Defeat Diabetes: Answer to Why Patients with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes
Cannot Sense their Need to Take Life-Saving Glucose
Answer to Why Patients with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Cannot Sense their Need
to Take Life-Saving Glucose
posted 11/06/02
An Appetite stimulant from the brain is the
answer.
The evidence came from a known and potent
appetite stimulant released by the brain called Neuropeptide Y (NPY). Studies
using diabetic rats have shown the NPY levels in the brains of diabetic rats
differ significantly to those of normal rats under conditions of low glucose.
It was known that specific nerves in the brain sense the levels of glucose in
the body.
"But how these nerves operate and how the brain tells us we need to eat or we
are full, which can help maintain glucose levels, has remained a mystery.
Understanding these mechanisms is a major goal of diabetes research," says
University of Melbourne pharmacologist Associate Professor Margaret Morris who
led the research.
"Our research has provided some insight into these mechanisms and should lead to
a better understanding and, ultimately, management of diabetes and hypoglycemia,
the life threatening condition faced by diabetics when their blood glucose gets
too low," she says.
The study is published in the latest edition of Diabetologia and is supported by
the US-based Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, the world's largest funder
of research into diabetes.
Previous clinical research had shown that a long-term program of multiple daily
insulin injections can protect against the complications of type-1 diabetes such
as blindness and kidney failure. The aim of the program is to drive down the
high blood glucose levels, characteristic of diabetes, closer to that of
non-diabetic individuals.
Normally we keep a relatively constant level of blood glucose by the pancreas
constantly adjusting the amount of insulin it releases. A diabetes, blood sugar
can only be controlled by injections of insulin. This causes a series of highs
and lows in blood glucose. The problem with such an intensive program of insulin
injection is that the lows experienced can often be too low placing the person
at risk of hypoglycemia.
Studies have shown that people with repeated exposure to hypoglycemic conditions
become desensitised to the body's triggers that inform us we are in this
predicament. In the case of NPY, this trigger would be the desire to eat, which
would restore blood sugar levels.
The University of Melbourne study compared diabetic and normal rats' brain
responses after periods of low glucose, and then tested their ability to recover
upon return to normal glucose levels.
The production of NPY in diabetic rats fell significantly during the period of
low glucose. In contrast, the NPY levels in the normal rat remained unchanged.
A second approach looked at the levels of NPY in response to injections of
insulin. This time the effects in the two groups were opposite. The normally
high NPY levels in the diabetic rat decreased, while normally low NPY levels in
the normal rat increased.
"As insulin lowers the blood glucose levels, a response that would normally
trigger the desire to eat, it is strange that the NPY levels in diabetic rats
drop, an effect that would normally suppress the need to eat," says Morris.
"We know that NPY is linked to the brains ability to sense and control the
body's levels of glucose. Our task now is to understand NPY's exact role, why it
differs in diabetes, what nerves are involved and what, if any, other sensory
nerves and stimulants are involved," she says. JDRF has just provided an
additional US$55,000 to fund this research.
Source: Diabetes In Control Dot Com.
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