Gumbiner B, Van Cauter E, Beltz W F, Ditzler T M, Griver K, Polonsky K S, Henry R R
Department of Medicine, Monroe Community Hospital, Rochester, New York 14620, USA.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1996 Jun;81(6):2061-8. doi: 10.1210/jcem.81.6.8964829.
Twenty-seven obese patients, including 8 with normal glucose tolerance, 10 with subclinical NIDDM, and 9 with overt noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), were studied before and after prolonged weight loss to assess the effects of the underlying defects of diabetes per se from those of obesity and chronic hyperglycemia on the regulation of pulsatile insulin secretion. Serial measurements of insulin secretion and plasma glucose were obtained during 3 standardized mixed meals consumed over 12 h. Insulin secretion rates were calculated by deconvoluting plasma C peptide levels using a mathematical model for C peptide clearance and kinetic parameters derived individually in each subject. Absolute (nadir to peak) and relative (fold increase above nadir) amplitudes of each insulin secretory pulse and glucose oscillation were calculated. Compared to the obese controls, the subclinical and overt NIDDM patients manifested the following abnormal responses: 1) decreased relative amplitudes of insulin pulses, 2) reduced frequency of glucose oscillations, 3) increased absolute amplitudes of glucose oscillations, 4) decreased temporal concomitance between peaks of insulin pulses and glucose oscillations, 5) reduced correlation between the relative amplitudes of glucose oscillations concomitant with insulin pulses, and 6) temporal disorganization of the insulin pulse profiles. These defects were more severe in the overt NIDDM patients, and weight loss only partially reversed these abnormalities in both NIDDM groups. These findings indicate that beta-cell responsiveness is reduced, and the regulation of insulin secretion is abnormal under physiological conditions in all patients with NIDDM, including those without clinical manifestations of the disease. These abnormalities are not completely normalized with weight loss, even in patients who achieve metabolic control comparable to that in obese controls. The results are consistent with the presence of an inherent beta-cell defect that contributes to secretory derangements in subclinical NIDDM patients. This abnormality precedes frank hyperglycemia and may ultimately contribute to the development of overt NIDDM.
对27名肥胖患者进行了研究,其中包括8名糖耐量正常者、10名亚临床非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)患者和9名显性非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病患者,在长期体重减轻前后进行研究,以评估糖尿病本身的潜在缺陷与肥胖和慢性高血糖对脉冲式胰岛素分泌调节的影响。在12小时内食用的3顿标准化混合餐期间,连续测量胰岛素分泌和血糖。使用C肽清除数学模型和每个受试者单独得出的动力学参数,通过反卷积血浆C肽水平来计算胰岛素分泌率。计算每个胰岛素分泌脉冲和葡萄糖振荡的绝对(最低点到峰值)和相对(最低点以上的增加倍数)幅度。与肥胖对照组相比,亚临床和显性NIDDM患者表现出以下异常反应:1)胰岛素脉冲的相对幅度降低;2)葡萄糖振荡频率降低;3)葡萄糖振荡的绝对幅度增加;4)胰岛素脉冲峰值与葡萄糖振荡之间的时间同步性降低;5)与胰岛素脉冲同时出现的葡萄糖振荡相对幅度之间的相关性降低;6)胰岛素脉冲轮廓的时间紊乱。这些缺陷在显性NIDDM患者中更为严重,体重减轻仅部分逆转了两个NIDDM组中的这些异常。这些发现表明,在所有NIDDM患者中,包括那些没有该疾病临床表现的患者,在生理条件下β细胞反应性降低,胰岛素分泌调节异常。即使在实现了与肥胖对照组相当的代谢控制的患者中,这些异常也不会因体重减轻而完全恢复正常。结果与存在内在β细胞缺陷一致,该缺陷导致亚临床NIDDM患者的分泌紊乱。这种异常在明显高血糖之前出现,最终可能导致显性NIDDM的发展。