Diabetes
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Comparative Study
Mechanisms of arterial hypotension after therapeutic dose of subcutaneous insulin in diabetic autonomic neuropathy.
To assess whether a therapeutic, subcutaneous injection of insulin exerts hemodynamic effects in subjects with IDDM, 0.2 U/kg regular insulin was injected subcutaneously in 17 IDDM subjects: 6 without autonomic neuropathy, 7 with autonomic neuropathy and othostatic hypotension, and 4 with autonomic neuropathy but without orthostatic hypotension. Plasma glucose was maintained at approximately 8.5 mM throughout the studies. Mean blood pressure, plasma norepinephrine concentration, forearm vascular resistances, and calf venous volume were measured before and 120 min after subcutaneous insulin, in the supine position and 5 min after standing. ⋯ No hemodynamic effects were observed when subjects with IDDM were restudied in a control experiment where placebo (distilled water), not insulin, was injected subcutaneously. In conclusion, therapeutic doses of subcutaneous insulin activate the sympathetic nervous system; decrease blood pressure in subjects with IDDM with autonomic neuropathy, but not in those without, primarily by decreasing arterial vascular resistances and plasma volume; and have no effects of capacitance vessels. Thus, in subjects with IDDM without autonomic neuropathy, greater activation of sympathetic nervous system after subcutaneous injection of insulin prevents orthostatic hypotension.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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These studies tested the hypothesis that physiological increments in plasma insulin concentrations have selective effects on the synthesis of hepatic proteins in humans. Leucine kinetics and fractional synthetic rates of albumin, fibrinogen, antithrombin III, and apoB-100 were determined in 6 normal subjects, on two different occasions during either the infusion of saline (control study) or a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic (0.4 mU.kg-1 x min-1 for 240 min) clamp, by a primed-constant infusion of [1-14C]Leu. ⋯ Thus, the insulin-induced decrement in the estimates of whole-body protein synthesis (nonoxidative Leu disposal) represents the mean result of opposite effects of hyperinsulinemia on the synthesis of proteins with different functions. The positive effect of insulin on albumin synthesis may play an important anabolic role during nutrient absorption by promoting the capture of a relevant amount of dietary essential amino acids into the protein, whereas the negative effect of insulin on fibrinogen synthesis might, at least partially, account for the increased plasma fibrinogen concentrations previously reported in poorly controlled diabetic patients.