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Diabetes, Vol 38, Issue 2 262-266, Copyright © 1989 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

Effects of dietary treatment on serum insulin and proinsulin response in newly diagnosed NIDDM

N Yoshioka, T Kuzuya, A Matsuda and Y Iwamoto
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Jichi Medical School, Tochigi-ken, Japan.

Serum proinsulin is disproportionately elevated both in the basal state and after an oral glucose load in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). However, there is no detailed information about the effect of glycemic control on this abnormality. We investigated the effect of glycemic control by dietary treatment on serum proinsulin level in the basal state and in response to an oral glucose load. Ten NIDDM patients (7 men and 3 women), aged 19-60 yr, with mean (+/- SD) body mass index of 28 +/- 6 kg/m2 (range 21-42 kg/m2) and normal renal and liver function were studied. Before and after dietary therapy (25-30 kcal/kg ideal body wt), 100-g oral glucose tolerance tests were performed. Proinsulin was measured with our proinsulin-specific antiserum, which recognizes the connecting site of the B-chain of insulin and C-peptide. After dietary treatment, fasting plasma glucose decreased from 197 +/- 35 to 113 +/- 18 mg/dl (P less than .001). Both serum insulin and proinsulin decreased (insulin from 15 +/- 8 to 10 +/- 4 microU/ml, P less than .02; proinsulin from 31 +/- 18 to 13 +/- 5 pM, P less than .02), and the molar ratio of proinsulin to insulin also tended to decrease (from 0.321 +/- 0.08 to 0.24 +/- 0.10, P less than .10). Insulin response to oral glucose increased after dietary treatment, whereas proinsulin response did not change, resulting in a significant decrease in the molar ratio of the area under the curve of proinsulin to insulin after glucose load (from 0.28 +/- 0.12 to 0.13 +/- 0.07, P less than .001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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V. Grill, B. Dinesen, S. Carlsson, S. Efendic, O. Pedersen, and C.-G. Ostenson
Hyperproinsulinemia and Proinsulin-to-Insulin Ratios in Swedish Middle-aged Men: Association with Glycemia and Insulin Resistance but Not with Family History of Diabetes
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Copyright © 1989 by the American Diabetes Association.