The effects of a low-dose intravenous insulin infusion upon plasma glucose and non-esterified fatty acid levels in very obese and non-obese human subjects

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Abstract

After an overnight fast, the effects of a 30-min low-dose intravenous insulin infusion (2.6 units/h) upon plasma glucose and non-esterified fatty acids were compared in 29 very obese patients and 17 nonobese controls. The dose of insulin was chosen so as to have its sole or predominant hypoglycaemic effect upon hepatic glucose release. The proportional fall from basal values at 30 min of both plasma glucose and non-esterified fatty acids was significantly greater in the controls and there was no difference between males and females. In the controls the fall in plasma glucose and non-esterified fatty acids was significantly and inversely correlated with the basal plasma insulin level. Neither index of insulin sensitivity was significantly related with the basal plasma insulin in the obese subjects. Weight loss in the obese subjects led to increased insulin sensitivity; in particular, the degree of change in insulin-induced nonesterified fatty acids was significantly related to the percentage change in weight. Despite their extreme degree of obesity, the distributions of basal plasma insulin levels and the indices of insulin sensitivity in the obese subjects overlapped with those of the nonobese controls. © 1981 Springer-Verlag.

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Bakir, S. M., & Jarrett, R. J. (1981). The effects of a low-dose intravenous insulin infusion upon plasma glucose and non-esterified fatty acid levels in very obese and non-obese human subjects. Diabetologia, 20(6), 592–596. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00257425

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