Abstract
Results: A low-sodium diet increased endogenous aldosterone and plasma renin activity, and acute glucose-stimulated insulin (-16.0 ± 5.6%; P =.007) and C-peptide responses (-21.8 ± 8.4%; P =.014) were decreased, where as the insulin sensitivity index was unchanged (-1.0 ± 10.7%; P=.98). Aldosterone infusion did not affect the acute insulin response (+1.8 ± 4.8%; P =.72) or insulin sensitivity index (+2.0 ± 8.8%; P =.78). Systolic blood pressure and serum potassium were similar during low and high sodium intake and during aldosterone infusion. Main Outcome Measures: Change in acute insulin secretory response assessed during hyperglycemicclamps while in sodium balance during a low-sodium vs high-sodium diet during aldosterone vs vehicle. Conclusions: Low dietary sodium intake reduces insulin secretion in humans, independent of insulin sensitivity. Context: Interruption of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system prevents incident diabetes in high-risk individuals, although the mechanism remains unclear. Objective: To test the hypothesis that activation of the endogenous renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system or exogenous aldosterone impairs insulin secretion in humans. Design: We conducted a randomized, blinded crossover study of aldosterone vs vehicle and compared the effects of a low-sodium versus a high-sodium diet. Setting: Academic clinical research center. Participants: Healthy, nondiabetic, normotensive volunteers. Interventions: Infusion of exogenous aldosterone (0.7 μg/kg/h for 12.5 h) or vehicle during low or high sodium intake. Low sodium (20 mmol/d; n = 12) vs high sodium (160 mmol/d; n = 17) intake for 5-7 days.
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CITATION STYLE
Luther, J. M., Byrne, L. M., Yu, C., Wang, T. J., & Brown, N. J. (2014). Dietary sodium restriction decreases insulin secretion without affecting insulin sensitivity in humans. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 99(10), E1895–E1902. https://doi.org/10.1210/jc.2014-2122
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