The changes in peripheral serum insulin and plasma C-peptide levels and in the insulin secretory rate in response to iv glucose (0.5 g/kg BW) administration were studied in seven normal subjects. Insulin secretory rates were calculated according to a two-compartment model of distribution for C-peptide, using individual C-peptide kinetics calculated from iv bolus injections of biosynthetic human C-peptide. The mean plasma glucose level increased from a fasting level of 5.1 +/- 0.1 (+/- SE) to a peak of 24.0 +/- 1.0 mmol/L at 3 min and reached basal levels 101 +/- 6 min after glucose administration. The mean serum insulin value increased from 50 +/- 12 to a peak of 405 +/- 58 pmol/L at 3 min and then declined to fasting levels 139 +/- 14 min after the stimulus. In contrast, the mean plasma C-peptide level increased from 390 +/- 50 to a peak of 1460 +/- 210 pmol/L at 3 min and only began declining 45 min after glucose administration, reaching fasting levels 191 +/- 15 min after the stimulus. The mean insulin secretory rate increased from 69.8 +/- 19.9 to a peak of 1412.7 +/- 159.1 pmol/min at 3 min (15.3 +/- 2.5-fold elevation over baseline) and reached basal levels 135 +/- 12 min after the stimulus. The clearance of endogenous insulin during the basal period (2.505 +/- 0.365 L/min) and that during the 4 h after the stimulus (2.319 +/- 0.230 L/min) were similar. In conclusion, after bolus iv glucose administration: 1) the insulin secretory rate is more closely represented by changes in peripheral serum insulin than in plasma C-peptide levels; and 2) no change in endogenous insulin clearance occurs.
Ninety-nine patients suspected of having pancreatic carcinoma were studied prospectively for carbohydrate tolerance. Thirty-two patients were proven subsequently to have pancreatic carcinoma; the remainder served as a control group. There was an increased incidence of carbohydrate intolerance in patients with pancreatic carcinoma compared to the control group. Insulin and C-peptide measurements during glucose tolerance tests suggest abnormal beta cell function and possibly insulin resistance as causes for this abnormality. Although factors related to malignancy in general could partly account for the results, a specific factor occurring in patients with pancreatic carcinoma must also be considered as it could serve as a marker for the early detection of this disease.
Pancreatic beta cells secrete the proinsulin connecting peptide (C-peptide) and insulin on an equimolar basis. The C-peptide can thus be used as an indicator of endogenous insulin secretion in the presence of exogenously administered insulin. Using this approach, we have shown suppression of endogenous insulin release in healthy subjects during hypoglycemia induced by intravenous infusion of porcine insulin. Moreover, the suppression persists after the plasma glucose returns to fasting levels, suggesting that the recovery of beta cells from the effects of hypoglycemia is not immediate.
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