| Literature DB >> 19033403 |
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19033403 PMCID: PMC2584119 DOI: 10.2337/db08-1084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Physiologic responses to decreasing plasma glucose concentrations
| Response | Glycemic threshold (mg/dl [mmol/l]) | Physiologic effects | Role in prevention or correction of hypoglycemia (glucose counterregulation) |
|---|---|---|---|
| ↓ Insulin | 80–85 [4.4–4.7] | ↑ | Primary glucose regulatory factor, first defense against hypoglycemia |
| ↑ Glucagon | 65–70 [3.6–3.9] | ↑ | Primary glucose counterregulatory factor, second defense against hypoglycemia |
| ↑ Epinephrine | 65–70 [3.6–3.9] | ↑ | Involved, critical when glucagon is deficient, third defense against hypoglycemia |
| ↑ Cortisol and growth hormone | 65–70 [3.6–3.9] | ↑ | Involved, not critical |
| Symptoms | 50–55 [2.8–3.1] | ↑Exogenous glucose | Prompt behavioral defense (food ingestion) |
| ↓ Cognition | <50 [<2.8] | — | (Compromises behavioral defense) |
Arterialized venous, not venous, plasma glucose concentrations.
Ra, rate of glucose appearance, glucose production by the liver and kidneys; Rd, rate of glucose disappearance, glucose utilization by insulin-sensitive tissues such as skeletal muscle (no direct effect on central nervous system glucose utilization). This table was prepared initially for Cryer PE: Glucose homeostasis and hypoglycemia. In Williams Textbook of Endocrinology, 11. Kronenberg HM, Melmed S, Polonsky KS, Larsen PR, Eds. Saunders, Philadelphia, 2008, p. 1503–1533.
FIG. 1.Physiological and behavioral defenses against hypoglycemia in humans. ACh, acetylcholine; NE, norepinephrine; PNS, parasympathetic nervous system; SNS, sympathetic nervous system. From Cryer PE: Mechanisms of sympathoadrenal failure and hypoglycemia in diabetes. J Clin Invest 116:14701–473, 2006. © 2006, American Society for Clinical Investigation. All rights reserved.
FIG. 2.Schematic diagram of HAAF in diabetes. Modified from Cryer PE: Diverse causes of hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure in diabetes. N Engl J Med 350:22722–279, 2004. © 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.
FIG. 3.Pancreatic islet and hypothalamic and cerebral network mechanisms of HAAF in diabetes.
Risk factors for hypoglycemia in diabetes
| Absolute or relative therapeutic insulin excess |
|---|
| 1. Insulin or insulin secretagogue doses are excessive, ill-timed, or of the wrong type |
| 2. Exogenous glucose delivery is decreased (e.g., following missed meals and during the overnight fast) |
| 3. Glucose utilization is increased (e.g., during and shortly after exercise) |
| 4. Endogenous glucose production is decreased (e.g., following alcohol ingestion) |
| 5. Sensitivity to insulin is increased (e.g., in the middle of the night and following weight loss, improved fitness or improved glycemic control) |
| 6. Insulin clearance is decreased (e.g., with renal failure) |