皮下水肿导致胰岛素吸收延迟。

Archivos de investigacion medica Pub Date : 1991-04-01
C R Ariza-Andraca, E Altamirano-Bustamante, A C Frati-Munari, P Altamirano-Bustamante, A Graef-Sánchez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

进行了一项前瞻性研究,以确定皮下水肿是否干扰胰岛素吸收。46名患者参加了这项研究。形成了三个小组。1组20例,其中10例合并非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(NIDDM)。无水肿患者20例(II组),NIDDM患者10例;轻度水肿6例(III组)。在360分钟内测量i125 -胰岛素的消失情况。第1组的吸收速率明显低于第2组,吸收速率明显延迟。360分钟胰岛素吸收量I组比II组低3 ~ 4倍(p < 0.001)。III组有中间值。血浆i125 -胰岛素峰值I组比II组低3 ~ 4倍。水肿患者对胰岛素吸收的损害在NIDDM患者中更为明显。总之,本研究表明皮下水肿损害胰岛素吸收。皮下组织对胰岛素的吸收因几种情况而异,导致血糖控制困难。既往研究表明,胰岛素吸收受注射部位、室温和皮肤温度、体育锻炼、脂肪组织厚度、局部按摩和胰岛素局部降解等因素的影响。慢性并发症如肾病和心脏病引起的水肿常发生在长期糖尿病患者中。然而,皮肤和皮下组织水肿对胰岛素吸收的影响以前没有研究过。这项研究的目的是评估水肿是否影响胰岛素的吸收。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Delayed insulin absorption due to subcutaneous edema.

A prospective study to determine if subcutaneous edema interferes with insulin absorption was performed. Forty-six patients entered the study. Three groups were formed. Twenty patients with generalized edema (Group 1), ten of them with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Twenty patients without edema (Group II). 10 of them with NIDDM; and six patients with mild edema (Group III). The disappearance of I125-insulin was measured throughout 360 minutes. The rate of absorption in group I was significantly lower and delayed than in group II. The amount of insulin absorbed at 360 minutes was 3 to 4 fold lower in group I than in group II (p 0.001). Group III had intermediate values. The peak of plasma I125-insulin level was 3 to 4 fold lower in group I than group II. The impairment of insulin absorption in subjects with edema was more evident in those with NIDDM. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that subcutaneous edema impairs insulin absorption. Insulin absorption from subcutaneous tissue varies due to several conditions, resulting in a difficult glycemic control. Previous studies have shown that insulin absorption is affected by several factors as the site of injection, room and skin temperature, physical exercise, the thickness of adipose tissue, local massage, and local degradation of insulin. Edema due to chronic complications such as nephropathy and cardiopathy often occurs in long-standing diabetic subjects. However, the effects of edema of the skin and subcutaneous tissue on insulin absorption has not been previously examined. The aim of this study was to assess if edema affects the absorption of insulin.

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