Bolli G, De Feo P, Perriello G, De Cosmo S, Compagnucci P, Santeusanio F, Brunetti P, Unger R H
J Clin Invest. 1984 Apr;73(4):917-22. doi: 10.1172/JCI111315.
To elucidate the mechanisms controlling the response of glucagon to hypoglycemia, a vital component of the counterregulatory hormonal response, the role of intraislet insulin was studied in seven normal subjects and five subjects with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) (of less than 15-mo duration). In the normal subjects, hypoglycemia (arterial plasma glucose [PG] 53 +/- 3 mg/dl) induced by an intravenous insulin infusion (30 mU/m2 X min for 1 h, free immunoreactive insulin [FIRI] 58 +/- 2 microU/ml) elicited a 100% fall in insulin secretion and an integrated rise in glucagon of 7.5 ng/ml per 120 min. When endogenous insulin secretion was suppressed by congruent to 50 or congruent to 85% by a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp (FIRI 63 +/- 1.5 or 147 +/- 0.3 microU/ml, respectively) before hypoglycemia, the alpha cell responses to hypoglycemia were identical to those of the control study. When the endogenous insulin secretion was stimulated by congruent to 100% (hyperinsulinemic-hyperglycemic clamp, FIRI 145 +/- 1.5 microU/ml, PG 132 +/- 2 mg/dl) before hypoglycemia, the alpha cell responses to the hypoglycemia were also superimposable on those of the control study. Finally, in C-peptide negative diabetic subjects made euglycemic by a continuous overnight intravenous insulin infusion, the alpha cell responses to hypoglycemia were comparable to those of normal subjects despite absent beta cell secretion, and were not affected by antecedent hyperinsulinemia (hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp for 2 h, FIRI 61 +/- 2 microU/ml). These results indicate that the glucagon response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia is independent of the level of both endogenous intraislet and exogenous arterial insulin concentration in normal man, and that this response may be normal in the absence of endogenous insulin secretion, in contrast to earlier reports. Thus, loss of beta cell function is not responsible for alpha cell failure during insulin-induced hypoglycemia in IDDM.
为阐明控制胰高血糖素对低血糖反应的机制(这是反调节激素反应的一个重要组成部分),我们在7名正常受试者和5名胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(IDDM)患者(病程小于15个月)中研究了胰岛内胰岛素的作用。在正常受试者中,静脉输注胰岛素(30 mU/m2×分钟,持续1小时,游离免疫反应性胰岛素[FIRI]为58±2微单位/毫升)诱导低血糖(动脉血浆葡萄糖[PG]为53±3毫克/分升),导致胰岛素分泌下降100%,胰高血糖素每120分钟综合升高7.5纳克/毫升。在低血糖发作前,通过高胰岛素-正常血糖钳夹术使内源性胰岛素分泌分别抑制约50%或约85%(FIRI分别为63±1.5或147±0.3微单位/毫升),α细胞对低血糖的反应与对照研究相同。当在低血糖发作前通过约100%刺激内源性胰岛素分泌(高胰岛素-高血糖钳夹术,FIRI为145±1.5微单位/毫升,PG为132±2毫克/分升)时,α细胞对低血糖的反应也与对照研究重叠。最后,在通过持续夜间静脉输注胰岛素使血糖正常的C肽阴性糖尿病患者中,尽管β细胞无分泌,但α细胞对低血糖的反应与正常受试者相当,且不受先前高胰岛素血症(高胰岛素-正常血糖钳夹术2小时,FIRI为61±2微单位/毫升)的影响。这些结果表明,在正常人体内,胰高血糖素对胰岛素诱导的低血糖反应与内源性胰岛内和外源性动脉胰岛素浓度水平无关,而且与早期报道相反,在缺乏内源性胰岛素分泌的情况下这种反应可能是正常的。因此,在IDDM患者胰岛素诱导的低血糖期间,β细胞功能丧失并非α细胞功能衰竭的原因。