From the Departments of Medicine and Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and Nashville Veteran Affairs Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee
![]() |
ABSTRACT |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
It is now clearly established that microvascular complications of type 1 diabetes can be prevented or delayed by maintaining near-normoglycemia in patients with this disease (1). The target of near-normoglycemia, however, is associated with a threefold increased incidence of severe hypoglycemia and coma (2). Further, in patients with type 1 diabetes, hypoglycemia is frequently associated with physical activity, often resulting in limitation of the patients daily activities. The reasons for the high incidence of exercise-associated hypoglycemia in patients with type 1 diabetes are not fully elucidated.
When exposed to hypoglycemia, the human body reacts by triggering a series of neuroendocrine, metabolic, and autonomic nervous system (ANS) responses, aimed at restoring euglycemia. In type 1 diabetes, some counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia (glucagon) are permanently lost shortly after the onset of the disease (3). In the absence of diabetic autonomic neuropathy, sympathoadrenal responses are preserved and can retain the ability to mount an adequate defense against hypoglycemia. Unfortunately, these residual counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia can also be reduced. After an episode of hypoglycemia, counterregulatory responses to further hypoglycemia are reduced, rendering hypoglycemia itself more likely to occur. Subsequent episodes of hypoglycemia prolong the duration of blunted responses and therefore perpetuate the likelihood of further hypoglycemia. This phenomenon, defined as "hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure," has been documented in healthy subjects, insulinoma patients (4), and type 1 diabetic patients (59).
Recently, an additional concept was also introduced stating that hypoglycemia and exercise may reciprocally blunt their respective counterregulatory responses (10,11). In patients with type 1 diabetes, hypoglycemia is often associated with physical activity. However, limited data exist examining the role of deficient counterregulatory responses per se on the increased incidence of exercise-associated hypoglycemia. Typically, glucagon responses, which are permanently lost during hypoglycemia after a few years duration of type 1 diabetes, are preserved during exercise. However, Bottini et al. (12) reported that epinephrine responses to exercise can be reduced in patients with classic diabetic autonomic neuropathy. Furthermore, Schneider et al. (13) have reported blunted neuroendocrine responses during exercise in metabolically well-controlled type 1 diabetic patients. Recently, a study from our laboratory in nondiabetic subjects demonstrated a significant reduction in counterregulatory responses to exercise after antecedent hypoglycemia (11). Rattarasarn et al. (14), on the other hand, reported unchanged counterregulatory responses during exercise after hypoglycemia in a group of type 1 diabetic patients. Thus, the effects of prior hypoglycemia on counterregulatory responses during subsequent exercise in patients with type 1 diabetes are unclear.
The present study was therefore designed to test the hypothesis that antecedent hypoglycemia induces acute counterregulatory failure during next-day exercise. A total of 16 patients with type 1 diabetes (8 men and 8 women) were studied. Each participant performed 90-min bouts of euglycemic cycling exercise of moderate intensity (50% VO2max) after either two 2-h episodes of hypoglycemia (2.9 mmol/l) or resting euglycemia (
5.0 mmol/l).
![]() |
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Preliminary exercise testing.
At least 2 weeks before the initial study, patients performed an incremental work test on a stationary cycle ergometer to determine VO2max and anaerobic threshold (AT). Air flow, O2, and CO2 concentrations in inspired and expired air were measured by a computerized open-circuit indirect calorimetry cart (Medical Graphics Cardio2 cycle) with a mouthpiece and nose clip system. AT was determined by the V-slope method (15). AT determined by gas exchange corresponds to the onset of an increased lactate/pyruvate ratio in blood and indicates the level of exercise above which anaerobic mechanisms supplement aerobic energy production (16). At workloads below the AT, exercise can be continued for a prolonged period, whereas above the AT, fatigue will occur considerably faster (17). The experimental work rate was established by calculating 80% AT. The AT was detected at 59 ± 3% of VO2max, and 80% AT corresponded to 47 ± 2% of the subjects VO2max. This workload was chosen because it is close enough to the AT to produce a physically challenging stress (i.e., large experimental signal) but is sustainable for a prolonged period of time. Subjects studied ranged from sedentary to regularly exercising, although not actively participating in competitive sports. Mean VO2max for the group was 31 ± 2 ml · kg-1 · min-1 (range 2143 ml · kg-1 · min-1).
