Diabetes, Vol 48, Issue 1 141-145, Copyright © 1999 by American Diabetes Association
Effects of recurrent hypoglycemia on brainstem function in diabetic BB rats: protective adaptation during acute hypoglycemia
RJ Jacob, J Dziura, M Blumberg, JP Morgen and RS Sherwin
Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8020, USA. ralph.jacob@yale.edu
To determine whether antecedent recurrent hypoglycemia protects the brain
from the adverse effects of a standardized hypoglycemic stimulus, we
implanted electrodes in the inferior colliculi of diabetic rats to directly
record inferior colliculi auditory-evoked potentials (ICEPs). Awake,
chronically catheterized BB rats were studied after 2 weeks of insulin
therapy designed to produce either chronic hyperglycemia (hyper-DM,
glycated hemoglobin 7.6 +/- 0.4%) or recurrent hypoglycemia (hypo-DM,
glycated hemoglobin 6.2 +/- 0.7%), and the results were compared with those
observed in nondiabetic rats. When plasma glucose was lowered to and
clamped at 2.8 mmol/l, the release of catecholamines was suppressed in the
hypo-DM rats (epinephrine: 2.5 +/- 0.4 nmol/l) as compared with hyper-DM
and the nondiabetic rats (9.3 +/- 2.3 and 32.7 +/- 6.1 nmol/l,
respectively). ICEP latency was significantly delayed in hyper-DM and
nondiabetic rats (P < 0.001), but it was unchanged in hypo-DM rats. A
more pronounced reduction in plasma glucose (2.0 mmol/l), however, provoked
a greater adrenergic response than that seen at 2.8 mmol/l and delayed ICEP
latency by 23% in a separate group of hypo-DM animals. These data
demonstrate that antecedent recurrent hypoglycemia attenuates the brainstem
dysfunction associated with mild to moderate, but not severe, hypoglycemia
in diabetic rats. This phenomenon may contribute to the alterations in
hypoglycemia counterregulation seen in diabetic patients during intensive
insulin therapy.