Hyperglycemia inhibits glucose production in man independent of changes in glucoregulatory hormones.

To evaluate the influence of hyperglycemia on hepatic glucose output in the absence of a rise in insulin, glucose was infused for 2 hours into six juvenile-onset diabetics receiving a constant infusion of insulin at a rate of 0.05-0.15 microM kg-1min-1. Prior to the infusion of glucose, insulin administration resulted in stable levels of plasma glucose (76 +/- 8 mg/dl) and glucose output (1.9 +/- 0.1 mg kg-1min-1). The addition of glucose produced a 2-3 fold rise in plasma glucose and a prompt fall in glucose output to 0.2-0.4 mg kg-1min-1, despite the unchanged rate of insulin infusion and the absence of a reduction in plasma glucagon or catecholamines. A similar decline in glucose output was observed when exogenous glucagon (1 ng kg-1-min-1) was added to the glucose infusion. We conclude that in the presence of basal insulin levels hyperglycemia inhibits glucose output independent of a rise in insulin or a fall in anti-insulin hormones.

[1]  M. Vranic,et al.  Glucose kinetics and fatty acids in dogs on matched insulin infusion after glucose load. , 1971, Metabolism: clinical and experimental.

[2]  P. Felig,et al.  Influence of endogenous insulin secretion on splanchnic glucose and amino acid metabolism in man. , 1971, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[3]  H. Hers,et al.  The control of glycogen metabolism in the liver , 1970, FEBS letters.

[4]  R. Steele,et al.  INHIBITION BY INSULIN OF HEPATIC GLUCOSE PRODUCTION IN THE NORMAL DOG. , 1965, The American journal of physiology.

[5]  M Berman,et al.  Insulin control of glucose metabolism in man: a new kinetic analysis. , 1975, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[6]  R. Bergman Integrated control of hepatic glucose metabolism. , 1977, Federation proceedings.

[7]  E. Cerasi,et al.  Splanchnic and peripheral glucose and amino acid metabolism in diabetes mellitus. , 1972, The Journal of clinical investigation.