Browsing by Subject "Glucose"
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- ItemOpen AccessAcute glycaemic effects of co-trimoxazole at prophylactic dose in healthy adults(2016) Kenteu, Bernold; Noubiap, Jean Jacques N; Etoa, Martine Claude; Azabji-Kenfack, Marcel; Dehayem, Mesmin; Sobngwi, EugèneAbstract Background Cases of severe hypoglycaemia were reported in HIV/AIDS patients receiving high dose of the sulfonylurea co-trimoxazole for opportunistic infections. Whether co-trimoxazole at prophylactic dose would induce similar side effects is unknown. We aimed to investigate the acute effects of co-trimoxazole at prophylactic dose on glucose metabolism in healthy adults. Methods We enrolled 20 healthy volunteers (15 males and 5 females) aged 23.0 (SD 2.0) years, with mean BMI of 22.3 (SD 3.6) Kg/m 2 with normal glucose tolerance, hepatic and renal function. We performed a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) with and without concomitant oral co-trimoxazole administered 60 min before the test. Blood glucose response was measured using a capillary test at baseline and at 30, 60, 90, 120 and 180 min following oral glucose load on the two occasions. C-peptide response was also measured. Absolute values of blood glucose and C-peptide with and without co-trimoxazole were compared using the Wilcoxon test. Results During the OGTT without co-trimoxazole (control) vs. the OGTT with co-trimoxazole (test), the glycaemia varied from 4.83 (SD 0.39) mmol/l vs. 4.72 (SD 0.28) mmol/l at T0 (P = 0.667), to 8.00 (SD 1.11) mmol/l vs. 7.44 (SD 0.78) mmol/l at T30 (P = 0.048), 8.00 (SD 1.17) mmol/l vs. 7.67 (SD 1.00) mmol/l at T60 (P = 0.121), 7.33 (SD 0.94) mmol/l vs. 7.11 (SD 0.83) mmol/l at T90 (P = 0.205), 6.78 (SD 1.00) mmol/l vs. 6.67 (SD 1.00) mmol/l at T120 (P = 0.351) and 4.72 (SD 1.39) mmol/l vs. 4.72 (SD 1.56) mmol/l at T180 (P = 0.747). The ratio of area under the glycaemia curve during the control and test investigation was 96.7 %, thus a 3.3 decreased glycaemic response (p = 0.062). A decrease of glycaemia by more than 10 % occurred in 6/20 participants at T30, 7/20 participants at T60 and 1/20 participant at T30 and T60. None of the volunteers experienced co-trimoxazole-induced hypoglycaemia. At the same time, the C-peptide response during the control vs. the test investigation varied from 278.1 (SD 57.5) pmol/l vs. 242.8 (SD 42.5) pmol/l at T0 (P = 0.138), to 1845.6 (SD 423.6) pmol/l vs. 2340.6 (SD 701.3) pmol/l at T60 (P = 0.345) and 1049.8 (SD 503.1) pmol/l vs. 1041.63 (SD 824.21) pmol/l at T180 (P = 0.893). Conclusion Ninety minutes after its administration, co-trimoxazole induced a significant reduction of the early glycaemic response to oral glucose in parallel with a 27-% increase in insulin secretory response. Co-trimoxazole induced within 120 min a more than 10-% blood glucose reduction in 2/3 of participants. However none of the volunteers experienced hypoglycaemia.
- ItemOpen AccessApparent Absorption Efficiencies of Nectar Sugars in the Cape Sugarbird, with a Comparison of Methods(1998) Jackson, Susan; Nicolson, Susan W; van Wyk, Ben‐ErikNectarivore sugar preferences and nectar composition in the Cape Floristic Kingdom (southern Africa) differ from trends reported for analogous systems in America and Europe in that sugarbirds and sunbirds show no aversion to sucrose, which is the dominant nectar sugar in many of their food plants. To elucidate the physiological bases (if any) of nectarivore sugar preferences, we determined apparent sugar absorption efficiencies in a passerine endemic to this region, the Cape sugarbird Promerops cafer. Apparent absorption efficiencies for the three major nectar sugars, sucrose, glucose, and fructose, were extremely high (> 99%), as in other specialized avian nectarivores. Xylose, a pentose sugar recently reported in the nectar of some Proteaceae, was absorbed and/or metabolized inefficiently, with a mean of 47.1% of ingested sugar recovered in cloacal fluid. We did not measure the proportions of xylose that were absorbed and/or metabolized. We also compared three methods of estimating absorption efficiency: (1) measurements of total sugar in cloacal fluid with refractometry, without correction for differences between volumes of ingesta and excreta; (2) the same measurements combined with correction for volume differences; and (3) HPLC analyses quantifying individual sugars in cloacal fluid, with correction for volume differences. Refractometry has been frequently used in previous studies. For all sugars except xylose, method 1 yielded results similar to those obtained with method 2, but the convergence was artifactual, and we do not recommend use of this method. Apparent absorption efficiencies calculated with method 2 underestimated true absorption efficiency, because refractometry measures nonsugar solutes, but this error is biologically significant only when efficiencies are low.