Experimental design.
Each patient was further studied during two separate visits, each lasting 2 consecutive days and including two overnight stays in our Clinical Research Center. During day 1 of one of the visits, patients underwent morning and afternoon 2-h hyperinsulinemic-hypoglycemic clamps (anteHypo). During day 1 of the other visit, patients underwent morning and afternoon hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic control experiments (anteEugly). During day 2 of both visits, all patients performed an identical 90-min exercise protocol under euglycemic conditions. The sequence of anteHypo and anteEugly studies was randomized, and at least 6 weeks were allowed to elapse between the two visits.
Patients were asked to avoid hypoglycemia during the 7 days preceding each visit. Patients checked their blood glucose four times per day and twice weekly at night and reported the recorded values to the investigators before admission. Detection of any value <3.9 mmol/l resulted in rescheduling of the study. Patients were also asked to avoid any exercise and consume their usual weight-maintaining diet for 3 days before each study. Intermediate- or long-acting insulin was administered into the arms for 3 days before a study to eliminate exaggerated insulin absorption from a working muscle during cycle exercise. Each subject was admitted to the Vanderbilt Clinical Research Center at 4:00 P.M. on the afternoon before an experiment. Upon admission, patients were asked to discontinue their usual insulin therapy, and two intravenous cannulas were inserted under 1% lidocaine local anesthesia. One cannula was placed in a retrograde fashion into a vein on the back of the left hand. This hand was placed in a heated box (5560°C) so that arterialized blood could be obtained. The other cannula was placed in the contralateral arm so that insulin and 20% glucose (when needed) could be infused via a variable rate volumetric infusion pump (I-med, San Diego, CA). An insulin infusion was immediately started at a basal rate. Patients then consumed an evening meal and a 7:30 P.M. snack and were requested not to ingest any food after 10:00 P.M. The insulin infusion rate was increased during meal consumption. Throughout the night, blood glucose was measured every 30 min, and the insulin infusion rate constantly adjusted to maintain glycemic levels of 4.46.7 mmol/l.
Day 1 procedures.
Day 1 procedures (Fig. 1) started at 8:00 A.M. after a 10-h overnight fast and lasted 480 min, divided into an equilibration period (0120 min), a morning hyperinsulinemic clamp period (120240 min), a rest period (240360 min), and an afternoon hyperinsulinemic clamp period (360480 min). At 120 min, in all studies, a primed continuous infusion of insulin (9 pmol · kg-1 · min-1) was started (18). In prior-hypoglycemia studies, plasma glucose was allowed to fall over a 30-min period to a target hypoglycemic plateau of 2.9 mmol/l. Plasma glucose was measured every 5 min and maintained at the desired level via a variable rate infusion of 20% dextrose (19). In prior-euglycemia studies, plasma glucose was held constant at basal levels by a similar technique (20). At 240 min, the insulin infusion was decreased to the morning basal rate, and euglycemia was restored in prior-hypoglycemia studies and maintained in the prior-euglycemia studies. At 360 min, a second 2-h euglycemic or hypoglycemic clamp identical to that performed in the morning was carried out. At 480 min, the insulin infusion was decreased to the morning basal rate, euglycemia was restored in prior-hypoglycemia studies, and all patients were allowed to consume a standardized meal. Evening and overnight procedures were then identical to those of admission night.
|
Tracer methodology.
Rates of glucose appearance (Ra), endogenous glucose production (EGP), and glucose utilization were calculated according to the methods of Wall et al. (21). EGP was calculated by determining the total Ra (this comprises both EGP and any exogenous glucose infused to maintain euglycemia) and subtracting from it the amount of exogenous glucose infused. It is now recognized that this approach is not fully quantitative because underestimates of total Ra and rate of glucose disposal can be obtained. This underestimate can be largely overcome by use of high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC)-purified tracer and taking measurements under steady-state conditions (i.e., constant specific activity). To minimize changes in specific activity, the tracer infusion rate was gradually doubled during the first 30 min of exercise. During the last 60 min of exercise, proportional additional increases of the tracer infusion rate were made commensurate with the changes of the exogenous glucose infusion rate.
