levels contributes to greater sympathetic activation.
肥胖是胰岛素抵抗发生发展的重要危险因素。初始代偿机制包括胰岛素水平升高,人们认为这会引发交感神经激活,试图恢复能量平衡。然而,我们之前已经表明,交感神经活动对肥胖患者的静息能量消耗没有有益影响。相反,我们推测交感神经激活会导致胰岛素抵抗。为了验证这一假设,我们采用标准的高胰岛素正常血糖钳夹方案,对肥胖受试者进行胰岛素敏感性测定,这些受试者采用交叉设计,随机分组,间隔1个月分别接受生理盐水(完整日)或曲美芬(4mg/min静脉注射,自主神经阻断日)。全身葡萄糖摄取量(以mg/kg每分钟计的MBW)用作最大肌肉葡萄糖利用的指标。在自主神经阻断期间,我们通过静脉输注一氧化氮合酶抑制剂N-甲基-L-精氨酸并进行滴定来钳制血压。在研究的21名肥胖受试者(年龄43±2岁;体重指数35±2kg/m²)中,14名存在胰岛素抵抗;与胰岛素敏感受试者相比,他们更肥胖,血糖和胰岛素水平更高,肌肉交感神经活动也更高(23.3±1.5次/分钟对17.2±2.1次/分钟;P=0.03)。在胰岛素抵抗受试者中,自主神经阻断期间葡萄糖利用得到改善(阻断时MBW为3.8±0.3对完整时3.1±0.3mg/kg每分钟;P=0.025),而在胰岛素敏感组中无此效应。这些发现支持了交感神经激活导致肥胖患者胰岛素抵抗的概念,并且可能导致一个反馈循环,即胰岛素水平的代偿性升高会导致更强的交感神经激活。