THE ROLES OF CATECHOLAMINES IN GLUCOREGULATION IN INTENSE EXERCISE ASDEFINED BY THE ISLET-CELL CLAMP TECHNIQUE

Citation
Rj. Sigal et al., THE ROLES OF CATECHOLAMINES IN GLUCOREGULATION IN INTENSE EXERCISE ASDEFINED BY THE ISLET-CELL CLAMP TECHNIQUE, Diabetes, 45(2), 1996, pp. 148-156
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Endocrynology & Metabolism","Medicine, General & Internal
Journal title
ISSN journal
00121797
Volume
45
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
148 - 156
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-1797(1996)45:2<148:TROCIG>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Exercise at >85% Vo(2max) causes the greatest known physiological incr eases in glucose production rates (R(a)). To define the relative roles of catecholamine versus glucagon/insulin responses in stimulating R(a ), normal subjects in the postabsorptive state exercised at 87 +/- 2% Vo(2max) during an islet cell clamp (IC): intravenous octreotide (soma tostatiu analog), 30 ng . kg(-1). min(-1) glucagon, 0.8 ng . kg(-1). m in(-1); growth hormone, 10 ng . k(-1) min(-1); and insulin adjusted to achieve euglycemia, then constant 56 +/- 7 min before exercise, Seven control subjects exercised without an IC. In four subjects (IC-1) wit h hormone infusions held constant during exercise, plasma insulin rose 76% and glucagon 35%, perhaps because of altered hemodynamics. In sev en subjects (IC-2), hormone infusions were decreased stepwise during e xercise and returned stepwise to initial rates during early recovery. R(a) increased sixfold in control and both IC groups. Plasma norepinep hrine and epinephrine likewise increased >12-fold with no differences among groups; both catecholamines correlated closely with R(a). Becaus e mixed venous blood plasma insulin declined and glucagon did not chan ge in control subjects, the glucagon-to-insulin ratio increased from 0 .20 to 0.26 (P = 0.02). In IC subjects, plasma insulin increased and g lucagon was either constant (IC-2) or increased less than insulin, res ulting in nonsignificant declines in the immunoreactive glucose-to-imm unoreactive insulin ratio. Although a rise in insulin would have been expected to attenuate the R(a) increment, this effect was overridden. The strong correlations of R(a) with catecholamines and the similar R( a) responses despite divergent glucagon-to-insulin responses are consi stent with the primacy of catecholamines in regulation of R(a) in inte nse exercise.