Analytical methods.
The collection and processing of blood samples have been described elsewhere (22). Plasma glucose concentrations were measured in triplicate using the glucose oxidase method with a glucose analyzer (Beckman, Fullerton, CA). Glucagon was measured according to a modification of the method of Aguilar-Parada et al. (23) with an interassay coefficient of variation (CV) of 12%. Free insulin was measured as previously described (24) with an interassay CV of 9%. Catecholamines were determined by HPLC (25) with an interassay CV of 12% for epinephrine and 8% for norepinephrine. We made two modifications to the procedure for catecholamine determination: 1) we used a five-point rather than a one-point standard calibration curve, and 2) we spiked the initial and final samples of plasma with known amounts of epinephrine and norepinephrine so accurate identification of the relevant respective catecholamine peaks could be made. Cortisol was assayed using the Clinical Assays Gamma Coat Radioimmunoassay (RIA) kit with an interassay CV of 6%. Growth hormone was determined by RIA (26) with a CV of 8.6%. Pancreatic polypeptide was measured by RIA using the method of Hagopian et al. (27) with an interassay CV of 8%. Lactate, glycerol, alanine, and ß-hydroxybutyrate were measured in deproteinized whole blood using the method of Lloyd et al. (28). Nonesterified fatty acids were measured using the WAKO kit adopted for use on a centrifugal analyzer (29).
On day 2, blood samples for glucose flux were taken every 10 min throughout the basal period and every 15 min during exercise. Blood for hormones and intermediary metabolites were drawn twice during the basal period and every 15 min during the exercise period. Cardiovascular parameters (pulse and systolic and diastolic arterial pressure) were measured every 10 min from -30 min to 90 min. Respiratory quotient, carbohydrate, and lipid oxidation were measured by gas exchange during the basal period and the final 10 min of exercise.
Materials.
HPLC-purified [3-3H]glucose (New England Nuclear, Boston, MA) was used as the glucose tracer (11.5 mCi · mmol-1 · l-1). Human regular insulin was purchased from Eli Lilly (Indianapolis, IN). The insulin infusion solution was prepared with normal saline and contained 3% (vol/vol) of the subjects own plasma.
Statistical analysis.
Data are expressed as mean ± SE unless otherwise stated and were analyzed using standard parametric two-way ANOVA with repeated-measures design. This was coupled with the Duncan post hoc test to delineate at which time points statistical significance was reached. A value of P < 0.05 indicated significant difference.
![]() |
RESULTS |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
|
Day 2: insulin, glucose, and counterregulatory hormone levels.
Basal pre-exercise plasma glucose levels were comparable in the two experimental groups (anteEugly 5.2 ± 0.1 mmol/l, anteHypo 5.1 ± 0.1 mmol/l). During the last 30 min of exercise, plasma glucose was 5.3 ± 0.2 mmol/l in anteEugly and 5.4 ± 0.1 mmol/l in anteHypo.
Before exercise, basal plasma insulin levels were 75 ± 8 pmol/l in anteEugly and 71 ± 7 pmol/l in anteHypo; during the last 30 min of exercise, insulin was 62 ± 6 pmol/l in anteEugly and 61 ± 6 pmol/l in anteHypo (Fig. 2).
After anteEugly, plasma glucagon increased during exercise from 44 ± 4 to 54 ± 5 ng/l. After anteHypo, basal glucagon levels (39 ± 40 ng/l) remained unchanged during exercise (39 ± 4 ng/l, P < 0.001 vs. anteEugly) (Fig. 3). Plasma cortisol increased during exercise from 359 ± 55 to 635 ± 83 nmol/l in anteEugly. After anteHypo, the increase of cortisol levels was significantly blunted during exercise (386 ± 55 to 469 ± 55 nmol/l, P < 0.001) (Fig. 3).
|
|
|
|
Day 2: intermediary metabolism.
