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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Diabetic MedicineVolume 25 Issue 5, Pages 513 - 522 Published Online: 28 Jun 2008 Journal compilation © 2010 Diabetes UK
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 307K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Review Article The mechanisms that underlie glucose sensing during hypoglycaemia in diabetes Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. KEYWORDS hypoglycaemia • glucose-excited neurons • glucose-inhibited neurons • ventromedial hypothalamus • AMP-activated protein kinase Diabet. Med. 25, 513–522 (2008) ABSTRACT
Hypoglycaemia is a frequent and greatly feared side-effect of insulin therapy, and a major obstacle to achieving near-normal glucose control. This review will focus on the more recent developments in our understanding of the mechanisms that underlie the sensing of hypoglycaemia in both non-diabetic and diabetic individuals, and how this mechanism becomes impaired over time. The research focus of my own laboratory and many others is directed by three principal questions. Where does the body sense a falling glucose? How does the body detect a falling glucose? And why does this mechanism fail in Type 1 diabetes? Hypoglycaemia is sensed by specialized neurons found in the brain and periphery, and of these the ventromedial hypothalamus appears to play a major role. Neurons that react to fluctuations in glucose use mechanisms very similar to those that operate in pancreatic B- and A-cells, in particular in their use of glucokinase and the K Accepted 10 October 2007 |