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Clinical Trial
. 1987 Sep 11;99(17):603-8.

[Long-term effect of combination glibenclamide-insulin treatment in the secondary failure of sulfonylurea therapy--results of a one-year double blind study]

[Article in German]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 3118579
Clinical Trial

[Long-term effect of combination glibenclamide-insulin treatment in the secondary failure of sulfonylurea therapy--results of a one-year double blind study]

[Article in German]
R Lundershausen et al. Wien Klin Wochenschr. .

Abstract

The long-term efficacy of combined insulin-glibenclamide treatment was investigated in 79 secondary drug failure patients by means of a double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled study. During a one-year follow-up period the patients on insulin plus glibenclamide required significantly lower exogenous insulin doses. Coincidentally, C-peptide concentrations were significantly raised in the verum versus the placebo group. Additionally, the administration of glibenclamide resulted in a decreased level of hyperglycaemia during the first six months of the observation period. Glibenclamide withdrawal after six and again after twelve months of the combined therapy provoked a deterioration of glycaemic control, as well as a lowering of the C-peptide concentrations. The findings demonstrate a prolonged beneficial effect of the combined treatment, in contrast to the solely short-term effects predicted by numerous studies. The metabolic improvement must be ascribed in part to the beta-cytotropic effect of glibenclamide. Extrapancreatic pathways via receptor/postreceptor mechanisms cannot be excluded.

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