Diabetes, Vol 44, Issue 8 954-962, Copyright © 1995 by American Diabetes Association
Insulin sensitivity accounts for glucose and lactate kinetics after intravenous glucose injection
RM Watanabe, J Lovejoy, GM Steil, M DiGirolamo and RN Bergman
University of Southern California, Department of Exercise Science, USA.
Mathematical modeling was used to explore the interaction between glucose,
insulin, and lactate during the frequently sampled intravenous glucose
tolerance test (FSIGTT). Insulin-modified FSIGTs were performed in 25 lean
volunteers, and an additional 5 volunteers underwent FSIGTs with glucose
injection alone to illustrate the effect of insulin on both glucose and
lactate kinetics. The model chosen as the best representation of the system
extended the minimal model of glucose kinetics (MM) by including a
two-compartment model of lactate kinetics. The model accounted for both
glucose and lactate kinetics, provided traditional MM parameters of insulin
sensitivity and glucose effectiveness, and descriptive parameters of
lactate kinetics. Modeling suggested that lactate production was limited by
the rate of glucose disappearance, with no indication of direct effects of
insulin on lactate. Inclusion of lactate kinetics had no adverse effect on
MM parameters (SG: 0.023 +/- 0.009 vs. 0.023 +/- 0.010 min-1, SI: 1.01 +/-
0.70 vs. 1.03 +/- 0.71 x 10(4).min-1.pmol-1.1; P > 0.50, lactate model
vs. MM), and indicated that approximately 1.2% min-1 of total glucose
disappearance during the FSIGT is converted to lactate. An additional
benefit of including lactate kinetics was the significant improvement in
precision in MM parameter estimates as reflected by the fractional standard
deviations (FSDs). This effect was most prominent for SG, in which a
threefold improvement in parameter precision was observed (FSD: 13.5 +/-
3.1 vs. 42.5 +/- 48.5; means +/- SD).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)