| Literature DB >> 10746009 |
Abstract
In addition to dietary and lifestyle changes, standing as the cornerstone of type 2 diabetes care, pharmacological treatments, whether as single or multidrug patterns, are often necessary for an efficient blood glucose control. Besides insulin, four different oral antidiabetic drug categories are available, each of them acting through different and potentially synergistic ways. Oral antidiabetic drugs include: 1) biguanides acting through the reduction of hepatic glucose production and are most efficient in obese patients; 2) alpha-glucosidase inhibitors delaying carbohydrate intestinal absorption; 3) thiazolidinediones or "glitazones", acting as insulin sensitizers; 4) insulin secretion enhancers, mainly including sulfonylureas, which increase insulin secretion and are being credited by a long clinical usage; these are now joined by the new generation of insulin secretion enhancers, led by repaglinide, which can mimic the physiological insulin secretion profile by a specific stimulatory effect on beta-cells characterized by its fast onset and short half-life. Obviously, the combination of these different antidiabetic drugs, by targetting different synergistic and additive pathways, can help to further improve blood glucose.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10746009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Metab ISSN: 1262-3636 Impact factor: 6.041