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Query: HUMANGGP:034761 (
insulin
)
211,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients manifesting the syndrome of
cachexia
of malignancy exhibit an abnormal diabetic glucose tolerance. In our patients this has been correlated with a marked resistance to administered
insulin
, while
insulin
receptors on monocytes are normal. Lipolysis remains responsive to the effects of
insulin
. The oxidation of FFA, as a substrate for metabolism, has been reported to be increased, and the utilization of glucose as a metabolic fuel is reduced. Increased Cori cycle activity has been demonstrated, which produces an enhanced gluconeogenesis from lactate and amino acids; there is an expenditure of 6 ATP for the synthesis of each mole of glucose. An attempt to interrupt the Cori cycle in man, using hydrazine sulfate to inhibit the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, has not resulted in reproducible clinical benefit. However, successful treatment of the underlying tumor may produce a total reversal of the
cachexia
syndrome, suggesting that neoplasms have the potential to elaborate an, as yet, unidentified metabolic toxin. The use of
insulin
to counteract the reported abnormalities should be examined as a possible supportive measure in the total nutritional management of the cancer patient.
...
PMID:Cachexia of malignancy: potential role of insulin in nutritional management. 44 87
Marked weight loss with
cachexia
together with severe depression and pain from symmetrical peripheral neuropathy were noted in a 66-year-old man, known to have had diabetes for six years, which required
insulin
on admission to hospital. The patient died of bronchopneumonia after one year. The severe neuropathy was proven both neurophysiologically and at necropsy. There was no diabetic retinopathy and no histological evidence of renal glomerulosclerosis. There was no evidence of a malignant tumour either clinically or at necropsy.
...
PMID:[Diabetic neuropathic cachexia (author's transl)]. 44 96
The authors used the omentum to envelop thin pancreatic fragments (10 to 18 g. i.e. 1/3 to 1/2 of the canine pancreas). After control of the blood sugar, a total corporo-caudal pancreatectomy was carried out in 21 dogs within 1 to 5 months. Nine survivors from one week to 3 months, permitted them to control the course of the blood sugar with biopsies of the graft and the absence of residual pancreas in the duodeno-hepatic region at autopsy. Compared with a comparative series of 11 dogs which survived total pancreatectomy and required 8 to 22 units of long-acting
insulin
, the series with autotransplants within the omentum, showed a moderate increase in blood sugar (1,1 to 1,1 g/l). However, progressive or acute
cachexia
with digestive disorders, frequently fistula of the sub-cutaneous graft were observed. In spite of the progressive and attenuated character of the diabetes, the preservation of secreting endocrine pancreatic islets is only temporary as shown by the histological controls.
...
PMID:[Intraepiploic pancreatic autograft in dogs. Blood sugar changes as compared with a group of pancreatectomized dogs]. 77 16
In addition to the maintenance of glucose homeostasis,
insulin
plays a major role in the regulation of branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) metabolism. We investigated
insulin
action on glucose turnover rates, arterial BCAA concentrations, and forearm BCAA flux in cancer
cachexia
. Six weight-losing patients with localized gastrointestinal malignancy and five age-matched control subjects underwent sequential 120-minute euglycemic
insulin
infusions. Steady-state
insulin
concentrations were 50 +/- 5, 97 +/- 14, and 435 +/- 14 microU/ml in patients and 44 +/- 4, 95 +/- 6, and 495 +/- 42 microU/ml in control subjects at the
insulin
infusion rates of 0.5, 1.0, and 4.0 mU/kg.min, respectively. During the 0.5 and 1.0 mU/kg.min
insulin
infusions, a primed, continuous infusion of D-[3-3H] glucose was used to quantify endogenous glucose production. Total body glucose uptake was decreased in patients with cancer compared with control subjects at the 0.5 mU/kg.min (2.9 +/- 0.4 vs 3.6 +/- 1.2 mg/kg.min), 1.0 mU/kg.min (5.3 +/- 0.3 vs 8.7 +/- 0.8 mg/kg.min; p less than 0.05), and 4.0 mU/kg.min (10.9 +/- 0.9 vs 13.7 +/- 1.1 mg/kg.min)
insulin
infusion rates, consistent with a state of
insulin
resistance. Progressive euglycemic
insulin
infusion induced a marked, comparable
insulin
-dependent decrease in arterial plasma BCAA concentrations in both patients with cancer and control subjects. There was no change in postabsorptive forearm BCAA flux with progressive hyperinsulinemia.
