Davis S N, Shavers C, Davis B, Costa F
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA.
J Clin Invest. 1997 Jul 15;100(2):429-38. doi: 10.1172/JCI119550.
The aim of this study was to determine whether preventing increases in plasma cortisol during antecedent hypoglycemia preserves autonomic nervous system counterregulatory responses during subsequent hypoglycemia. Experiments were carried out on 15 (8 male/7 female) healthy, overnight-fasted subjects and 8 (4 male/4 female) age- and weight-matched patients with primary adrenocortical failure. 5 d before a study, patients had their usual glucocorticoid therapy replaced with a continuous subcutaneous infusion of cortisol programmed to produce normal daily circadian levels. Both groups underwent identical 2-d experiments. On day 1, insulin was infused at a rate of 1.5 mU/kg per min, and 2-h clamped hypoglycemia (53+/-2 mg/dl) was obtained during the morning and afternoon. The next morning, subjects underwent an additional 2-h hypoglycemic (53+/-2 mg/ dl) hyperinsulinemic clamp. In controls, day 2 steady state epinephrine, norepinephrine, pancreatic polypeptide, glucagon, growth hormone, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity were significantly blunted (P < 0.01) compared with day 1 hypoglycemia. In marked contrast, when increases of plasma cortisol were prevented in the patient group, day 2 neuroendocrine, muscle sympathetic nerve activity, hypoglycemic symptoms, and metabolic counterregulatory responses were equivalent with day 1 results. We conclude that (a) prevention of increases of cortisol during antecedent hypoglycemia preserves many critical autonomic nervous system counterregulatory responses to subsequent hypoglycemia; (b) hypoglycemia-induced increases in plasma cortisol levels are a major mechanism responsible for causing subsequent hypoglycemic counterregulatory failure; and (c) our results suggest that other mechanisms, apart from cortisol, do not play a major role in causing hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure.
本研究的目的是确定在先前低血糖期间防止血浆皮质醇升高是否能在随后的低血糖期间保留自主神经系统的对抗调节反应。对15名(8名男性/7名女性)健康的、夜间禁食的受试者和8名(4名男性/4名女性)年龄和体重匹配的原发性肾上腺皮质功能不全患者进行了实验。在研究前5天,患者将其常规糖皮质激素治疗替换为持续皮下输注皮质醇,其程序设定为产生正常的每日昼夜节律水平。两组均进行相同的2天实验。在第1天,以每分钟1.5 mU/kg的速率输注胰岛素,并在上午和下午获得2小时的低血糖钳夹(53±2 mg/dl)。第二天早上,受试者接受额外的2小时低血糖(53±2 mg/dl)高胰岛素钳夹。在对照组中,与第1天的低血糖相比,第2天的稳态肾上腺素、去甲肾上腺素、胰多肽、胰高血糖素、生长激素和肌肉交感神经活动明显减弱(P<0.01)。与之形成鲜明对比的是,当患者组中血浆皮质醇的升高被阻止时,第2天的神经内分泌、肌肉交感神经活动、低血糖症状和代谢对抗调节反应与第1天的结果相当。我们得出以下结论:(a)在先前低血糖期间防止皮质醇升高可保留许多关键的自主神经系统对随后低血糖的对抗调节反应;(b)低血糖诱导的血浆皮质醇水平升高是导致随后低血糖对抗调节失败的主要机制;(c)我们的结果表明,除皮质醇外,其他机制在导致低血糖相关自主神经功能衰竭方面不起主要作用。