Lingenfelser T, Renn W, Sommerwerck U, Jung M F, Buettner U W, Zaiser-Kaschel H, Kaschel R, Eggstein M, Jakober B
Department of Medicine, Eberhard-Karls University Tuebingen, Germany.
Diabetes. 1993 Apr;42(4):610-8. doi: 10.2337/diab.42.4.610.
To test the hypothesis that recurrent short-term hypoglycemic episodes may impair hormonal counterregulation, symptom awareness, and neurophysiological function during subsequent hypoglycemia, we examined two groups of IDDM patients (n = 18), neither of whom exhibited signs of autonomic neuropathy. Two sequential euglycemic-hypoglycemic clamp studies were performed three days apart with stable glycemic plateaus of 5.6, 3.3, 2.2, and 1.7 mM, at which the patients' awareness of and response to hypoglycemia was evaluated. In the intervention group (n = 11), three short-term hypoglycemic episodes preceded the second clamp study. Counterregulatory hormones increased significantly during hypoglycemia, but adrenaline (P < 0.03), cortisol (P < 0.01), and ACTH (albeit not significant) showed a blunted response after repetitive hypoglycemic events. In this group, the perception of hypoglycemic symptoms was significantly reduced and was most evident for the autonomic symptoms of sweating (P < 0.05), heart pounding (P < 0.01), and warmness (P < 0.03). The deterioration of neurophysiological function, as assessed from the middle latency auditory evoked potentials, was more pronounced in the intervention group (latency shift of the Pa component, P < 0.05). These data suggest that alterations of neuroendocrine counterregulation, symptom perception, and certain aspects of cerebral function may occur as a consequence of recurrent short-term hypoglycemic episodes. These adaptation phenomena may contribute to the increased incidence of severe hypoglycemia in IDDM patients on intensive insulin therapy.
为了验证反复出现的短期低血糖发作可能会损害后续低血糖期间的激素对抗调节、症状感知和神经生理功能这一假设,我们研究了两组1型糖尿病患者(n = 18),两组患者均未表现出自主神经病变的迹象。在间隔三天的时间里进行了两项连续的正常血糖-低血糖钳夹研究,血糖稳定平台分别为5.6、3.3、2.2和1.7 mM,在此期间评估患者对低血糖的感知和反应。在干预组(n = 11)中,第二次钳夹研究前有三次短期低血糖发作。低血糖期间,对抗调节激素显著增加,但重复低血糖事件后,肾上腺素(P < 0.03)、皮质醇(P < 0.01)和促肾上腺皮质激素(尽管不显著)的反应减弱。在该组中,低血糖症状的感知显著降低,出汗(P < 0.05)、心跳加速(P < 0.01)和发热(P < 0.03)等自主神经症状最为明显。根据中潜伏期听觉诱发电位评估,干预组神经生理功能的恶化更为明显(Pa成分的潜伏期移位,P < 0.05)。这些数据表明,反复出现的短期低血糖发作可能会导致神经内分泌对抗调节、症状感知和脑功能某些方面的改变。这些适应现象可能导致强化胰岛素治疗的1型糖尿病患者严重低血糖的发生率增加。