Duration of type I diabetes affects glucagon and glucose responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia

West J Med. 1984 Oct;141(4):467-71.

Abstract

The glucagon response to hypoglycemia, which fulfills a primary role toward restoring the plasma glucose level, is blunted or absent in most patients with type I diabetes. To identify predictive factors for this abnormality and for the capability of glycemic counterregulation, we investigated the relationship between the duration of diabetes and glucagon and glucose responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. In 18 type I diabetic patients with 1 through 28 years of disease who had no detectable autonomic neuropathy, individual glucagon increments after insulin hypoglycemia were inversely correlated with the duration of disease (r = -.53, P < .025). Patients with disease for ten or fewer years showed a glucagon rise that was lower than in controls but significantly higher than in patients with a duration of more than ten years. The plasma glucose rise after the nadir correlated with peak glucagon increments (r = .60, P < .01); eight of the nine patients with glycemic increments comparable to normals had had diabetes for ten years or less. Thus, having diabetes for more than ten years implied that not only were glucagon responses to insulin hypoglycemia severely compromised but also that the abrupt restoration of plasma glucose levels was impaired. These findings should be taken into account when establishing goals and modalities for tight metabolic control.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Blood Glucose / analysis*
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 / blood*
  • Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 / drug therapy
  • Female
  • Glucagon / blood*
  • Humans
  • Hypoglycemia / blood*
  • Hypoglycemia / chemically induced
  • Insulin / adverse effects*
  • Male
  • Prognosis
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Blood Glucose
  • Insulin
  • Glucagon