Effect of lactate administration on cerebral blood flow during hypoglycemia in people with type 1 diabetes

Author:

van Meijel Lian AORCID,van Asten Jack J A,Grandjean Joanes,Heerschap Arend,Tack Cornelis JORCID,van der Graaf Marinette,Wiegers Evita C,de Galan Bastiaan EORCID

Abstract

IntroductionImpaired awareness of hypoglycemia, clinically reflected by the inability to timely detect hypoglycemia, affects approximately 25% of the people with type 1 diabetes. Both altered brain lactate handling and increased cerebral blood flow (CBF) during hypoglycemia appear to be involved in the pathogenesis of impaired awareness of hypoglycemia. Here we examine the effect of lactate on CBF during hypoglycemia.Research design and methodsNine people with type 1 diabetes and normal awareness of hypoglycemia underwent two hyperinsulinemic euglycemic-hypoglycemic (3.0 mmol/L) glucose clamps in a 3T MR system, once with sodium lactate infusion and once with sodium chloride infusion. Global and regional changes in CBF were determined using pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling.ResultsLactate (3.3±0.6 vs 0.9±0.2 mmol/L during lactate infusion vs placebo infusion, respectively) suppressed the counter-regulatory hormone responses to hypoglycemia. Global CBF increased considerably in response to intravenous lactate infusion but did not further increase during hypoglycemia. Lactate also blunted the hypoglycemia-induced regional redistribution of CBF towards the thalamus.ConclusionsElevated lactate levels enhance global CBF and blunt the thalamic CBF response during hypoglycemia in patients with type 1 diabetes, mimicking observations of impaired awareness of hypoglycemia. These findings suggest that alteration of CBF associated with lactate may play a role in some aspects of the development of impaired awareness of hypoglycemia.Trial registration numberNCT03730909.

Funder

European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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