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Alcohol consumption alters insulin secretion and cardiac autonomic activity

Alcohol consumption alters insulin secretion and cardiac autonomic activity
Alcohol consumption alters insulin secretion and cardiac autonomic activity
Background

Alcohol may have a cardioprotective effect. One possible mechanism is by modifying insulin resistance/secretion. The aims of this study were: (i) to examine the effect of short-term alcohol consumption on the metabolic control of glucose tolerance; (ii) to study the influence of short-term alcohol consumption on cardiac autonomic activity using spectral analysis of heart rate variability.

Methods

Twenty-one healthy subjects, in a randomized crossover design, either received three units of ethanol daily for 1 week or abstained from ethanol. The control of glucose tolerance was assessed using the intravenous glucose tolerance test with minimal modelling.

Results

There was no difference in fasting glucose, fasting insulin or insulin sensitivity between the two groups. Alcohol showed a lower insulin first phase insulin response (no alcohol 659·0 ± 394·1 SD, alcohol 535·2 ± 309·1) pmol L?1 min?1, P = 0·027). There was no difference in heart rate or blood pressure but a significant difference in the ratio of high to low frequency spectral power of heart rate variability; (no alcohol 4·55 ± 3·78, alcohol 8·16 ± 6·77, P = 0·033). This suggests decreased sympathetic and/or increased vagal modulation of heart rate in the alcohol group.

Conclusion

The finding of no difference in insulin sensitivity between the two groups contrasts with, but does not entirely contradict, the results of previous epidemiological studies – perhaps suggesting that longer term changes such as liver enzyme induction may be important. The difference in insulin secretion questions the validity of previous studies of the influence of alcohol on insulin sensitivity, where insulin levels were used as a surrogate for insulin resistance.
alcohol, cardiac autonomic activity, glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, insulin secretion
0014-2972
187-92
Flanagan, D.E.H.
0e71d733-e314-4c8e-b232-ef56dd59e908
Pratt, E.
f7aab9ef-6c87-45ad-a07d-460b8775389a
Murphy, J.
ac5964f7-48bd-424f-9cc6-6faa2b36e590
Vaile, J.C.
546f4f1e-f8be-41e8-a3fc-42a57b1f9f33
Petley, G.W.
4f2da40b-3c7b-4adc-b75c-e24e62bb1cf0
Godsland, I.F.
3911b2cd-db00-460e-b390-9e7289becbe6
Kerr, D.
c68fa959-c322-481d-a026-1be27a2fad54
Flanagan, D.E.H.
0e71d733-e314-4c8e-b232-ef56dd59e908
Pratt, E.
f7aab9ef-6c87-45ad-a07d-460b8775389a
Murphy, J.
ac5964f7-48bd-424f-9cc6-6faa2b36e590
Vaile, J.C.
546f4f1e-f8be-41e8-a3fc-42a57b1f9f33
Petley, G.W.
4f2da40b-3c7b-4adc-b75c-e24e62bb1cf0
Godsland, I.F.
3911b2cd-db00-460e-b390-9e7289becbe6
Kerr, D.
c68fa959-c322-481d-a026-1be27a2fad54

Flanagan, D.E.H., Pratt, E., Murphy, J., Vaile, J.C., Petley, G.W., Godsland, I.F. and Kerr, D. (2002) Alcohol consumption alters insulin secretion and cardiac autonomic activity. European Journal of Clinical Investigation, 32 (3), 187-92. (doi:10.1046/j.1365-2362.2002.00970.x). (PMID:11895470)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Alcohol may have a cardioprotective effect. One possible mechanism is by modifying insulin resistance/secretion. The aims of this study were: (i) to examine the effect of short-term alcohol consumption on the metabolic control of glucose tolerance; (ii) to study the influence of short-term alcohol consumption on cardiac autonomic activity using spectral analysis of heart rate variability.

Methods

Twenty-one healthy subjects, in a randomized crossover design, either received three units of ethanol daily for 1 week or abstained from ethanol. The control of glucose tolerance was assessed using the intravenous glucose tolerance test with minimal modelling.

Results

There was no difference in fasting glucose, fasting insulin or insulin sensitivity between the two groups. Alcohol showed a lower insulin first phase insulin response (no alcohol 659·0 ± 394·1 SD, alcohol 535·2 ± 309·1) pmol L?1 min?1, P = 0·027). There was no difference in heart rate or blood pressure but a significant difference in the ratio of high to low frequency spectral power of heart rate variability; (no alcohol 4·55 ± 3·78, alcohol 8·16 ± 6·77, P = 0·033). This suggests decreased sympathetic and/or increased vagal modulation of heart rate in the alcohol group.

Conclusion

The finding of no difference in insulin sensitivity between the two groups contrasts with, but does not entirely contradict, the results of previous epidemiological studies – perhaps suggesting that longer term changes such as liver enzyme induction may be important. The difference in insulin secretion questions the validity of previous studies of the influence of alcohol on insulin sensitivity, where insulin levels were used as a surrogate for insulin resistance.

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More information

Published date: March 2002
Keywords: alcohol, cardiac autonomic activity, glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, insulin secretion
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 383379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383379
ISSN: 0014-2972
PURE UUID: 70db46c7-2306-469e-a846-fe7606a9e39e
ORCID for G.W. Petley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3295-0444

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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2016 09:50
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: D.E.H. Flanagan
Author: E. Pratt
Author: J. Murphy
Author: J.C. Vaile
Author: G.W. Petley ORCID iD
Author: I.F. Godsland
Author: D. Kerr

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