It is thought that altered brain lactate handling is involved in the development of impaired awareness of hypoglycemia (IAH), i.e. the inability to timely detect hypoglycemia in people with type 1 diabetes (T1DM). Infusion of lactate diminishes symptomatic and hormonal responses to hypoglycemia in patients with normal awareness of hypoglycemia (NAH), resembling the situation of patients with IAH. It is unknown whether this attenuating effect is due to brain lactate oxidation or the result of lactate-induced alterations of global and regional cerebral blood flow (CBF). Normally, hypoglycemia causes a redistribution of CBF towards the thalamus, from where the sympathetic response to hypoglycemia is coordinated, but in IAH this effect is absent and global CBF is increased. We hypothesize that lactate infusion in patients with NAH will result in blunting of thalamic activation and/or enhanced global CBF. If so, these results may help delineating the pathogenesis of IAH which eventually creates new avenues to protect against the morbidity associated with hypoglycemia and IAH. Study design: Single-blind placebo controlled, randomized cross-over intervention study Study population: T1DM patients with NAH (n=10) Intervention: On two separate occasions, patients with T1DM and NAH will undergo a hyperinsulinemic euglycemic-hypoglycemic glucose clamp with or without the infusion of exogenous lactate. ASL-MRI will be applied to measure global and regional changes in CBF. Main study parameters/endpoints: The change in regional thalamic CBF in response to intravenous lactate infusion compared to placebo, during hypoglycemia
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
10
IV infusion
IV infusion
Radoud university medical center
Nijmegen, Netherlands
RECRUITINGRegional CBF in ml/100g/min measured with ASL-MRI
The change in regional thalamic CBF in response to intravenous lactate infusion compared to placebo, during hypoglycemia
Time frame: during stable euglycemia (40 minutes) and hypoglycemia (45 minutes)
Global CBF in ml/100g/min measured with ASL-MRI
The change in global CBF in response to intravenous lactate infusion
Time frame: during stable euglycemia (40 minutes) and hypoglycemia (45 minutes)
Counterregulatory hormone responses to hypoglycemia
The difference in adrenaline (pmol/L) responses to hypoglycemia during lactate infusion compared to placebo
Time frame: during stable euglycemia (40 minutes) and hypoglycemia (45 minutes)
Symptom responses to hypoglycemia
The difference in symptom responses to hypoglycemia (meausured with a validated questionnaire) during lactate infusion compared to placebo
Time frame: during stable euglycemia (40 minutes) and hypoglycemia (45 minutes)
Measurements of metabolites in cell lysates or supernatants of the cultured immune cells
The effect of lactate administration on immune cell function and metabolism
Time frame: during stable euglycemia (40 minutes) and hypoglycemia (45 minutes)
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