Diabetes Care, Vol 20, Issue 3 413-418, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
Prevalence and determinants of solid and liquid gastric emptying in unstable type I diabetes. Relationship to postprandial blood glucose concentrations
EB Lyrenas, EH Olsson, UC Arvidsson, TJ Orn and JH Spjuth
Department of Internal Medicine, Central Hospital, Karlskrona, Sweden.
OBJECTIVE: To compare postprandial blood glucose levels with gastric
emptying (GE) time after intake of a solid and a nutrient liquid meal in
patients with unstable, type I diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The
subjects studied were 15 patients with long-standing type I diabetes who
during the last year repeatedly reported unexplained episodes of
instability in their blood glucose regulation, including postprandial
hypoglycemia. All patients were on a meal-administered, fast-acting insulin
regimen. As control group, 19 healthy subjects were studied. GE was
measured at two separate occasions, using a gamma camera after intake of
either a solid or a nutrient liquid, isotope-labeled meal. Measurement of
GE was done directly after meal completion and at 30-min intervals for 2 h.
Insulin was taken 30 min before intake of the meal. Blood glucose was
measured 30 min before the meal, after meal completion and at 30, 60, 90,
and 120 min after start of the meal. All patients were evaluated for
evidence of autonomic neuropathy and were asked for signs of
gastrointestinal motor dysfunction. RESULTS: Seven (44%) of the patients
had significantly delayed emptying of the solid meal (three men, four
women) (P < 0.01), of whom one woman also had delayed emptying of the
liquid meal compared with the healthy control subjects. Changes in blood
glucose concentration were correlated to GE time with, in the group with
delayed GE, a significant fall after the solid meal compared with the
liquid meal (P < 0.05). The lag phase was prolonged in the women
compared with the men, reaching significance in the patient group (P <
0.01). The women, patients as well as control subjects, had throughout the
study a prolonged emptying time compared with the men after both the solid
and the liquid meal. No correlation between GE and blood glucose
concentration could be found. CONCLUSIONS: Delayed GE of a solid meal is
commonly found in patients with type I diabetes and may be one cause of
unstable blood glucose regulation. Women, patients as well as control
subjects, seem to have a more prolonged GE than men. Awareness of gastric
function in patients with type I diabetes is essential, especially in
patients treated with meal-administered, fast-acting insulin.