TY - JOUR
T1 - A novel measure of glucose homeostasis (Or loss thereof) comprising the joint dynamics of glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cortisol
AU - Keenan, Daniel M.
AU - Veldhuis, Johannes D.
AU - Basu, Ananda
AU - Basu, Rita
N1 - Funding Information:
The research was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Health National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases Grant DK-29953, entitled “Mechanisms of Insulin Resistance in Man” (to R. Basu).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 the American Physiological Society.
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - Quantification of disturbances in glucose-insulin homeostasis has been the cornerstone of appraising insulin resistance and detecting early-stage diabetes. Metabolic homeostasis arises from feedback and feed-forward interactions among (at least) all four of glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cortisol. Quantifying such tetrapartite interactions in the fasting (endogenously regulated) state overnight could elucidate very early regulatory disruption. In the present study, healthy subjects without diabetes (ND; n = 20) and patients with Type 2 diabetes (T2D; n = 21) were investigated by repeated overnight blood sampling of all four of glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cortisol concentrations. To obviate confounding by hormone-specific disappearance rates, analyses were performed at the level of production (glucose) or secretion (insulin, glucagon, and cortisol) rates estimated by regularized deconvolution analysis. Then, a novel method for quantifying the loss of homeostasis among glucose, insulin, and glucagon (and, when available, cortisol) secretion patterns was developed. Potential early stage prediabetic candidates were identified. The new methodology avoids many of the difficulties encountered in the conventional estimation of insulin-glucose sensitivity or resistance, while incorporating the dynamics of the key coregulators under fasting conditions.
AB - Quantification of disturbances in glucose-insulin homeostasis has been the cornerstone of appraising insulin resistance and detecting early-stage diabetes. Metabolic homeostasis arises from feedback and feed-forward interactions among (at least) all four of glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cortisol. Quantifying such tetrapartite interactions in the fasting (endogenously regulated) state overnight could elucidate very early regulatory disruption. In the present study, healthy subjects without diabetes (ND; n = 20) and patients with Type 2 diabetes (T2D; n = 21) were investigated by repeated overnight blood sampling of all four of glucose, insulin, glucagon, and cortisol concentrations. To obviate confounding by hormone-specific disappearance rates, analyses were performed at the level of production (glucose) or secretion (insulin, glucagon, and cortisol) rates estimated by regularized deconvolution analysis. Then, a novel method for quantifying the loss of homeostasis among glucose, insulin, and glucagon (and, when available, cortisol) secretion patterns was developed. Potential early stage prediabetic candidates were identified. The new methodology avoids many of the difficulties encountered in the conventional estimation of insulin-glucose sensitivity or resistance, while incorporating the dynamics of the key coregulators under fasting conditions.
KW - Deconvolution
KW - Diabetes
KW - Insulin resistance
KW - Secretion
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U2 - 10.1152/ajpendo.00078.2018
DO - 10.1152/ajpendo.00078.2018
M3 - Article
C2 - 30860881
AN - SCOPUS:85066411024
SN - 0193-1849
VL - 316
SP - E998-E1011
JO - American Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism
JF - American Journal of Physiology - Endocrinology and Metabolism
IS - 6
ER -