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Mini-Dose Glucagon as a Novel Approach to Prevent Exercise-Induced Hypoglycemia in Type 1 Diabetes.
- Source :
- Diabetes Care; Sep2018, Vol. 41 Issue 9, p1909-1916, 8p
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- <bold>Objective: </bold>Patients with type 1 diabetes who do aerobic exercise often experience a drop in blood glucose concentration that can result in hypoglycemia. Current approaches to prevent exercise-induced hypoglycemia include reduction in insulin dose or ingestion of carbohydrates, but these strategies may still result in hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia. We sought to determine whether mini-dose glucagon (MDG) given subcutaneously before exercise could prevent subsequent glucose lowering and to compare the glycemic response to current approaches for mitigating exercise-associated hypoglycemia.<bold>Research Design and Methods: </bold>We conducted a four-session, randomized crossover trial involving 15 adults with type 1 diabetes treated with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion who exercised fasting in the morning at ∼55% VO2max for 45 min under conditions of no intervention (control), 50% basal insulin reduction, 40-g oral glucose tablets, or 150-μg subcutaneous glucagon (MDG).<bold>Results: </bold>During exercise and early recovery from exercise, plasma glucose increased slightly with MDG compared with a decrease with control and insulin reduction and a greater increase with glucose tablets (P < 0.001). Insulin levels were not different among sessions, whereas glucagon increased with MDG administration (P < 0.001). Hypoglycemia (plasma glucose <70 mg/dL) was experienced by six subjects during control, five subjects during insulin reduction, and none with glucose tablets or MDG; five subjects experienced hyperglycemia (plasma glucose ≥250 mg/dL) with glucose tablets and one with MDG.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>MDG may be more effective than insulin reduction for preventing exercise-induced hypoglycemia and may result in less postintervention hyperglycemia than ingestion of carbohydrate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- BLOOD sugar
COMPARATIVE studies
CROSSOVER trials
DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology
EXERCISE
FASTING
GLUCAGON
GLUCOSE
HYPOGLYCEMIA
INSULIN
INSULIN pumps
TYPE 1 diabetes
RESEARCH methodology
MEDICAL cooperation
RESEARCH
STATISTICAL sampling
EVALUATION research
RANDOMIZED controlled trials
DISEASE complications
PREVENTION
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 01495992
- Volume :
- 41
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Diabetes Care
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 131363691
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.2337/dc18-0051