High Blood Glucose Concentration Is a Risk Factor for Mortality in Middle-Aged Nondiabetic Men: 20-year follow-up in the Whitehall Study, the Paris Prospective Study, and the Helsinki Policemen Study

Diabetes Care ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 360-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Balkau ◽  
M. Shipley ◽  
R. J. Jarrett ◽  
K. Pyorala ◽  
M. Pyorala ◽  
...  
Endocrinology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 156 (10) ◽  
pp. 3763-3776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amita Bansal ◽  
Frank H. Bloomfield ◽  
Kristin L. Connor ◽  
Mike Dragunow ◽  
Eric B. Thorstensen ◽  
...  

Adults born preterm are at increased risk of impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes. Late gestation fetuses exposed to high blood glucose concentration also are at increased risk of impaired glucose tolerance as adults. Preterm babies commonly become hyperglycemic and are thus exposed to high blood glucose concentration at an equivalent stage of pancreatic maturation. It is not known whether preterm birth itself, or complications of prematurity, such as hyperglycemia, alter later pancreatic function. To distinguish these, we made singleton preterm lambs hyperglycemic (HYPER) for 12 days after birth with a dextrose infusion and compared them with vehicle-treated preterm and term controls and with HYPER lambs made normoglycemic with an insulin infusion. Preterm birth reduced β-cell mass, apparent by 4 weeks after term and persisting to adulthood (12 mo), and was associated with reduced insulin secretion at 4 months (juvenile) and reduced insulin mRNA expression in adulthood. Hyperglycemia in preterm lambs further down-regulated key pancreatic gene expression in adulthood. These findings indicate that reduced β-cell mass after preterm birth may be an important factor in increased risk of diabetes after preterm birth and may be exacerbated by postnatal hyperglycemia.


2012 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 55-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nattaphong Boriraksantikul ◽  
Kiran D. Bhattacharyya ◽  
Paul J. D. Whiteside ◽  
Christine O'Brien ◽  
Phumin Kirawanich ◽  
...  

1970 ◽  
Vol 65 (3) ◽  
pp. 481-489
Author(s):  
F. A. László ◽  
I. Szijj ◽  
F. Durszt ◽  
K. Kovács

ABSTRACT The hypoglycaemic action of synthetic human 1,39-corticotrophin was determined in mice and its effectiveness compared with highly purified porcine corticotrophin. Synthetic human 1,39-corticotrophin (0.01 mg = 1.0 IU) and porcine corticotrophin (1.0 IU) induced a transient hypoglycaemia. After the administration of the porcine corticotrophin the decrease in the blood glucose concentration was somewhat more marked and prolonged. Adrenocortical activity was not necessary for the development of hypoglycaemia. In adrenalectomized mice, dexamethasone substitution by increasing the initial blood glucose content, made the effect more pronounced. Pretreatment with corticotrophin reduced the extent of the alloxan-induced transitory hyperglycaemia. On the other hand, it did not influence the high blood glucose values in manifest alloxan diabetic animals. It is possible that corticotrophin induces hypoglycaemia through insulin release. This is an extra-adrenal effect of corticotrophin as it is also observed in adrenalectomized mice.


2014 ◽  
Vol 307 (4) ◽  
pp. H587-H597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark W. Sims ◽  
James Winter ◽  
Sean Brennan ◽  
Robert I. Norman ◽  
G. André Ng ◽  
...  

While it is well established that mortality risk after myocardial infarction (MI) increases in proportion to blood glucose concentration at the time of admission, it is unclear whether there is a direct, causal relationship. We investigated potential mechanisms by which increased blood glucose may exert cardiotoxicity. Using a Wistar rat or guinea-pig isolated cardiomyocyte model, we investigated the effects on cardiomyocyte function and electrical stability of alterations in extracellular glucose concentration. Contractile function studies using electric field stimulation (EFS), patch-clamp recording, and Ca2+ imaging were used to determine the effects of increased extracellular glucose concentration on cardiomyocyte function. Increasing glucose from 5 to 20 mM caused prolongation of the action potential and increased both basal Ca2+ and variability of the Ca2+ transient amplitude. Elevated extracellular glucose concentration also attenuated the protection afforded by ischemic preconditioning (IPC), as assessed using a simulated ischemia and reperfusion model. Inhibition of PKCα and β, using Gö6976 or specific inhibitor peptides, attenuated the detrimental effects of glucose and restored the cardioprotected phenotype to IPC cells. Increased glucose concentration did not attenuate the cardioprotective role of PKCε, but rather activation of PKCα and β masked its beneficial effect. Elevated extracellular glucose concentration exerts acute cardiotoxicity mediated via PKCα and β. Inhibition of these PKC isoenzymes abolishes the cardiotoxic effects and restores IPC-mediated cardioprotection. These data support a direct link between hyperglycemia and adverse outcome after MI. Cardiac-specific PKCα and β inhibition may be of clinical benefit in this setting.


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