Blood lactate levels (Fig. 4) were similar at baseline in the two groups. Blood lactate increased by a greater increment during anteEugly compared with anteHypo (1.34 ± 0.14 vs. 0.77 ± 0.20 mmol/l, respectively; P < 0.02). Free fatty acid (FFA) basal levels (Fig. 4) were also similar in both groups, but the exercise-induced increase was significantly less in anteHypo (87 ± 0.58 µmol/l) than in anteEugly (224 ± 68 µmol/l, P < 0.05). Similarly, circulating levels of glycerol (Fig. 4), an indicator of whole-body lipolysis, increased significantly less after anteHypo (66 ± 11 µmol/l) compared with anteEugly (103 ± 14 µmol/l, P = 0.002). No difference in the circulating levels of alanine or of the ketone body ß-hydroxybutyrate were measured between the two groups either at baseline or during exercise.
Day 2: cardiovascular parameters.
No significant difference occurred in heart rate and systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure between the two groups at baseline or during exercise. However, unlike heart rate and systolic and mean blood pressure (which increased over baseline during exercise), diastolic blood pressure fell by 10 mmHg by the last 30 min of exercise (Table 3).
|
![]() |
DISCUSSION |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|
Glycemic levels were carefully controlled at all times during our 2-day studies. During overnight stays at our Clinical Research Center, hypoglycemia was carefully avoided by constant adjustments of exogenous insulin and/or glucose. Uncontrolled hypoglycemia during the first part of the study would have confounded interpretation of blunted responses during subsequent exercise. Additionally, euglycemia was also strictly maintained during day 2 exercise. During exercise, hyperglycemia inhibits neuroendocrine responses, whereas hypoglycemia would have induced counterregulatory responses independent of those induced by exercise per se.
Another important point of our experimental design was controlling the prevailing insulinemia during exercise. In nondiabetic individuals, exercise conditions similar to those used in the present study result in a 4050% fall in peripheral insulinemia below pre-exercise levels. Trying to reproduce this pattern in patients with type 1 diabetes, however, may result in relative hepatic hypoinsulinemia, particularly in patients who need very low basal insulin infusion rates, and can result in hyperglycemia of 89 mmol/l during exercise. Furthermore, a drop in insulin levels during exercise will not reflect real-life conditions for diabetic patients on typical basal/bolus multiple insulin injection regimens who are unable to reduce insulin levels. Therefore, insulin concentrations during exercise were controlled at levels of 6070 pmol/l, which reflect typical postabsorptive insulinemia found in type 1 diabetic patients (30). Indeed, the inability of type 1 diabetic patients to suppress insulin levels during exercise may per se be a factor responsible for exercise-associated hypoglycemia.
Blunting of the glucagon response during exercise after antecedent hypoglycemia is particularly relevant for patients with type 1 diabetes. In these patients, the glucagon response to hypoglycemia is gradually lost over the first few years after diagnosis. Interestingly, however, secretion of the hormone during exercise is preserved, indicating that the pancreatic -cell deficit is stimulus specific. After antecedent euglycemia, our patients were able to mount a glucagon response similar to that previously observed in nondiabetic subjects during exercise of similar duration and intensity (11). Two episodes of prior hypoglycemia of 2.9 mmol/l, however, abolished this response, therefore increasing the risk of hypoglycemia. In fact, maintaining euglycemic conditions during exercise required the infusion of an additional 15 µmol · kg-1 · min-1 exogenous glucose after prior hypoglycemia, as compared with prior euglycemia. Had this supplemental exogenous glucose not been administered, hypoglycemia, possibly severe, would have occurred during exercise.
Plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine responses to exercise were reduced after prior hypoglycemia, a finding consistent with reduced sympathetic drive. Additionally, there was a trend for the pancreatic polypeptide response (an index of parasympathetic input to the pancreas) to be reduced during exercise (39% smaller incremental area under the curve) after antecedent hypoglycemia compared with antecedent euglycemia. Taken together, these data indicate that prior hypoglycemia resulted in a widespread reduction of the ANS drive during subsequent exercise in type 1 diabetes. It should also be noted that the pancreatic polypeptide response after antecedent euglycemia (i.e., without the blunting effect of prior hypoglycemia) was only about half that reported during similar experimental conditions in nondiabetic subjects (11). Our data therefore indicate that, in type 1 diabetes, the pancreatic polypeptide response may be an index of reduced ANS activation not only during hypoglycemia, as previously reported (31), but also in response to different forms of stress (exercise).
Lactate, FFA, and glycerol responses were reduced during exercise after antecedent hypoglycemia compared with euglycemia. During exercise, ANS activation and increased catecholamine secretion stimulate lipolysis and increase peripheral release of gluconeogenic precursors, such as lactate and amino acids. The reduced ANS drive and catecholamine levels during exercise, caused by antecedent hypoglycemia, are therefore the most likely explanation for the blunting in lactate and lipolytic responses in our study. It should be noted that insulin levels during exercise were identical in the two experimental conditions, and therefore, decreased lipolysis could not be ascribed to a difference in the antilipolytic effect of this hormone. Greater lactate and glycerol uptake by the liver during exercise could also have reduced the circulating levels of these metabolites. This possibility, however, appears unlikely because greater uptake of these precursors should be reflected by an increase in EGP. Instead, and quite to the contrary, a reduction in EGP occurred during exercise after antecedent hypoglycemia.
Cardiovascular responses to exercise were similar in the two experimental conditions tested in the present study. However, although heart rate and systolic blood pressure increased as expected during exercise, diastolic blood pressure decreased by 10 mmHg. Diastolic dysfunction during exercise, not accompanied by systolic dysfunction or altered cardiac output response, has been reported by several authors (3234) in type 1 diabetic patients with no evidence of autonomic neuropathy, leading to the hypothesis that alterations in diastolic filling may represent the earliest functional defect of diabetic cardiomyopathy. Surprisingly, however, an exercise-induced reduction in diastolic blood pressure in type 1 diabetes has not been previously reported. We believe that the experimental design used in previous exercise studies obscured recognition of this finding. The large majority of previous exercise studies in type 1 diabetes used incremental maximal tests (33,35,36) or brief periods of submaximal exercise (37); furthermore, diastolic blood pressure was seldom reported, and glycemic levels during exercise were never controlled (introducing the confounding effect of concomitant hypoglycemia, which may independently lower blood pressure and stimulate the ANS).
Interestingly, despite significant reductions in catecholamine responses after day 1 hypoglycemia, there were similar cardiovascular responses during exercise in both series of studies. Cardiovascular responses during stress can depend on the balance between the sympathetic and parasympathetic drive. An off-setting blunting effect on the two limbs of the ANS in the anteHypo group may have therefore resulted in a new equilibrium with unchanged cardiovascular responses. However, this hypothesis remains speculative because, in the present study, only indirect measurements of sympathetic and parasympathetic impulses were obtained.
Current clinical practice stresses the importance of physical activity in diabetes management. The beneficial effects of exercise (including weight control, improved insulin sensitivity, and protection from cardiovascular disease) are particularly important for type 1 diabetic patients, already at high risk for long-term cardiovascular complications. Consequently, growing numbers of patients participate in physical activities such as football, tennis matches, outdoor hiking, or bike rides, which are all forms of physical activity with duration and intensity similar to our exercise model. Importantly, the blunting effect of antecedent hypoglycemia on counterregulatory responses to exercise, as indicated by inadequate supply of glucose and lipids to the working muscle, was apparent after just 30 min of exercise. This indicates that if patients with type 1 diabetes are exposed to prior hypoglycemia and later engage in a form of physical activity comparable to that performed in our study, they may expect hypoglycemia to begin early and persist or worsen through the completion of exercise. In this context, our observations may be relevant for day-to-day management of type 1 diabetes. The concept that antecedent episodes of hypoglycemia may affect counterregulatory responses during next-day exercise may help provide the conceptual basis for prevention of undesired exercise-associated hypoglycemia.
