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The physiological action of gliclazide: β-cell function and insulin resistance

The physiological action of gliclazide: β-cell function and insulin resistance
The physiological action of gliclazide: β-cell function and insulin resistance

There is continuing debate about the physiological mechanisms of the action of sulphonylureas in man. In those patients taking sulphonylureas insulin secretion can be demonstrated to be higher, but there are also data which have been interpreted as evidence that these drugs may cause an alteration in peripheral insulin sensitivity. The physiological effects of the sulphonylurea gliclazide in diabetic subjects has been examined using a variety of experimental protocols to address this question: an intravenous gliclazide infusion, experiments using glucose clamping, mathematical modelling of the insulin and glucose data from subjects on and off gliclazide therapy, and the infusion of amino acids and glucose separately or in combination. The data from all these analyses suggest that the primary effect of gliclazide is on the β-cell and that any effects on the peripheral insulin sensitivity are either slight or secondary to the improvement of the secretory capacity of the pancreatic islets.

Gliclazide, Insulin, Insulin resistance, Sulphonylurea, β-cell function
0168-8227
S53-S59
Matthews, D. R.
ba1a878d-6510-45c5-896c-d4ade423caca
Hosker, J. P.
88a48c01-48d7-4315-9eb9-b426919b7b8b
Stratton, I.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Matthews, D. R.
ba1a878d-6510-45c5-896c-d4ade423caca
Hosker, J. P.
88a48c01-48d7-4315-9eb9-b426919b7b8b
Stratton, I.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f

Matthews, D. R., Hosker, J. P. and Stratton, I. (1991) The physiological action of gliclazide: β-cell function and insulin resistance. Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice, 14 (SUPPL. 2), S53-S59. (doi:10.1016/0168-8227(91)90008-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There is continuing debate about the physiological mechanisms of the action of sulphonylureas in man. In those patients taking sulphonylureas insulin secretion can be demonstrated to be higher, but there are also data which have been interpreted as evidence that these drugs may cause an alteration in peripheral insulin sensitivity. The physiological effects of the sulphonylurea gliclazide in diabetic subjects has been examined using a variety of experimental protocols to address this question: an intravenous gliclazide infusion, experiments using glucose clamping, mathematical modelling of the insulin and glucose data from subjects on and off gliclazide therapy, and the infusion of amino acids and glucose separately or in combination. The data from all these analyses suggest that the primary effect of gliclazide is on the β-cell and that any effects on the peripheral insulin sensitivity are either slight or secondary to the improvement of the secretory capacity of the pancreatic islets.

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More information

Published date: 1991
Keywords: Gliclazide, Insulin, Insulin resistance, Sulphonylurea, β-cell function

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 486938
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486938
ISSN: 0168-8227
PURE UUID: 895a6ed9-a68d-4482-a5ac-2ac395076ab0
ORCID for I. Stratton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1172-7865

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Date deposited: 08 Feb 2024 17:45
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: D. R. Matthews
Author: J. P. Hosker
Author: I. Stratton ORCID iD

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