Hyperinsulinemia of obesity is due to decreased clearance of insulin
M. T. Meistas, S. Margolis and A. A. Kowarski The hyperinsulinemia of obesity could result from a decrease in the metabolic clearance rate of insulin (MCR-I), an increase in the secretory rate of insulin (SR-I), or a combination of both these processes. Because C-peptide and insulin are secreted in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology: endocrinology and metabolism 1983-08, Vol.245 (2), p.E155-E159 |
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Zusammenfassung: | M. T. Meistas, S. Margolis and A. A. Kowarski
The hyperinsulinemia of obesity could result from a decrease in the
metabolic clearance rate of insulin (MCR-I), an increase in the secretory
rate of insulin (SR-I), or a combination of both these processes. Because
C-peptide and insulin are secreted in an equimolar ratio, the plasma
concentrations of C-peptide (C) and insulin (I) are inversely proportional
to their rates of metabolic clearance (C/I = MCR-I/MCR-C). We obtained 24-h
integrated concentrations (IC) of insulin (IC-I) and C-peptide (IC-C) in 23
obese and 45 nonobese subjects over a period of normal activity and food
intake. The IC-I was 69% higher in the obese subjects (P less than 0.0001).
A 13% increase in the IC-C (P = 0.04), with a constant rate of C-peptide
clearance, indicates a proportionate increase in SR-I. A 33% decrease in
the IC-C/IC-I in the obese group (P less than 0.005) reflects a decrease in
MCR-I; hence, 75% of the hyperinsulinemia is due to a decrease in the
clearance of insulin. Because peripheral MCR-I (pMCR-I) is similar in obese
and nonobese subjects, the decrease in MCR-I may be due to a decrease in
the hepatic clearance of insulin. This conclusion was supported by our
comparison of 24-h IC-C/IC-I ratios in the obese and nonobese subjects.
Whereas the 24-h IC-C/IC-I of the nonobese resembled the fasting state, the
24-h IC-C/IC-I of the obese resembled the postprandial state, when insulin
removal by the liver is known to be suppressed. These data are consistent
with a decreased 24-h hepatic MCR-I (hMCR-I) as the cause of the
hyperinsulinemia of obesity. |
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ISSN: | 0002-9513 0193-1849 2163-5773 1522-1555 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpendo.1983.245.2.e155 |