- ItemOpen AccessConjugated linoleic acid versus high-oleic acid sunflower oil: effects on energy metabolism, glucose tolerance, blood lipids, appetite and body composition in regularly exercising individuals(2007) Lambert, Estelle V; Goedecke, Julia H; Bluett, Kerry; Heggie, Kerry; Claassen, Amanda; Rae, Dale E; West, Sacha; Dugas, Jonathan; Dugas, Lara; Meltzer, Shelly; Charlton, Karen; Mohede, IngeThe aim of this study was to measure the effects of 12 weeks of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) supplementation on body composition, RER, RMR, blood lipid profiles, insulin sensitivity and appetite in exercising, normal-weight persons. In this double-blind, randomised, controlled trial, sixty-two non-obese subjects (twenty-five men, thirty-seven women) received either 3.9 g/d CLA or 3.9 g high-oleic acid sunflower oil for 12 weeks. Prior to and after 12 weeks of supplementation, oral glucose tolerance, blood lipid concentrations, body composition (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and computerised tomography scans), RMR, resting and exercising RER and appetite were measured. There were no significant effects of CLA on body composition or distribution, RMR, RER or appetite. During the oral glucose tolerance tests, mean plasma insulin concentrations (0, 30, 120 min) were significantly lower (P= 0.04) in women who supplemented with CLA (24.3 (SD 9.7) to 20.4 (SD 8.5) microU/ml) compared to high-oleic acid sunflower oil control (23.7 (SD 9.8) to 26.0 (SD 8.8) microU/ml). Serum NEFA levels in response to oral glucose were attenuated in both men and women in the CLA (P=0.001) compared to control group. However, serum total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol concentrations decreased in both groups and HDL-cholesterol concentrations decreased in women over 12 weeks (P=0.001, P=0.02, P=0.02, respectively). In conclusion, mixed-isomer CLA supplementation had a favourable effect on serum insulin and NEFA response to oral glucose in non-obese, regularly exercising women, but there were no CLA-specific effects on body composition, energy expenditure or appetite.
- ItemOpen AccessOleanolic acid: a novel cardioprotective agent that blunts hyperglycemia-induced contractile dysfunction(Public Library of Science, 2012) Mapanga, Rudo F; Rajamani, Uthra; Dlamini, Nonkululeko; Zungu-Edmondson, Makhosazane; Kelly-Laubscher, Roisin; Shafiullah, Mohammed; Wahab, Athiq; Hasan, Mohamed Y; Fahim, Mohamed A; Rondeau, PhilippeDiabetes constitutes a major health challenge. Since cardiovascular complications are common in diabetic patients this will further increase the overall burden of disease. Furthermore, stress-induced hyperglycemia in non-diabetic patients with acute myocardial infarction is associated with higher in-hospital mortality. Previous studies implicate oxidative stress, excessive flux through the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP) and a dysfunctional ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) as potential mediators of this process. Since oleanolic acid (OA; a clove extract) possesses antioxidant properties, we hypothesized that it attenuates acute and chronic hyperglycemia-mediated pathophysiologic molecular events (oxidative stress, apoptosis, HBP, UPS) and thereby improves contractile function in response to ischemia-reperfusion. We employed several experimental systems: 1) H9c2 cardiac myoblasts were exposed to 33 mM glucose for 48 hr vs. controls (5 mM glucose); and subsequently treated with two OA doses (20 and 50 µM) for 6 and 24 hr, respectively; 2) Isolated rat hearts were perfused ex vivo with Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 33 mM glucose vs. controls (11 mM glucose) for 60 min, followed by 20 min global ischemia and 60 min reperfusion ± OA treatment; 3) In vivo coronary ligations were performed on streptozotocin treated rats ± OA administration during reperfusion; and 4) Effects of long-term OA treatment (2 weeks) on heart function was assessed in streptozotocin-treated rats. Our data demonstrate that OA treatment blunted high glucose-induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in heart cells. OA therapy also resulted in cardioprotection, i.e. for ex vivo and in vivo rat hearts exposed to ischemia-reperfusion under hyperglycemic conditions. In parallel, we found decreased oxidative stress, apoptosis, HBP flux and proteasomal activity following ischemia-reperfusion. Long-term OA treatment also improved heart function in streptozotocin-diabetic rats. These findings are promising since it may eventually result in novel therapeutic interventions to treat acute hyperglycemia (in non-diabetic patients) and diabetic patients with associated cardiovascular complications.
- ItemOpen AccessSensory neuropathy and metabolic risk factors in human immune deficiency virus infected South Africans receiving protease inhibitors(2015) Vermaak, John-Randel; Dave, Joel A; Levitt, Naomi; Heckmann, Jeannine MBackgroundProtease inhibitors (PI)s have been associated with distal sensory polyneuropathy (DSP) and metabolic complications in high-income countries. No data exist in Africans where second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) often include PIs.MethodWe performed a cross-sectional study to assess the DSP frequency and metabolic risk factors in community-based South Africans taking ritonavir-boosted lopinavir as PI. Examination findings categorized subjects as having DSP (≥1 neuropathic sign) or symptomatic DSP [DSP with symptom(s)]. Fasting-state glucose and lipid profiles were assessed. We compared the ritonavir/lopinavir-group to a nested group on first-line ART [dideoxy-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (d-drugs)] selected from a dataset collected at the same time and matched for d-drug exposure.ResultsThe ritonavir/lopinavir-group (n=86) consisted predominantly of women (84%) with a median age of 36years (IQR 32–41). The median current CD4+ count was 489cells/μL (IQR 291–665). The median exposure time to ritonavir/lopinavir was 18months (IQR 10–26) and to d-drugs, 24months (IQR 16–38). DSP was present in 78% and symptomatic DSP in 48%; symptoms were most frequently of moderate intensity. Only age independently associated with DSP and symptomatic DSP (p=0.08 and p=0.04, respectively). None of the metabolic syndrome components showed associations with DSP or symptomatic DSP despite a trend towards hypertriglyceridemia overall. The ritonavir/lopinavir-group had less DSP compared to the d-drug only group (p=0.002) but the frequency of symptomatic DSP was similar (p=0.49).ConclusionRitonavir-boosted lopinavir did not add additional risk to developing DSP in this community-based African cohort after a median of 18months on second-line ART.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12981-015-0073-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.