Insulin-mediated vasodilation and glucose uptake are functionally linked in humans

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Abstract

Intra-arterial infusion of insulin in physiological doses causes forearm vasodilation which is augmented by co-infusion of D-glucose, leading us to speculate that local insulin-mediated vasodilation may depend on insulin- mediated glucose uptake. We have examined the relationship between whole- body insulin sensitivity and forearm vasodilation in response to local infusion of insulin/glucose, thus avoiding any confounding effects of sympathetic stimulation on peripheral blood flow. Eighteen healthy, normotensive male volunteers (age, 26±5.4 years) attended on two separate occasions for measurement of: (1) whole-body insulin sensitivity with use of the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp; (2) forearm vasodilation in response to an intra-arterial infusion of insulin/glucose with use of bilateral venous occlusion plethysmography. Insulin-mediated glucose uptake (M) for the group (mean±SD) was 10.0±2.2 mg · kg-1 · min-1, and the percentage change in forearm blood flow ratio (%FBFR) for the group (median, interquartile range) was 28.2% (13.6, 48.6). In univariate analysis, M was significantly correlated with %FBFR (r(s)=0.60, P<0.05), but not with body mass index (BMI) (r(s)=-0.42), age (r=-0.39) or mean arterial pressure (r=0.13). In multiple regression analysis, %FBFR remained a significant independent predictor of M (R2 (adj)=0.48, t=3.23, P<0.01) in a model involving BMI, age, and blood pressure. These data support the concept of a significant functional relationship between insulin's metabolic and vascular actions, possibly at an endothelial level.

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Cleland, S. J., Petrie, J. R., Ueda, S., Elliott, H. L., & Connell, J. M. C. (1999). Insulin-mediated vasodilation and glucose uptake are functionally linked in humans. Hypertension, 33(1 II), 554–558. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.33.1.554

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