|
About Diabetes
|
Chromium Picolinate
Helps Muscles Use Blood Sugar A new published study: it is reported that chromium prompts muscles to become
more efficient. Researchers found that daily use of chromium picolinate enhanced
muscle sensitivity to insulin in obese, insulin-resistant rats. Specifically,
chromium improved the ability of insulin, after attaching to muscle cells, to
enhance chemical signals in the cell that promoted blood sugar uptake. The
study, funded in part by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and conducted
by researchers at Pennington Biomedical Research Center (PBRC), is the first
published study using this animal model to demonstrate chromium's action in this
way. Chromium is one of the few essential trace minerals for which a specific mechanism of action had not been completely identified. This study demonstrated that chromium picolinate helps insulin receptor sites on muscle cells work more efficiently. Insulin receptors on the outer part of a cell allow the cell to bind with insulin in the blood. When the cell and insulin bind, signals within the cell activate "glucose transporters" so that the cell can then take up glucose from the blood and use it for energy. The result was a significantly improved rate at which muscles absorbed glucose from the blood and metabolized it. Impaired insulin action, in the obese rats used in this study, was partially restored with chromium supplementation. In a control group of lean, healthy rats with no abnormalities, chromium supplementation exhibited no observable additional effect on insulin receptor activity. The study also found that obese, insulin resistant rats treated with chromium picolinate had improved triglyceride and total high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol ratios. These findings support previous research demonstrating chromium picolinate's potential benefits in reducing cardiovascular risk factors in subjects exhibiting insulin resistance. "These results add to a growing body of evidence, but more importantly provide a cellular mechanism to explain the effects of chromium picolinate on carbohydrate metabolism," added Dr. Cefalu. Ongoing research at PBRC is now focusing on the effect of chromium picolinate on cellular proteins associated with insulin function. The chromium form used in this study was provided by Nutrition 21, the makers of Chromax(R) chromium picolinate, the most studied form of chromium and more bioavailable. Wang ZQ. Chromium Picolinate Enhances Skeletal Muscle Cellular Insulin Signaling In Vivo in Obese, Insulin-Resistant JCR: LA-cp Rats. J Nutr. 2006;136(2):415-20. Source: Diabetes In Control: BD Medical
- Diabetes Care. Retrieved January 23, 2006 from
http://www.bddiabetes.co.uk/cgi bin/bd/bdweb/eservices/content/show.bd?Program=501B362F152E2CEC00256E390058DF1
C&BV_UseBVCookie=yes&BD_SID=UWtSVlN5NUNSRTFmUkVNPTpNQT09Ojo%3D. |