Aims/hypothesis. The role of glucose sensing cells in the human hepatic portal system in the initiation of the neuroendocrine responses to acute hypoglycaemia is not known. We investigated the effect of raising blood glucose concentrations in the hepatic-portal vein on neurohumoral responses during induction of systemic hypoglycaemia in nine healthy male volunteers. Methods. Each subject received an insulin infusion (3 mU·kg -1 ·min -1 ) on two occasions, in random order. Variable rate glucose infusion was used to maintain plasma glucose at 5 mmol/l for 60 min, then 3.2 mmol/l for 60 min. At 20 min prior to hypoglycaemia, subjects drank 20 g of glucose in water or water sweetened with saccharin. In five of the volunteers, the oral glucose was labelled with U-13C6 glucose, which showed peak systemic glucose absorption between 90 and 110 min. Five volunteers also repeated the study with a euglycaemic clamp.Results. Oral glucose was associated with a reduction in the early adrenaline response to hypoglycaemia, the area under the curve from 90 to 110 min falling from 24.02±20.84 (means ± SD) to 15. vere hypoglycaemia during the pharmacological treatment of diabetes mellitus. The inability to generate or detect the warning symptoms of early hypoglycaemia puts diabetic patients at high risk of episodes of severe hypoglycaemia [1] and often the fear of hypoglycaemia limits the optimisation of glycaemic control [2]. Associated with loss of subjective awareness of hypoglycaemia is a lowering of the glucose concentration required to initiate the counterregulatory response to hypoglycaemia, as well as a reduction in the magnitude and intensity of the counterregulatory response at any given blood glucose concentration [3,4,5]. The speculation that these defects are principally the result of defective glucose sensing gains support from data showing similar changes in the neuroendocrine rePerception of a minor decrease in plasma glucose concentration and initiation of a counterregulatory response are essential factors in the defence against se-