Effect of Clonidine on Insulin Secretion: A Case Report

We have recently seen a case of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus with hypertension in which chronic treatment with oral clonidine gave rise to elevation of blood glucose and decreased insulin secretion. When the response of insulin secretion to glucose administration during clonidine therapy was compared with that after 12 days of wash-out for clonidine in this patient (who was then receiving phentolamine mesylate), there was a marked suppression of insulin secretion to stimulation by intravenous glucose during oral clonidine therapy. This result indicates that the decreased insulin secretion associated with oral clonidine therapy is very unlikely to be due to any direct action of clonidine on β cells of the pancreatic islets and may be due to suppression of catecholamine release via central α-adrenergic receptor stimulation.