Determination of serum C-peptide (CPR) and urinary excretion of CPR as an indicator for introducing intensive insulin treatment in patients with diabetes mellitus

Shimane journal of medical science Volume 19 Issue 2 Page 25-28 published_at 2001-12-01
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Title
Determination of serum C-peptide (CPR) and urinary excretion of CPR as an indicator for introducing intensive insulin treatment in patients with diabetes mellitus
Creator
Yamane Yuko
Mori Toshiaki
Shimizu Tadashi
Kato Yuzuru
Source Title
Shimane journal of medical science
Volume 19
Issue 2
Start Page 25
End Page 28
Journal Identifire
ISSN 03865959
EISSN 24332410
Descriptions
Diabetic complications could be prevented orblunted by better control of blood glucose with intensive insulin therapy. However, we need to have a reliable indicator to determine the timing when one patient should be introduced into the insulin therapy.
In the present study, residual &szlig;-cell function in the pancreas was evaluated by measuring serum Cpeptide (CPR) levels and 24 hr urinary excretions of CPR in 43 non-obese patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). All patients were initially treated with threetime daily (t.i.d.) injections of regular insulin for one or two weeks, during which period those patients whose fasting blood glucose levels being ≦1 80 mg/dl were classified into the class 1, and those being > 180 mg/dl were into the class 2. In the following study period, class 1 patients (n=18) were maintained t.i.d. regular insulin alone, while class 2 patients (n=25) received at 9:00 p.m. a single injection of neutral protamine insulin suspension in addition to the t.i.d. injections of regular insulin. Both basal serum CPR levels and urinary excretions of CPR were revealed to be much lower in the class 2 patients than in the class 1 patients (mean ± SD; serum CPR, 1.1±0.4 ng/ml for class 1 vs. 0.6±0.4 ng/ml for class 2, P<0.01; urinary CPR excretion, 40±14 μg/day for class 1 vs. 20±16 μg/day for class 2, P<0.01). Moreover, there was a significant correlation between basal serum CPR levels and the urinary CPR excretions (r=0.64, P<0.01). These findings suggest that basal serum CPR levels as well as the urinary CPR excretions are useful indicators for determining the proper timing to introduce the intensive insulin therapy into non-obese DM patients.
Language
eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
Shimane Medical University
Date of Issued 2001-12-01
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Relation
[NCID] AA00841586
Remark http://ci.nii.ac.jp/vol_issue/nels/AA00841586_jp.html