Title: Physiological, Symptomatic and Hormonal Responses to Acute Hypoglycaemia in Type 1 Diabetic Patients with Autonomic Neuropathy
Abstract: The effects of peripheral autonomic neuropathy on the symptomatic, physiological, and hormonal responses to acute insulin‐induced hypoglycaemia were studied in two groups of patients with Type 1 diabetes, matched for age, duration of diabetes, and prevailing glycaemic control. A group of eight patients who gave a history of normal awareness of hypoglycaemia and had normal cardiovascular autonomic function tests were compared to a group of six patients who had symptoms of autonomic dysfunction and gross abnormalities of cardiovascular autonomic function tests. An additional two patients with autonomic neuropathy who also had hypoglycaemia unawareness were studied. Acute hypoglycaemia was induced by intravenous infusion of insulin (2.5 ***mU kg −1 min −1 ) and the onset of the acute autonomic reaction (R) was identified objectively by the sudden rise in heart rate and onset of sweating. Cognitive function and hypoglycaemia symptom scores were estimated serially, and plasma counterregulatory hormones were measured. Acute autonomic activation was observed to occur in all subjects in response to hypoglycaemia and commenced at similar venous plasma glucose concentrations in both groups (neuropathic patients: 1.6 ± 0.2 mmol I −1 vs non‐neuropathic patients 1.6 ± 0.2 mmol I −1 , p = 0.9,). In the neuropathic patients plasma adrenaline responses were significantly lower at all time points from time R until time R + 30 min (MANOVA for repeated measures, F = 19.4, p < 0.001). The total autonomic symptom score at R was slightly lower in the neuropathic patients (12 (8–12) median (range)) but was not significantly different from the non‐neuropathic patients (14 (10–26), p = 0.10), and the total neuroglycopenic symptom scores were very similar (neuropathic group: 11 (6–21) vs non‐neuropathic group: 11.5 (6–22), p = 0.95). Although some of the autonomic responses were lower, but not significantly so, in the patients with autonomic neuropathy this study suggests that peripheral autonomic neuropathy is not the principal cause of hypoglycaemia unawareness in patients with Type 1 diabetes.
Publication Year: 1993
Publication Date: 1993-12-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 25
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