Metabolism: clinical and experimental
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It has been suggested that serum insulin levels in subjects with recently diagnosed type II diabetes have been overestimated, and that after correction for proinsulin, true insulin levels are depressed rather than elevated. We tested this possibility in a cross-sectional study of a population-based sample of 328 adults living in Wadena, a Minnesota community in which residents are of northern European background. Specificity of insulin measurements was provided by an antibody blind to proinsulin and its major metabolite. ⋯ There was marked overlap of individual insulin levels from group to group. In summary, randomly selected adults in Wadena with IGT or asymptomatic diabetes showed, on average, elevated insulin levels, but physician-diagnosed diabetes was associated with relative diminution of serum insulin. In this population, the current view of insulin resistance in "early" diabetes was supported by insulin-specific measurements.