OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the effect of gastric emptying on postprandial insulinrequirement in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients with and without gastroparesis.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
Postprandial insulin requirement and gastric emptying were simultaneously evaluated in five IDDM patients with gastroparesis and in six control IDDM patients without gastroparesis. Postprandial insulin requirement after test-meal intake was assessed by measuring the insulin infusion rate during a 4-h feedback control with an artificial endocrine pancreas device (Biostator, Life Science Instruments, Miles, Elkhart, IN). Gastric solid and liquid emptyings were evaluated during the Biostator study by measuring the disappearance rate of 99mTc in the stomach and in the time course of plasma acetaminophen concentration, respectively.
RESULTS
Total insulin requirement during the first 120 min after the test-meal intake was significantly lower in the gastroparetic patients than in the control patients. The gastroparetic patients showed no apparent postprandial peak for insulin infusion rate during the 4-h study, although the peak rate was observed within 120 min after the test-meal intake in the control patients. The disappearance of 99mTc in the stomach was significantly slower, and plasma acetaminophen concentrations were significantlylower in the gastroparetic patients compared with those in the control patients, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
The results suggest that IDDM patients with gastroparesis, accompanied by impaired solid and liquid emptying, have an altered postprandial insulin requirement.
Preliminary results obtained from a small number of patients suggest that EM523L or erythromycin analogs, which have agonistic activity to motilin receptors as well as no antibacterial effect, may be useful to accelerate gastric emptying and improve insulin requirement patterns, thereby establishing more stable glycemic control.
Fecal fat excretion, fecal mass, fecal fat concentration, and the coefficient of fat absorption were evaluated in 31 normal Japanese subjects with a mean fat consumption of 61.8 g and compared with the values in 43 Japanese patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP) with a fat consumption of 40.2 g. Fecal fatty acids were analyzed by the gas chromatographic method. Fecal fat excretion by normal individuals was 1.7 +/- 1.0 (Mean +/- SD) g/day (range, 0.4-4.9 g/day). Steatorrhea was therefore defined as fecal fat excretion that exceeded 5.0 g/day. The patients with CP were divided into three groups: non-steatorrhea (fecal fat < 5.0 g/day), chemical steatorrhea (fecal fat > or = 5 g/day and no appearance of fatty stool), and manifest steatorrhea (evaluated from the appearance of fatty stool). In addition, we investigated the correlation between fecal fat excretion and pancreatic exocrine function, obtained by the pancreozymin-secretin (or secretin) test in 24 controls and 30 CP patients. Fecal fat excretion by CP patients was 9.1 +/- 8.8 g/day, which was significantly higher (P < 0.01) than that of controls. There were 28 (65%) CP patients with steatorrhea. Of these, 15 (35%) showed chemical steatorrhea and 13 (30%) manifest steatorrhea. In CP patients, the fecal mass (250.5 +/- 133.6 g vs control, 125.6 +/- 52.5 g), fecal fat concentration (3.40 +/- 2.16 g% vs control, 1.48 +/- 0.89 g%), and coefficient of fat absorption (77.3 +/- 20.2% vs control, 97.2 +/- 1.7%) all showed significant differences from the controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.