Evidence for a relationship between free radicals and insulin action in the elderly
- PMID: 8492724
- DOI: 10.1016/0026-0495(93)90228-g
Evidence for a relationship between free radicals and insulin action in the elderly
Abstract
In forty healthy subjects with normal glucose tolerance divided by age into four groups (group A, subjects with mean age < 25 years [n = 10]; group B, subjects with mean age < 40 years [n = 9]; group C, subjects with mean age < 60 years [n = 11]; group D, subjects with mean age > 75 years [n = 10]) and were matched for body mass index (BMI), lean body mass (LBM), mean arterial blood pressure, and sedentary life style, we determined the plasma O2- production, reduced to oxidized glutathione level ratio (GSH/GSSG), and plasma membrane microviscosity. Euglycemic hyperinsulinemic (1 mU/kg.min-1 for 120 minutes) glucose clamp with simultaneous D-3-H glucose infusion and indirect calorimetry allowed determination of glucose turnover parameters and substrate oxidation. In the oldest group of subjects, a significant increase in plasma O2-production and membrane microviscosity associated with a significative reduction in glucose disappearance rate (Rd), total body glucose disposal (TBGD), and nonoxidative glucose metabolism was found. In group D subjects (n = 10), all of these changes were correlated with one another. In a multiple regression analysis of the pooled data from all study subjects (n = 40), only plasma O2- production levels displayed a statistically significant relation with TBGD and nonoxidative glucose metabolism. In conclusion, in aged patients a significant relationship between free radical production and insulin action seems to exist.
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