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. 1985 Jan-Feb;8(1):28-33.
doi: 10.2337/diacare.8.1.28.

Rarity of a marked "dawn phenomenon" in diabetic subjects treated by continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion

Rarity of a marked "dawn phenomenon" in diabetic subjects treated by continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion

J J Bending et al. Diabetes Care. 1985 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

We assessed the quality of overnight glycemic control and the frequency of the "dawn phenomenon" (nadir-0800 h glycemic increase) in 41 insulin-dependent diabetic patients treated by continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). Mean plasma glucose levels were near-normal during the 24 h and, in particular, constant throughout the night. In a subset of six patients overnight plasma free insulin concentrations were also constant during CSII. The majority of profiles (88%) showed a glucose nadir from 2.0 to 5.9 mmol/L (most frequently at 0600 h) and had an 0800 h value from 2.0 to 6.9 mmol/L (92%). A large proportion (46%) of profiles showed a zero or negative nadir-0800 h glycemic increase. In 22 patients with three or more profiles recorded at the same basal insulin infusion rate, only one of 103 profiles had a fasting glycemic increase greater than an arbitrary value of 5.0 mmol/L (5.3), although many patients exhibited small dawn glycemic increases (e.g., 14 of 22 had a mean increase of from 0 to 2 mmol/L). In 12 subjects a 15% reduction in basal insulin infusion rate increased the mean +/- SEM dawn glycemic increase from 0.58 +/- 0.25 mmol/L to 2.7 +/- 0.76 mmol/L (P less than 0.025) as well as significantly increasing the nocturnal nadir and 0800 h plasma glucose concentrations. Thus, a marked dawn phenomenon is rare when a single but adequate basal infusion rate is used for CSII, and this questions the need in the majority of patients for preprogrammable pumps with nocturnal infusion rate changes.

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