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Five-Year Follow-Up Study on Plasma Insulin Levels in Newly Diagnosed NIDDM Patients and Nondiabetic Subjects

  1. Leo K Niskanen, MD,
  2. Matti I Uusitupa, MD,
  3. Helena Sarlund, MD,
  4. Onni Siitonen, MD and
  5. Kalevi Pyörälä, MD
  1. Departments of Medicine and Clinical Nutrition, University of Kuopio Kuopio, Finland
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Leo Niskanen, MD, Department of Medicine, University of Kuopio, 70210 Kuopio, Finland.

Abstract

A representative group of middle-aged (45- to 64-yr-old) patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) (n = 133; 70 men, 63 women) were examined at the time of diagnosis and 5 yr afterward for metabolic control and insulin response to oral glucose; 144 nondiabetic control subjects (62 men, 82 women) were similarly examined twice between 5-yr intervals. At the 5-yr examination, 56 of the diabetic patients (36 men, 20 women) were on diet therapy only, 60 (27 men, 33 women) received oral antidiabetic drugs, and 5 were treated with insulin. The metabolic control of diabetic patients was poor at the time of diagnosis and 5-yr examination. Fasting plasma insulin levels were higher in diabetic patients than in control subjects both at baseline (23 ± 2 vs. 14 ± 1 mU/L, P < 0.01, for men; 26 ± 2 vs. 15 ± 1 mU/L, NS, for women) and 5-yr examination (19 ± 1 vs. 16 ± 2 mU/L, NS, for men; 29 ± 5 vs. 15 ± 1 mU/L, P < 0.05, for women). The frequency of insulin deficiency in diabetic patients based on a postglucagon (1 mg i.v.) C-peptide level <0.60 nM was 3.3% at the 5-yr examination, indicating that true insulin deficiency was uncommon during the first years after diagnosis of diabetes in middle-aged subjects.

  • Received March 21, 1989.
  • Revision received August 2, 1989.
  • Accepted August 2, 1989.
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