Kashyap M L, Magill F, Rojas L, Hoffman M M
Can Med Assoc J. 1970 May 30;102(11):1165-9.
Glucose, insulin and non-esterified fatty acid (NEFA) metabolism was studied in 18 patients (mean age 49) with ischemic heart disease (IHD) who did not have any concurrent disorder known to affect glucose tolerance.Significant hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia were observed in the IHD patients after oral glucose. The serum NEFA declined to a lower level in IHD patients than in normal subjects who received glucose.In response to hypoglycemia following the oral administration of sodium tolbutamide the serum NEFA in IHD patients rose to a higher level in the rebound phase than in normal subjects. This rise was preceded by a sharp decline in the concentration of circulating insulin.In 72% of the patients (IHD sub-group) the blood glucose values after oral glucose satisfied the criteria for the diagnosis of diabetes mellitus. The metabolic changes following oral glucose in the IHD sub-group and in asymptomatic diabetics (AD), free of clinical atherosclerosis and with similar impairment in glucose tolerance, were compared. Despite insignificantly lower insulin concentrations, the AD showed a significantly lesser fall in circulating NEFA than did the patients in the IHD sub-group. After oral sodium tolbutamide the IHD sub-group patients showed a greater insulin response and a greater rebound increase in circulating NEFA than did the AD.These differences in response to oral glucose and to sodium tolbutamide suggest that the pathogenesis of the impaired glucose tolerance in IHD may be different from that responsible for abnormal carbohydrate tolerance in asymptomatic diabetics without evident atherosclerosis. The abnormalities demonstrated in glucose, insulin and NEFA metabolism may play a role in the genesis of the hyperlipoproteinemia and atherosclerosis of IHD. One possible mechanism leading to hyperlipoproteinemia in ischemic heart disease compatible with the data is discussed.