Chronic clamping of plasma glucose levels at ≥250 mg/dl in four partially depancreatized but previously nondiabetic dogs was followed within 2 wk by persistent hyperglycemia and glycosuria of ≤500 g/day, ketonuria, and weight loss. Three of the four dogs required daily insulin injections to control these catabolic manifestations. There was no evidence of spontaneous improvement of the severe diabetic state during the 39–69 days of observation after discontinuation of intravenous glucose infusion. Impairment of intravenous glucose tolerance, loss of the insulin response to glucose and arginine, fasting hyperglucagonemia, exaggerated glucagon responsiveness to arginine, and a significant reduction in sensitivity to insulin were characteristic of all diabetic dogs. Morphometric analysis of the endocrine pancreas revealed a profound reduction in the number and size of identifiable islets of the hyperglycemic dogs compared with islets from their own pancreases resected months earlier and with those from pancreatic remnants of eight subtotally depancreatized control dogs that had not been subjected to chronic hyperglycemic clamping. The reduction in number and size of islets of the hyperglycemic dogs was largely the consequence of depletion of insulin-containing cells and was similar to that of dogs with long-standing alloxan-induced diabetes. In the eight control dogs, clinical evidence of diabetes did not develop during a follow-up period of 193–296 days. In this group, there was no evidence of diminution of intravenous glucose tolerance, of the insulin response to glucose or arginine, or of insulin sensitivity as determined by an acute hyperinsulinemic hyperglycemic clamp. The number and size of islets and number of β-cells in pancreatic remnants from these dogs did not differ morphometrically from those of the pancreatic segment that had been resected. We conclude that in subtotally depancreatized but nondiabetic dogs, maintenance of constant hyperglycemia of ≥ 250 mg/dl by means of intravenous glucose infusion causes a severe, persistent, and often insulin-requiring diabetic state that does not occur in the absence of the hyperglycemia.
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Original Articles|
May 01 1988
Severe Diabetes Induced in Subtotally Depancreatized Dogs by Sustained Hyperglycemia
Toshinori Imamura;
Toshinori Imamura
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Michael Koffler;
Michael Koffler
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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J Harold Helderman;
J Harold Helderman
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Dale Prince;
Dale Prince
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Richard Thirlby;
Richard Thirlby
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Lindsey Inman;
Lindsey Inman
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Roger H Unger
Roger H Unger
Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Health Science Center, the Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
Dallas, Texas
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Roger H. Unger, MD, Center for Diabetes Research, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, Texas 75235.
Diabetes 1988;37(5):600–609
Article history
Received:
August 28 1987
Revision Received:
October 21 1987
Accepted:
October 21 1987
PubMed:
3282947
Citation
Toshinori Imamura, Michael Koffler, J Harold Helderman, Dale Prince, Richard Thirlby, Lindsey Inman, Roger H Unger; Severe Diabetes Induced in Subtotally Depancreatized Dogs by Sustained Hyperglycemia. Diabetes 1 May 1988; 37 (5): 600–609. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.37.5.600
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