Pacini G, Finegood D T, Bergman R N
Diabetes. 1982 May;31(5 Pt 1):432-41. doi: 10.2337/diab.31.5.432.
A new technique is introduced for automatic control of the blood sugar ("glucose clamp") at basal (euglycemic) or elevated (hyperglycemic) levels during variable insulin infusion. A minimal mathematical model of glucose kinetics is implemented on a laboratory minicomputer during clamp experiments. From the measured time course of plasma glucose concentration, the computer estimates the fractional disappearance rate of glucose (X) and calculates the rate of exogenous infusion required to match the desired concentration (M). Eight clamp experiments were performed on three conscious dogs. Euglycemic (N = 4): insulin was infused at 8, 40, and 150 microU/min for sequential 2.5-h periods )I, II, and III); hyperglycemic (N = 4): following the establishment of 140 mg/dl hyperglycemia (period I), insulin was infused at 30 and 120 mU/min for 2.5 h each (periods II and III). Plasma insulin levels [range: 21 +/- 9 (basal) to 1729 +/- 209 microunits/ml] were matched in comparable periods in the two types of experiments [P greater than 0.8 (I); P greater than 0.5 (II), P greater than 0.2 (III)]. Glucose was successfully clamped for all periods at euglycemia (99.6 +/- 0.7% of desired value) and hyperglycemia (100.0 +/- 1.1% desired 140-mg/dl value). Glucose infusion rates necessary to achieve stable glycemia were greater at elevated than basal glucose (P less than 0.001) despite comparable insulinemia during the three insulin infusion periods. Thus, the glucose infusion rate versus insulin level (M/I) was glycemia-dependent, and therefore not a direct measure of insulin sensitivity. In contrast, the insulin-induced increases in fractional glucose disappearance (delta X), also provided by our clamp technique during experiments, were highly correlated within insulin (r = 0.08 to r = 0.99, P less than 0.01) and independent of glycemia (P greater than 0.7). The ratio delta X/delta I (increase in glucose fractional disappearance rate/incremental insulin level) was a measure of insulin sensitivity independent of glycemia, and could successfully differentiate insulin-resistant from normal animals (P less than 0.001; delta X/delta I in three animals: 6.9 X 10(-4), 5.5 X 10(-4), and 1.4 X 10(-4) min-1 microunits/ml). Thus, this model-dependent glucose clamp technique provides a direct measurement of insulin sensitivity independent of glycemia.
介绍了一种新技术,用于在可变胰岛素输注期间将血糖自动控制在基础(正常血糖)或升高(高血糖)水平。在钳夹实验期间,在实验室小型计算机上实现了葡萄糖动力学的最小数学模型。根据测得的血浆葡萄糖浓度随时间变化的过程,计算机估计葡萄糖的分数消失率(X),并计算出与所需浓度(M)相匹配的外源性输注速率。对三只清醒的狗进行了八次钳夹实验。正常血糖组(N = 4):在连续的2.5小时期间(I、II和III期)分别以8、40和150微单位/分钟的速率输注胰岛素;高血糖组(N = 4):在建立140mg/dl高血糖水平(I期)后,分别以30和120mU/分钟的速率输注胰岛素2.5小时(II期和III期)。在两种类型的实验中,可比时间段内的血浆胰岛素水平[范围:21±9(基础值)至1729±209微单位/毫升]相匹配[I期P>0.8;II期P>0.5,III期P>0.2]。在所有时间段内,正常血糖(99.6±0.7%的期望值)和高血糖(100.0±1.1%的140mg/dl期望值)时葡萄糖均成功钳定。尽管在三个胰岛素输注期胰岛素血症相当,但在高血糖时实现稳定血糖所需的葡萄糖输注速率高于基础血糖时(P<0.001)。因此,葡萄糖输注速率与胰岛素水平之比(M/I)取决于血糖水平,因此不是胰岛素敏感性的直接测量指标。相比之下,我们的钳夹技术在实验期间提供的胰岛素诱导的葡萄糖分数消失增加(ΔX),在胰岛素范围内高度相关(r = 0.08至r = 0.99,P<0.01)且与血糖无关(P>0.7)。ΔX/ΔI比值(葡萄糖分数消失率增加/胰岛素增量水平)是一种独立于血糖水平的胰岛素敏感性测量指标,并且可以成功区分胰岛素抵抗动物和正常动物(P<0.001;三只动物的ΔX/ΔI分别为:6.9×10⁻⁴、5.5×10⁻⁴和1.4×10⁻⁴分钟⁻¹微单位/毫升)。因此,这种依赖模型化的葡萄糖钳夹技术提供了一种独立于血糖水平的胰岛素敏感性直接测量方法。