Effect of Acute Hyperglycemia on Insulin Secretion in Humans
- Elena Toschi1,
- Stefania Camastra1,
- Anna Maria Sironi1,
- Antonio Masoni1,
- Amalia Gastaldelli1,
- Andrea Mari2,
- Ele Ferrannini1 and
- Andrea Natali1
- 1Metabolism Unit, CNR Institute of Clinical Physiology, and the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy
- 2CNR Institute of Systems Science and Biomedical Engineering, Padova, Italy
Abstract
First-phase insulin response to intravenous glucose is impaired both in type 2 diabetic patients and in subjects at risk for the disease. Hyperglycemia can modify β-cell response by either inhibiting or potentiating both first- and second-phase insulin release. In normal subjects, the effect of acute hyperglycemia on insulin secretion is controversial. We measured (in 13 healthy volunteers) insulin secretion (by deconvolution of plasma C-peptide concentrations) during three consecutive 30-min hyperglycemic steps (2.8, 2.8, and 5.6 mmol/l), followed by an intravenous arginine bolus. First-phase insulin secretion in response to the first hyperglycemic step (456 ± 83 pmol · min−1 · m−2) was significantly larger than that in response to the second step (311 ± 37 pmol · min−1 · m−2, P < 0.01); the subsequent increase in glycemia failed to stimulate first-phase secretion any further (377 ± 60 pmol · min−1 · m−2, NS vs. the previous value). This inhibition was also evident when insulin release rates were corrected for the respective increments (absolute or percentage) in plasma glucose levels and was not due to β-cell exhaustion because the arginine bolus still elicited a large peak of insulin secretion (4,790 ± 2,330 pmol · min−1 · m−2). In contrast, second-phase insulin secretion was related to the prevailing glucose levels across the three hyperglycemic steps in a direct quasilinear manner. We conclude that first-phase insulin secretion is inhibited by short-term modest hyperglycemia, whereas the second-phase insulin secretion increases linearly with hyperglycemia.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Elena Toschi, MD, CNR Institute of Clinical Physiology, Via Savi, 8, 56126 Pisa, Italy.
Accepted for publication 17 May 2001.
The symposium and the publication of this article have been made possible by an unrestricted educational grant from Servier, Paris.














