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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phenformin
at high doses (10 mg/l, 50 mg/l, and 100 mg/l) increased the insulin and lactate output rates by the isolated perfused rat pancreas.
Glucagon
secretion was not modified. There was a statistically significant correlation between the increase in insulin and lactate output rates induced by phenformin. Intra-pancreatic L (+) lactate concentrations induced by phenformin were in the range of sodium L (+) lactate concentrations which experimentally stimulated insulin secretion by the same preparation. Thiamin pyrophosphate and sodium dichloroacetate, which promote the aerobic metabolism of pyruvate, opposed the phenoformin induced increase in lactate output by the isolated perfused rat pancreas and provoked as well a decrease in insulin release. These results suggest that the increase in insulin secretion following the administration of phenformin at high concentrations can be explained, to a large extent, by the increase in the production of lactate ions.
...
PMID:Is lactate involved in phenformin-induced insulin secretion? 43 87
Eighteen diabetic patients with lactic acidosis (L.A.) were analyzed for possible causal factors, metabolic changes, and efficacy of treatment. An antecedent phenformin therapy was performed in fifteen cases and was associated with renal insufficiency in ten cases and liver disease in eight cases. Tissular anoxia of primary hemodynamic or respiratory origin was absent in all cases. The severe metabolic acidosis (pH m.93 +/- 0,03; HCO3-= 6 +/- 1 MM; PaCO2 = 18 +/- 2 MM. Hg) and hyperlactatemia (14.2 +/- 0.3 mM) were associated with high lactate/pyruvate ration (70 +/- 22). High alanine levels (up to 4.6 mM) were measured in some of these patients. High beta-hydroxybutrate levels were sometimes measured (up to 7.6 mM), and substantial amounts of acetoacetate were also detected in twelve cases.
Glucagon
level was always increased (1,050 +/- 240 pg./ml.), and insulin/
glucagon
ratio was low. Cortisol (49 +/- 10 mug./100 ml.) and HGH (10.8 +/- 0.6 ng./ml.) were also elevated. Increased plasma levels of phenformin were measured in five L.A. diabetic subjects (50 +/- 5 mug./ml.) by comparison with other phenformin-treated diabetic subjects. The specificity of the assay was investigated, and phenformin metabolites were characterized by thin-layer chromatography. Por the treatment of L.A., adjunction of dialysis and furosemide improved the efficacy of early and massive sodium bicarbonate infusion. It is suggested that accumulation of phenformin via renal insufficiency plays a determinant role in causing L.A. through an impairment of lactate metabolism in the liver. An accelerated epuration of the drug may be helpful in therapy of L.A.
Phenformin
treatment should be avoided in case of renal and/or liver insufficiency.
...
PMID:Phenformin-induced lactic acidosis in diabetic patients. 80 37
The effect of phenformin (
DBI
) on the plasma intestinal
glucagon
-like immunoreactivity (GLI) and pancreatic
glucagon
(IRG) responses to oral and intravenous glucose loads were studied in 26 gastrectomized subjects, using a cross-reacting and an IRG-specific anti-serum. The drug produced no significant changes in fasting GLI and IRG levels. Thirty minutes after oral glucose alone, the total GLI level rose to a peak of 1.55 +/- 0.17 ng/ml in the untreated subjects and to a maximum level of 1.67 +/- 0.18 ng/ml in the
DBI
-pretreated subjects. However, the mean GLI levels obtained 120 and 180 min after oral glucose were significantly higher after treatment with
DBI
. The blood sugar and IRI responses to oral glucose were lowered significantly by
DBI
pretreatment.
DBI
did not alter the glucose, IRI, IRG and GLI response to intravenous glucose. These results suggest that the release of intestinal GLI is not related to the intestinal absorption of glucose.
...
PMID:Effect of phenformin on the response of plasma intestinal glucagon-like immunoreactivity (GLI) to oral glucose in gastrectomized subjects. 118 99
The study investigated the effects of metformin and phenformin, at "therapeutic" concentrations, on the pancreatic A-, B- and D- cell response to glucose using the isolated perfused rat pancreas model. Changes in the rate of pancreatic lactate output after these biguanides were also evaluated. Metformin--at 1.5 micrograms/ml--and phenformin--at 100 ng/ml--were separately infused both at 160 mg/dl and 300 mg/dl glucose levels. Neither metformin nor phenformin affected
glucagon
or somatostatin secretion during these two metabolic stimuli with glucose, nor did they significantly influence insulin response to the lower glucose stimulus. Both metformin and phenformin enhanced insulin response to 300 mg/dl glucose infusion and increased the second phase of the B-cell secretory profile but only phenformin significantly enhanced the pancreatic lactate output rate during the 300 mg/dl glucose infusion. Infusion with dichloroacetate (a stimulator of the mitochondrial pyruvate oxidation) or with verapamil (a calcium antagonist) alone did not modify the insulin response to high glucose concentrations. During metformin infusion dichloroacetate neither modified metformin's effects on B-cell response to high glucose nor did it affect the pancreatic lactate output rate. On the other hand dichloroacetate opposed phenformin's effects on the B-cell response to high glucose and reversed the rise in the pancreatic lactate output rate. Verapamil inhibited the effect of metformin on the B-cell response to high glucose but failed to affect phenformin's influence on high-glucose induced insulin release. These data suggest both metformin and phenformin potentiate--at least in rats--the late phase of insulin secretory response to high glucose. However metformin seems to influence pancreatic B-cell activity mainly by facilitating the trans-membrane calcium ion influx responsible for the second phase of insulin release.
Phenformin
's influence seems indirect since it increases pancreatic lactate production which mediates the enhanced B-cell response to glucose.
...
PMID:Do metformin and phenformin potentiate differently B-cell response to high glucose? An in vitro study on isolated rat pancreas. 167 60