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Diabetes, Vol 46, Issue 2 249-257, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Pancreas transplantation restores epinephrine response and symptom recognition during hypoglycemia in patients with long-standing type I diabetes and autonomic neuropathy
DM Kendall, DP Rooney, YF Smets, L Salazar Bolding and RP Robertson
Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA. kendall@lenti.med.umn.edu
Impaired epinephrine secretion and symptom unawareness are characteristic
of severe hypoglycemia in individuals with long-standing type I diabetes.
Recently, the avoidance of clinical hypoglycemia has been reported to
improve epinephrine and symptom responses to hypoglycemia in type I
patients. However, the extent to which these defects can be restored in
individuals with long-standing type I diabetes and autonomic neuropathy has
not been assessed, nor has it been determined whether pancreas
transplantation, which not only obviates hypoglycemia but also prevents
hyperglycemia, results in the complete recovery of either epinephrine
response or symptom awareness during insulin-induced hypoglycemia. We
performed stepped hypoglycemic clamp studies in successful pancreas
transplantation recipients to assess epinephrine and other
counterregulatory hormone responses during hypoglycemia and to determine
the degree to which hypoglycemic symptom recognition could be restored.
Thirteen pancreas transplant recipients and matched control subjects were
studied utilizing stepped hypoglycemic clamp protocol to achieve target
glucose levels of 3.9, 3.3, 2.8, and 2.2 mmol/l (70, 60, 50, and 40 mg/dl,
respectively). Plasma epinephrine response was significantly greater in
healthy control subjects and pancreas transplant patients compared with
type I subjects at the glucose plateaus of 3.9, 3.3, and 2.8 mmol/l.
However, epinephrine response in pancreas transplant recipients was
significantly less than that seen in either healthy control subjects or
nondiabetic kidney transplant recipients at each of these glucose plateaus.
The magnitude of the epinephrine response in pancreas transplant type I
patients did not correlate with either the duration of diabetes, the
duration of transplantation, or the measures of autonomic nerve function.
Hypoglycemic symptom recognition was significantly greater in pancreas
transplant subjects than type I patients and did not differ between
pancreas transplant and control groups. No improvement in norepinephrine
response was observed after pancreas transplantation, while glucagon
responses to hypoglycemia were normalized in pancreas transplant patients.
In conclusion, these studies uniquely demonstrate that successful pancreas
transplantation improves epinephrine response and normalizes hypoglycemia
symptom recognition in patients with long-standing diabetes and established
autonomic neuropathy. No correlation was observed between the severity of
autonomic neuropathy or the duration of diabetes and the recovery of either
the epinephrine or symptom responses to hypoglycemia.

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Copyright © 1997 by the American Diabetes Association.
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