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Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients
BACKGROUND: Insulin-resistance is commonly found in adrenal incidentaloma (AI) patients. However, little is known about beta-cell secretion in AI, because comparisons are difficult, since beta–cell-function varies with altered insulin-sensitivity. OBJECTIVES: To retrospectively analyze beta–cell fun...
Autores principales: | , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2013
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3797754/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146977 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077326 |
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author | Anderwald, Christian-Heinz Tura, Andrea Gessl, Alois Luger, Anton Pacini, Giovanni Krebs, Michael |
author_facet | Anderwald, Christian-Heinz Tura, Andrea Gessl, Alois Luger, Anton Pacini, Giovanni Krebs, Michael |
author_sort | Anderwald, Christian-Heinz |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Insulin-resistance is commonly found in adrenal incidentaloma (AI) patients. However, little is known about beta-cell secretion in AI, because comparisons are difficult, since beta–cell-function varies with altered insulin-sensitivity. OBJECTIVES: To retrospectively analyze beta–cell function in non-diabetic AI, compared to healthy controls (CON). METHODS: AI (n=217, 34%males, 57±1years, body-mass-index:27.7±0.3kg/m(2)) and CON [n=25, 32%males, 56±1years, 26.7±0.8kg/m(2)] with comparable anthropometry (p≥0.31) underwent oral-glucose-tolerance-tests (OGTTs) with glucose, insulin, and C–peptide measurements. 1mg-dexamethasone-suppression-tests were performed in AI. AI were divided according to post–dexamethasone-suppression–test cortisol-thresholds of 1.8 and 5µg/dL into 3subgroups: pDexa<1.8µg/dL, pDexa1.8-5µg/dL and pDexa>5µg/dL. Using mathematical modeling, whole-body insulin-sensitivity [Clamp-like-Index (CLIX)], insulinogenic Index, Disposition Index, Adaptation Index, and hepatic insulin extraction were calculated. RESULTS: CLIX was lower in AI combined (4.9±0.2mg·kg(-1)·min(-1)), pDexa<1.8µg/dL (4.9±0.3) and pDexa1.8-5µg/dL (4.7±0.3, p<0.04 vs.CON:6.7±0.4). Insulinogenic and Disposition Indexes were 35%–97% higher in AI and each subgroup (p<0.008 vs.CON), whereas C–peptide–derived Adaptation Index, compensating for insulin-resistance, was comparable between AI, subgroups, and CON. Mathematical estimation of insulin–derived (insulinogenic and Disposition) Indexes from associations to insulin-sensitivity in CON revealed that AI-subgroups had ~19%-32% higher insulin-secretion than expectable. These insulin-secretion-index differences negatively (r=-0.45, p<0.001) correlated with hepatic insulin extraction, which was 13-16% lower in AI and subgroups (p<0.003 vs.CON). CONCLUSIONS: AI-patients show insulin-resistance, but adequately adapted insulin secretion with higher insulin concentrations during an OGTT, because of decreased hepatic insulin extraction; this finding affects all AI-patients, regardless of dexamethasone-suppression-test outcome. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3797754 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2013 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-37977542013-10-21 Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients Anderwald, Christian-Heinz Tura, Andrea Gessl, Alois Luger, Anton Pacini, Giovanni Krebs, Michael PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Insulin-resistance is commonly found in adrenal incidentaloma (AI) patients. However, little is known about beta-cell secretion in AI, because comparisons are difficult, since beta–cell-function varies with altered insulin-sensitivity. OBJECTIVES: To retrospectively analyze beta–cell function in non-diabetic AI, compared to healthy controls (CON). METHODS: AI (n=217, 34%males, 57±1years, body-mass-index:27.7±0.3kg/m(2)) and CON [n=25, 32%males, 56±1years, 26.7±0.8kg/m(2)] with comparable anthropometry (p≥0.31) underwent oral-glucose-tolerance-tests (OGTTs) with glucose, insulin, and C–peptide measurements. 1mg-dexamethasone-suppression-tests were performed in AI. AI were divided according to post–dexamethasone-suppression–test cortisol-thresholds of 1.8 and 5µg/dL into 3subgroups: pDexa<1.8µg/dL, pDexa1.8-5µg/dL and pDexa>5µg/dL. Using mathematical modeling, whole-body insulin-sensitivity [Clamp-like-Index (CLIX)], insulinogenic Index, Disposition Index, Adaptation Index, and hepatic insulin extraction were calculated. RESULTS: CLIX was lower in AI combined (4.9±0.2mg·kg(-1)·min(-1)), pDexa<1.8µg/dL (4.9±0.3) and pDexa1.8-5µg/dL (4.7±0.3, p<0.04 vs.CON:6.7±0.4). Insulinogenic and Disposition Indexes were 35%–97% higher in AI and each subgroup (p<0.008 vs.CON), whereas C–peptide–derived Adaptation Index, compensating for insulin-resistance, was comparable between AI, subgroups, and CON. Mathematical estimation of insulin–derived (insulinogenic and Disposition) Indexes from associations to insulin-sensitivity in CON revealed that AI-subgroups had ~19%-32% higher insulin-secretion than expectable. These insulin-secretion-index differences negatively (r=-0.45, p<0.001) correlated with hepatic insulin extraction, which was 13-16% lower in AI and subgroups (p<0.003 vs.CON). CONCLUSIONS: AI-patients show insulin-resistance, but adequately adapted insulin secretion with higher insulin concentrations during an OGTT, because of decreased hepatic insulin extraction; this finding affects all AI-patients, regardless of dexamethasone-suppression-test outcome. Public Library of Science 2013-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3797754/ /pubmed/24146977 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077326 Text en © 2013 Anderwald et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Anderwald, Christian-Heinz Tura, Andrea Gessl, Alois Luger, Anton Pacini, Giovanni Krebs, Michael Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title | Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title_full | Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title_fullStr | Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title_full_unstemmed | Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title_short | Adequately Adapted Insulin Secretion and Decreased Hepatic Insulin Extraction Cause Elevated Insulin Concentrations in Insulin Resistant Non-Diabetic Adrenal Incidentaloma Patients |
title_sort | adequately adapted insulin secretion and decreased hepatic insulin extraction cause elevated insulin concentrations in insulin resistant non-diabetic adrenal incidentaloma patients |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3797754/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146977 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0077326 |
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