42 research outputs found

    Influence of Maternal Obesity on Insulin Sensitivity and Secretion in Offspring

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVE—The purpose of this study was to clarify the effects of maternal obesity on insulin sensitivity and secretion in offspring

    Effect of Oral Sebacic Acid on Postprandial Glycemia, Insulinemia, and Glucose Rate of Appearance in Type 2 Diabetes

    Get PDF
    Dicarboxylic acids are natural products with the potential of being an alternate dietary source of energy. We aimed to evaluate the effect of sebacic acid (a 10-carbon dicarboxylic acid; C10) ingestion on postprandial glycemia and glucose rate of appearance (Ra) in healthy and type 2 diabetic subjects. Furthermore, the effect of C10 on insulin-mediated glucose uptake and on GLUT4 expression was assessed in L6 muscle cells in vitro

    Effects of high-fat diet exposure during fetal life on type 2 diabetes development in the progeny

    Get PDF
    Nutrition during fetal life is a critical factor contributing to diabetes development in adulthood. The aim of our study was to verify: 1) whether a high-fat (HF) diet in young adult mice induces alterations in beta-cell mass, proliferation, neogenesis, and apoptosis, as well as insulin sensitivity and secretion; 2) whether these alterations may be reversible after HF diet suspension; 3) the effects in a first (F1) and second generation (F2) of mice without direct exposure to a HF diet after birth. Type 2 diabetes developed in adult mice on a HF diet, in F1 mice that were HF diet-exposed during fetal or neonatal life, and in F2 mice whose mothers were HF diet-exposed during their fetal life. beta-cell mass, replication, and neogenesis were high in HF diet-exposed mice and decreased after diet suspension. beta-cell mass and replication remained high in F1 mice and decreased in F2 mice whose mothers were exposed to a HF diet. beta-cell neogenesis was present in adult mice on a HF diet and in F1 mice that were HF diet-exposed during fetal and/or neonatal life. We conclude that a HF diet during fetal life, particularly if combined with the same insult during the suckling period, can induce the type 2 diabetes phenotype, which can be directly transmitted to the progeny even in the absence of additional dietary insults

    Fat mass largely contributes to insulin mediated glucose uptake in morbidly obese subjects

    No full text
    The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of body size on insulin-mediated, whole-body glucose uptake (M-value) in morbidly obese (MO) subjects, who have large amounts of fat mass. Furthermore, we aimed at verifying which surrogate insulin-sensitivity index can better substitute the euglycemic clamp values and whether the insulin secretion/insulin resistance index is meaningful also in MO subjects

    Blunted glucose metabolism in anorexia nervosa

    No full text
    Only few studies have specifically investigated diet-induced thermogenesis in anorexia nervosa. Twenty women, 10 anorectics (body mass index [BMI] = 14.98 +/- 1.02 kg/m(2)) and 10 controls (BMI = 22.53 +/- 0.75 kg/m(2)) were studied. Body composition was evaluated by isotopic dilution. Respiratory gas exchange was measured by indirect calorimetry. An oral glucose load (75 g) was administered to the anorectics (A) and the controls (CA). The controls underwent a second load (CB) with a higher glucose amount (1.85 +/- 0.11 g/kg body weight [BW]) to compare with the load taken by anorectics. Glucose-induced thermogenesis (GIT) was computed for 300 minutes following the load as the percent increase of energy expenditure (EE) above resting-EE (REE). Serum glucose levels were lower in anorectic patients both in fasting (3.46 +/- 0.66 v 5.23 +/- 0.23 in CA, P <.01 v 5.32 +/- 0.34 mmol in CB, P <.01) and in the postprandial state (glucose area under the curve [AUC] 175.51 +/- 6.40 v 289.80 +/- 7.30 in CA, P <.01 v 324.65 mmol in CB, P <.001); insulin AUC was lower, 1,926 +/- 452 versus 41,148 +/- 2,071 in CA, P <.0001 versus 60,765.5 pmol in CB, P <.0001. REE, normalized by fat-free mass (FFM), was similar between groups. GIT was lower in anorectics (3.58 +/- 1.20 v 5.45 +/- 1.83 in CA, P <.05 v 9.09% +/- 1.05% in CB, P <.01). Glucose oxidation was higher in anorectics than in CA (689.44 +/- 72.22 v 333.32 +/- 32.98 micromol/L/min, P <.001), but similar to CB. Lipid oxidation become negative after 30 minutes in anorectics (postprandial lipid oxidation = -93.58 +/- 39.86 v 370.61 +/- 21.73 in CA, P <.0001 v 119.01 +/- 12.32 micromol/L/300 min in CB, P <.0001). Anorectic patients displayed a low REE and GIT. Carbohydrate oxidation was similar between groups; lipid oxidation was extremely reduced. An increased protein catabolism was observed
    corecore