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Cyclic Oscillations of Basal Plasma Glucose and Insulin Concentrations in Human Beings

List of authors.
  • D. A. Lang, M.B.,
  • D. R. Matthews, D. Phil.,
  • J. Peto, M.SC,
  • and R. C. Turner, M.D.

Abstract

In a study of whether oscillations in plasma glucose and insulin occur in human beings, plasma samples were taken at one-minute intervals from 10 normal subjects for periods lasting between one and two hours. In five subjects the basal plasma insulin concentrations cycled regularly, with a mean period of 13 minutes and mean amplitude of 1.6 mU per liter (11.5 pmol per liter). A concurrent plasma glucose cycle was demonstrated, with a mean amplitude (after averaging to minimize random error) of 0.05 mmol per liter (1 mg per deciliter). The average plasma glucose cycle was two minutes in advance of the plasma insulin. In the subjects with less regular plasma insulin cycles, a similar plasma glucose rise was demonstrated two minutes before the insulin rise. These phase relations are compatible with the presence of a negative-feedback loop between the liver and pancreatic beta cells that regulates both basal plasma insulin and glucose concentrations, although the cyclic beta-cell secretion could be independent of plasma glucose (N Engl J Med 301:1023–1027, 1979)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by grants from the Novo Research Institute and the Charles Wolfson Charitable Trust.

Presented at the 14th annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, Zagreb, Yugoslavia, September, 1978.

We are grateful to Mrs. E. Harris, Mrs. C. Uren, Mrs. M. Beeton and Miss P. Harding for their assistance, to Dr. L. Heding for reagents for C-peptide assays and to Dr. P. Sonksen for anti-insulin antiserum.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of the Regius Professor of Medicine, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford 0X2 6HE, U.K., where reprint requests should be addressed to Dr. Turner.

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