Acute Pain Induces Insulin Resistance in Humans

Author:

Greisen Jacob1,Juhl Claus B.2,Grøfte Thorbjørn3,Vilstrup Hendrik4,Jensen Troels S.5,Schmitz Ole6

Affiliation:

1. Research Fellow, Department of Medicine V and Center for Clinical Pharmacology.

2. Research Fellow, Department of Medicine M.

3. Research Fellow.

4. Professor, Department of Medicine V.

5. Professor, Department of Neurology and Danish Pain Research Center.

6. Professor, Center for Clinical Pharmacology and Department of Medicine M.

Abstract

Background Painful trauma results in a disturbed metabolic state with impaired insulin sensitivity, which is related to the magnitude of the trauma. The authors explored whether pain per se influences hepatic and extrahepatic actions of insulin. Methods Ten healthy male volunteers underwent two randomly sequenced hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic (insulin infusion rate, 0.6 mU x kg(-1) x min(-1) for 180 min) clamp studies 4 weeks apart. Self-controlled painful electrical stimulation was applied to the abdominal skin for 30 min, to a pain intensity of 8 on a visual analog scale of 0-10, just before the clamp procedure (study P). In the other study, no pain was inflicted (study C). Results Pain reduced whole-body insulin-stimulated glucose uptake from 6.37+/-1.87 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) (mean +/- SD) in study C to 4.97+/-1.38 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) in study P (P < 0.01) because of a decrease in nonoxidative glucose disposal, as determined by indirect calorimetry (2.47+/-0.88 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) in study P vs. 3.41+/-1.03 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) in study C; P < 0.05). Differences in glucose oxidation rates were not statistically significant. The suppression of isotopically determined endogenous glucose output during hyperinsulinemia tended to be decreased after pain (1.67+/-0.48 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) in study P vs. 2.04+/-0.45 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1) in study C; P = 0.06). Pain elicited a twofold to threefold increase in serum cortisol (P < 0.01), plasma epinephrine (P < 0.05), and serum free fatty acids (P < 0.05). Similarly, circulating concentrations of glucagon and growth hormone tended to increase during pain. Conclusions Acute severe pain decreases insulin sensitivity, primarily by affecting nonoxidative glucose metabolism. It is conceivable that the counterregulatory hormonal response plays an important role. This may indicate that pain relief in stress states is important for maintenance of normal glucose metabolism.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference41 articles.

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