“…In referring to this hypothesis, Mirsky and associates (46) have stated that such diabetes “is attributed to a relative insufficiency in the capacity of the pancreas to meet the increased peripheral requirements for insulin.” - ) In patients who have been operated upon for insulinoma, the postoperative hyperglycemia may disappear in association with a decline in the level of plasma insulin. Such hyperglycemia can be explained as readily by the high‐output failure of insulin release as by the usual explanation of “compensatory islet‐cell atrophy.” The decompensation in glucose tolerance associated with organic hyperinsulinism is exemplified by Watkins and Traylor's (47) case of a 4‐year‐old boy with a single islet‐cell adenoma which was successfully resected. The results of the first preoperative glucose tolerance test in this patient were as follows: blood glucose values (mg per 100 ml)—fasting, 22 mg; 30 minutes, 175 mg; 60 minutes, 182 mg; 90 minutes, 187 mg; 120 minutes, 123 mg; 150 minutes, 150 mg; 180 minutes, 55 mg; and 210 minutes, 22 mg. Another preoperative study sixteen months later gave the following results: fasting, 75 mg; 30 minutes, 320 mg; 60 minutes, 65 mg; 90 minutes, 162 mg; 120 minutes, 160 mg; and 180 minutes, 147 mg. Diabetes mellitus also has followed subtotal pancreatectomy for islet‐cell adenoma, either shortly after such surgery (48) or after a hiatus of several decades (49).
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