| Literature DB >> 35163806 |
Frank Greenway1, Brian Loveridge2, Richard M Grimes3, Tori R Tucker4, Michael Alexander5, Scott A Hepford6, Justin Fontenot7, Candi Nobles-James8, Carol Wilson9, Adam M Starr10, Mohammed Abdelsaid11, Stanley T Lewis12, Jonathan R T Lakey5.
Abstract
Prevalence of type 2 diabetes increased from 2.5% of the US population in 1990 to 10.5% in 2018. This creates a major public health problem, due to increases in long-term complications of diabetes, including neuropathy, retinopathy, nephropathy, skin ulcers, amputations, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. In this review, we evaluated the scientific basis that supports the use of physiologic insulin resensitization. Insulin resistance is the primary cause of type 2 diabetes. Insulin resistance leads to increasing insulin secretion, leading to beta-cell exhaustion or burnout. This triggers a cascade leading to islet cell destruction and the long-term complications of type 2 diabetes. Concurrent with insulin resistance, the regular bursts of insulin from the pancreas become irregular. This has been treated by the precise administration of insulin more physiologically. There is consistent evidence that this treatment modality can reverse the diabetes-associated complications of neuropathy, diabetic ulcers, nephropathy, and retinopathy, and that it lowers HbA1c. In conclusion, physiologic insulin resensitization has a persuasive scientific basis, significant treatment potential, and likely cost benefits.Entities:
Keywords: CKD; PIR; cardiovascular disease; chronic kidney disease; diabetes; insulin infusion; insulin resistance; metabolic disorder; nephropathy; neuropathy; obesity; physiologic insulin resensitization; retinopathy; treatment modality
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35163806 PMCID: PMC8836751 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A three-minute moving average (continuous line) of the fasting plasma insulin, C-peptide and glucose concentrations taken at one-minute intervals. The dashed line shows the “unsmoothed” data. Smoothing reduces the rapid fluctuations, which are probably due to “noise,” and also blunts the amplitude. The simultaneous insulin and C-peptide cycles disappear after 50 min. Reproduced from [13].
Summary of benefits from physiologic insulin resensitization in treating diabetic nephropathy.
| Improvements in the Progression of Diabetic Nephropathy | |
|---|---|
| Halting the Progression of CKD: CrCl (18 months) [ | 348% |
| Reversals of CKD: Improved EGFR (3.75 months) [ | 44% |
| Reversals of CKD: Improved EGFR (3 months) [ | 12% |
Clinical Outcomes Utilizing Physiologic Insulin Resensitization.
| Decreases in Hemoglobin A1c [ |
| Reversals of Diabetic Neuropathy [ |
| Improvements in Wound Healing [ |
| Decreases in Insulin Requirements [ |
| Improvements in Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) [ |
| Decreases in Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP) [ |
| Reduce/Arrest Progression of Diabetic Nephropathy [ |
Summary of study results discussed in this article.
| Reference | Finding | Study Design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tucker et al. | Neuropathy | Case Series | Improved; discontinued Gabapentin |
| Tucker et al. | Foot Ulcer | Case Series | Healed quickly |
| Tucker et al. | HbA1c | Case Report | HbA1c decreased 2.8 |
| Elliott et al. | Foot Ulcer | Case Series | Healed 1/3 more quickly |
| Dailey et al. | Nephropathy | Controlled Trial | Improved ( |
| Elliott et al. | Neuropathy Pain | Case Series | 93% improved, 47.5% resolved |
| Villaverde et al. | Nephropathy | Case Series | 41% increase in GFR |
| Manessis et al. | Nephropathy | Case Series | 12% increase in GFR |
| Quach et al. | Nephropathy | Case Series | 11% increase in GFR |
| Dailey et al. | Nephropathy | Controlled Trial | Reduced decline in GFR |
| Aoki et al. | HbA1c | Case Series | HbA1c decreased by 1.5 T1D |
| Aoki et al. | HbA1c | Case Series | HbA1c decreased by 1; improved glycemic control |
| Elliott et al. | Hospitalizations | Case Series | Reduced hospitalizations |