Insulin
-induced branched-chain hypoaminoacidemia is unimpaired in this group of patients manifesting resistance to
insulin
action on glucose metabolism, thereby providing evidence of a differential resistance to
insulin
action on glucose metabolism versus
insulin
action on BCAA concentrations in cancer
cachexia
. Peripheral BCAA flux is not affected by systemic
insulin
infusion, suggesting that skeletal muscle is not a major site of BCAA disposal during
insulin
-mediated hypoaminoacidemia.
...
PMID:Insulin action on glucose and branched-chain amino acid metabolism in cancer cachexia: differential effects of insulin. 154 55
Achieving nitrogen accretion in patients with critical surgical illness or cancer
cachexia
is often not possible by the simple provision of calories and nitrogen.
Cachexia
may result from the metabolic derangements caused by release of inflammatory mediators such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF). We wished to determine whether recombinant human insulin-like growth factor I (rhIGF-I) preserves its protein-sparing effects in the face of high plasma TNF concentrations. Primed constant infusions of [15N]urea and [6-3H]glucose tracers were used to measure protein and glucose kinetics in fasted lambs. The lambs were divided into four groups: two groups received normal saline infusions of 480 min, and two groups received recombinant TNF (rTNF) infusions of 1 microgram.kg-1.h-1. During the last 300 min, one of the normal saline and one of the rTNF-infused groups were infused with rhIGF-I at a dose of 50 micrograms.kg-1.h-1. rTNF infusion resulted in the lambs becoming febrile and significantly increased plasma cortisol, glucagon, and
insulin
levels. rhIGF-I infusion in the control animals reduced the rate of loss of protein by 15% (P less than 0.01) and increased the rate of peripheral glucose clearance by 55% (P less than 0.01). rhIGF-I infusion in the rTNF-treated animals reduced the rate of net protein loss by 15% (P less than 0.01) and caused similar changes in glucose kinetics, as were observed in the control animals. We conclude that as rhIGF-I preserves its protein anabolic action in the face of high rTNF levels, further investigation into a possible clinical role for rhIGF-I in severe surgical illness is warranted.
...
PMID:Effects of recombinant IGF-I on protein and glucose metabolism in rTNF-infused lambs. 195 85
Fasting blood samples were collected from 83 patients with histologically proven breast cancer and analysed for plasma glucagon, serum immunoreactive tumour necrosis factor (TNF alpha),
insulin
, glucose, growth hormone, cortisol and TSH. Samples from patients with known diabetes mellitus or thyroid disease, and those on parenteral nutrition or with evidence of infection were excluded as were patients who had a history of weight loss through dieting or who were anorexic. Fasting plasma glucagon, serum cortisol and immunoreactive TNF alpha concentrations in patients with stage IV breast cancer who had developed weight loss were significantly higher than those in patients with stage IV disease who had not developed weight loss. There were no significant differences in the fasting serum concentrations of
insulin
, glucose, growth hormone and TSH between the two patient groups. The association between weight loss in stage IV breast cancer and increased concentrations of plasma glucagon, serum cortisol and TNF alpha suggests a possible role for these hormonal factors in the development of cancer
cachexia
.
...
