Horm Metab Res 1983; 15(7): 313-316
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1018707
© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York

Glucose, Immunoreactive Insulin and C-Peptide Immunoreactivity in Patients with Acute Viral Hepatitis

S. Scremin1 , L. Caprioglio1 , M. D'Aquino, F. Virgili2 , A. Fabbro2 , L. Okolicsanyi3
  • 11st Department of Medicine and Infectious Diseases, General Hospital, Mestre Venice, Italy
  • 2Endocrine Diseases Department, General Hospital, Mestre Venice, Italy
  • 31st Medical Department School of Medicine, University of Padua, Padua, Italy
Further Information

Publication History

1982

1982

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary

Carbohydrate intolerance with high insulin levels are a consistent finding in acute and chronic liver diseases. It has been recently clarified that in cirrhotic patients hyperinsulinism is related to decreased hepatic clearance, but the role of liver cell damage or portal systemic shuntings is still unclear.

Therefore, we assessed glucose, immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and C-peptide immunoreactivity (CPR), in the basal state and after oral and intravenous glucose load, in fifteen patients with acute viral hepatitis (AVH), a liver disease where cell necrosis is prominent.

CPR is a useful tool for investigation of hyperinsulinism as, according to previous reports, it is not - or is only to a limited degree - metabolised by the liver.

Our results confirm the carbohydrate intolerance, with high IRI levels, in the early stage of AVH. CPR levels were significantly increased before and after glucose load.

This study suggests that liver cell damage plays a key role in the pathogenesis of hyperinsulinism in liver diseases and high CPR values seem also to be related to liver damage.