The results from the present study are consistent with our previous observations in a group of 16 healthy subjects who underwent a comparable experimental protocol (11). Similar to the findings reported here, antecedent hypoglycemia resulted in a widespread blunting of neuroendocrine and metabolic counterregulatory responses during exercise, including glucagon, catecholamines, cortisol, EGP, and lipolysis. Changes in other parameters were also qualitatively in agreement with the present study. An earlier study by Rattarasarn et al. (14), on the other hand, reported no blunted response to exercise after hypoglycemia. In that study, type 1 diabetic patients exercised after antecedent afternoon euglycemia or 2 h of hypoglycemia. On both occasions, however, patients had been hypoglycemic for 2 h during the morning of the day preceding the exercise bout. This result may have generated a strong enough blunting stimulus to render superfluous the presence or absence of afternoon hypoglycemia. Other differences, such as the shorter duration of exercise (only 60 min), prevailing hyperglycemia, and smaller sample size (n = 8), may also have affected the results.
The underlying mechanisms causing the high incidence of exercise-associated hypoglycemia in type 1 diabetes are still incompletely understood. One mechanism points to the role played by acute increases in insulin sensitivity (and also in relatively elevated insulin levels) that occur during exercise (38). The hyperinsulinemia that typically occurs during clinical practice in patients with type 1 diabetes, however, is modest and very unlikely to cause marked hypoglycemia if counterregulatory responses are intact (19). Furthermore, if hypoglycemia occurs during exercise, neuroendocrine responses are in fact increased (39). Catecholamine responses to hypoglycemic exercise, on the other hand, are reduced in well-controlled type 1 diabetic patients (i.e., exposed to repeated antecedent hypoglycemia) (13). Furthermore, patients with classic diabetic autonomic neuropathy have blunted epinephrine responses during euglycemic exercise (12). These reports suggest that an alteration in counterregulatory responses, similar to that observed during repeated hypoglycemia, may be an important cause of the increased incidence of hypoglycemia associated with physical activity. The mechanisms responsible for acute counterregulatory failure during repeated hypoglycemia, however, are also speculative and could include prior hypercortisolemia (40), alterations in cerebral glucose extraction (41), and elevations of circulating levels of lactate (42) and ketone bodies (42) during the subsequent stress. Whether one or more of these mechanisms are also responsible for blunted responses during exercise is unclear.
In summary, this study has demonstrated that after two 2-h episodes of hypoglycemia of 2.9 mmol/l, a widespread blunting of counterregulatory responses occurs in patients with type 1 diabetes during next-day moderate exercise. Among neuroendocrine counterregulatory responses, glucagon, epinephrine, and cortisol were the most severely blunted, and this reduction was paralleled by proportional blunting of EGP and lipolysis.
We conclude that in patients with type 1 diabetes, antecedent hypoglycemia induces acute counterregulatory failure not only during subsequent hypoglycemia, but also during subsequent, moderate exercise. This acute state of counterregulatory impairment may be one of the causes of exercise-associated hypoglycemia in patients with type 1 diabetes.
![]() |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
---|
We thank Eric Allen, Angelina Penalosa, and Wanda Snead for expert technical assistance. We also appreciate the skill and help of the nurses of the Vanderbilt General Clinical Research Center in the performance of the studies included in this report.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Stephen N. Davis, 715 PRB, Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232-6303. E-mail: steve.davis{at}mcmail.vanderbilt.edu
Received for publication January 28, 2003 and accepted in revised form
ANS, autonomic nervous system; anteEugly, hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic control experiments; anteHypo, 2-h hyperinsulinemic-hypoglycemic clamps; AT, anaerobic threshold; CV, coefficient of variation; EGP, endogenous glucose production; FFA, free fatty acid; HPLC, high-pressure liquid chromatography; Ra, rate of glucose appearance; RIA, radioimmunoassay
![]() |
REFERENCES |
---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
---|