4.7 Article

Glucose and triglyceride excursions following a standardized meal in individuals with diabetes: ELSA-Brasil study

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR DIABETOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12933-015-0181-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Health (Department of Science and Technology)
  2. Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation [process: 01 06 0010.00 RS, process: 01 06 0212.00BA, process: 01 06 0300.00 ES, process: 01 06 0278.00 MG, process: 01 06 0115.00SP, process: 01 06 0071.00 RJ]

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Objective: To assess glucose and triglyceride excursions 2 hours after the ingestion of a standardized meal and their associations with clinical characteristics and cardiovascular complications in individuals with diabetes. Research design and methods: Blood samples of 898 subjects with diabetes were collected at fasting and 2 hours after a meal containing 455 kcal, 14 g of saturated fat and 47 g of carbohydrates. Self-reported morbidity, socio-demographic characteristics and clinical measures were obtained by interview and exams performed at the baseline visit of the ELSA-Brasil cohort study. Results: Median (interquartile range, IQR) for fasting glucose was 150.5 (123-198) mg/dL and for fasting triglycerides 140 (103-199) mg/dL. The median excursion for glucose was 45 (15-76) mg/dL and for triglycerides 26 (11-45) mg/dL. In multiple linear regression, a greater glucose excursion was associated with higher glycated hemoglobin (10.7, 95% CI 9.1-12.3 mg/dL), duration of diabetes (4.5; 2.6-6.4 mg/dL, per 5 year increase), insulin use (44.4; 31.7-57.1 mg/dL), and age (6.1; 2.5-9.6 mg/dL, per 10 year increase); and with lower body mass index (-5.6; -8.4 - -2.8 mg/dL, per 5 kg/m(2) increase). In adjusted logistic regression models, a greater glucose excursion was marginally associated with the presence of cardiovascular comorbidities (coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction and angina) in those with obesity. Conclusions: A greater postprandial glycemic response to a small meal was positively associated with indicators of a decreased capacity for insulin secretion and negatively associated with obesity. No pattern of response was observed with a greater postprandial triglyceride excursion.

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