Horm Metab Res 1994; 26(4): 181-183
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1000807
Originals Clinical

© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York

Effect of Moderate Obesity on Glucose Transport in Human Muscle

C. W. Elton, E. B. Tapscott, W. J. Pories, G. L. Dohm
  • Departments of Biochemistry and Surgery, East Carolina University School of Medicine, Greenville, North Carolina, USA
Further Information

Publication History

1993

1993

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary

We have shown that maximally stimulated glucose transport is reduced in in vitro incubated muscle of morbidly obese subjects. To investigate the possibility that a “threshold” of obesity exists, above which glucose transport is significantly decreased, hormone (insulin, IGF-I, or IGF-II) stimulation of glucose transport was correlated with body mass index using muscle biopsies from a group of 30 lean to obese females with BMI ranging from 16 to 40. There was a significant negative relationship between stimulation for glucose transport and BMI (R = 0.765). These data suggest there is no obesity threshold for insulin resistance in skeletal muscle but a continuous decline in glucose transport below a BMI of approximately 30 kg/m2, after which insulin and the IGFs no longer stimulate glucose transport.

    >