Elevated plasma glucose 2 h postchallenge predicts defects in beta-cell function.

Studies were performed in subjects with no known family history of diabetes, normoglycemic subjects who have first-degree relatives with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), and subjects with nondiagnostic oral glucose tolerance tests (NDX) or impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). Insulin sensitivity index (SI) was similar in all four groups. However, a number of defects in insulin secretion were seen in the NDX and IGT groups, including reduced first-phase insulin secretory responses in intravenous glucose in relation to the degree of insulin resistance, and reduced normalized spectral power of insulin secretion during oscillatory glucose infusion. The latter finding demonstrates a decreased ability of the beta-cell to detect and respond to the successive increases and decreases in glucose and therefore to be entrained by the exogenous glucose infusion. The ability of a low-dose glucose infusion to prime the insulin secretory response to a subsequent glucose stimulus was normal in subjects with IGT but reduced or absent in subjects with overt NIDDM. These studies demonstrate that a number of alterations in beta-cell function are detectable in nondiabetic first-degree relatives of subjects with NIDDM with mild elevations in the 2-h postchallenge glucose level, and these abnormalities antedate the onset of overt hyperglycemia and clinical diabetes.

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