PMID:Hormonal factors associated with weight loss in patients with advanced breast cancer. 195 51
Cachexia
is a phenomenon commonly observed in patients with cancer, but its etiology is poorly understood. Abnormalities of
insulin
action and metabolism that have been hypothesized to promote cancer
cachexia
were investigated in this study using a computerized euglycemic clamp and modified frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test (FSIGT) in a group of malnourished patients with localized head and neck cancer, and in healthy, well-nourished, age- and, sex-matched controls. Glucose disposal rates, determined by the euglycemic clamp at three different rates of
insulin
infusion did not differ significantly between the two groups. However, mean plasma
insulin
concentrations at each level of
insulin
infused were significantly lower in the patients with cancer than in the control subjects resulting in unexpectedly higher calculated
insulin
metabolic clearance rate in the patients with cancer. Peripheral
insulin
sensitivity calculated from the slope of glucose disposal versus plasma
insulin
concentration did not differ between the two groups. Results from the FSIGT demonstrated no difference in
insulin
sensitivity or
insulin
-independent glucose disappearance between the two groups. However, whole body glucose appearance was significantly elevated in the patients with cancer. Thus, increased whole body glucose utilization in the absence of
insulin
resistance or increased
insulin
-dependent glucose disposal was observed. These data are consistent with the concept of a localized tumor acting as a glucose drain in which case increased glucose appearance and increased
insulin
clearance would defend against hypoglycemia.
...
PMID:Insulin action and metabolism in patients with head and neck cancer. 202 56
Pre- and postoperative nutritional states were studied in fifty patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Seven of them were cardiac cachectic patients. There was no hospital death except one patient with cardiac
cachexia
. Preoperative measurements showed decreased %standard body weight (80.7%), %standard AMC (86.1%), and %standard TSF (61.5%) in cachectic patients. Resting energy expenditure (REE) and circulating blood volume were significantly higher in cachectic patients throughout the pre- and postoperative periods, and a significant correlations were admitted between them (p less than 0.05). REE increased to 33.6 kcal/kg/day 1 week after operation. Serum proteins, including rapid turnover proteins (RTP), when expressed in g/dl or mg/dl, did not show any difference between two groups. However by correction with circulating plasma volume and body weight (mg/kg), cardiac cachectic patients had significantly higher protein contents preoperatively and seventh post-operative day (p less than 0.05). There was no difference in urinary excretion of 3-methylhistidine between two groups throughout the study period, but urinary excretion of urea was higher in 1st and 3rd postoperative days in non cachectic patients. Serum cortisol and urinary excretion of vanillymandelic acid were higher, and serum
insulin
level tended to be lower in cachectic patients postoperatively. These results indicate that, in cardiac
cachexia
, increased blood volume and hypermetabolic state cause higher energy expenditure, resulting in weight loss and chronic heart failure.
...
PMID:[Pre- and postoperative nutritional assessment of cardiac cachexia]. 203 35
Cancer cachexia has been listed as a major cause of death in cancer patients. In order to investigate the metabolic effects of the tumor on the host, we have evaluated an experimental model of cancer
cachexia
in the mouse (MAC16 colon adenocarcinoma), in which weight loss can reach 30-40% of initial weight with a tumor burden of only 2.5%, without a reduction in the intake of either food or water. The weight loss appears not to arise from tumor necrosis factor production, which is associated with a marked reduction in both food and water intake, but may be a result of catabolic factors produced by the tumor and present in the circulation. Both
insulin
and 3-hydroxybutyrate are effective inhibitors of the tumor catabolic factors in vitro and protect, to some extent, weight loss in vivo. However, whereas 3-hydroxybutyrate was associated with a reduction in tumor weight,
insulin
caused an enhancement, suggesting that the former may be more appropriate than the latter in the clinical treatment of cancer
cachexia
.
...
PMID:Cancer cachexia. 208 20
The effect of
cachexia
on
insulin
secretion was examined in adult male rats. Isolated islets of Langerhans from Walker 256 tumor-bearing rats secreted less
insulin
by glucose stimuli as compared with the control group; this was accompanied by significant change in 45Ca2+ outflow rate. Reduced
insulin
secretion to glucose stimuli in tumor-bearing rats probably led to low insulinemia (one-third). These findings indicate that reduced
insulin
secretion is probably an important factor for the development of
cachexia
in Walker 256 tumor-bearing rats.
...
PMID:Insulin secretion in Walker 256 tumor cachexia. 219 28
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