The investigators aimed at evaluating the effects of a small non-glucidic nutrient preload on plasma glucose, insulin, C-peptide, glucagon-like peptide-1, and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide concentrations after the meal consumption and for 300 min after a 75 g glucose ingestion in diet-controlled type 2 diabetic patients.
As supported by experimental and clinical data, oral carbohydrate tolerance is influenced by the coingestion of nutrients through multiple mechanisms. The ingestion itself, the contact with the gastric mucosa, the arrival into the intestine and the subsequent digestion are known to produce neural reflexes, hormonal responses and plasma substrates gradients which, by modulating gastric emptying, insulin secretion and insulin clearance participate in the regulation of postprandial glycaemia. The size of this effect is influenced by a number of factors: the specific nutrient chemical characteristics (fat vs protein and composition) and their physical properties (solid vs liquid), the timing (pre-load vs coingestion) and finally the individual glucose tolerance status. The effect on 5 h glucose excursions of a combination of protein and fat given before carbohydrate is still unknown.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
7
Ingestion of a small mixed protein and lipid meal 30 minutes before glucose
Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana
Pisa, PI, Italy
Plasma glucose concentration
Time frame: 330 minutes
Plasma Insulin concentration
Time frame: 330 minutes
Plasma C-peptide concentration
Time frame: 330 minutes
Plasma glucagon-like peptide-1 concentration
Time frame: 330 minutes
Plasma glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide concentration
Time frame: 330 minutes
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