Background And Study Aims: In patients with obesity and type-2 diabetes, short-time very low-calorie diet may ameliorate hyperglycemia and hepatic steatosis. Whether this also implies the glucose-regulating hormone glucagon remains to be elucidated. This study investigated the effects of a very low-calorie diet on plasma levels of glucagon and liver fat in obese patients with type-2 diabetes.

Patients And Methods: Ten obese patients with type-2 diabetes, 6 men and 4 women, were included. At baseline, fasting plasma glucagon, insulin and glucose were determined, and liver fat and stiffness evaluated by transient elastography. The subjects were then prescribed a very low-calorie diet of maximum 800 kcal/day for 7 weeks and reexamined after 7 weeks and 12 months.

Results: At baseline, BMI was 42±4 kg/m and fasting glucose 10.6±3.4 mmol/l. All patients had hepatic steatosis. Plasma glucagon was strongly related to liver fat (r=0.52, p=0.018). After 7 weeks of very low-calorie diet, plasma glucagon was significantly decreased by nearly 30% (p=0.004) along with reductions of BMI (p<0.0001), glucose (p=0.02), insulin (p=0.03), liver fat (p=0.007) and liver stiffness (p=0.05). At 12 months follow-up, both glucagon and liver fat increased and were not different to basal levels, despite persistent reductions of BMI (p<0.002) and glucose (p=0.008).

Conclusion: In obese type-2 diabetic subjects, plasma glucagon and liver fat are correlated and similarly affected by a very low-calorie diet, supporting a role of hepatic steatosis in glucagon metabolism.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1220-6160DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

low-calorie diet
20
liver fat
16
glucagon liver
12
type-2 diabetes
12
plasma glucagon
12
patients obesity
8
obesity type-2
8
hepatic steatosis
8
diet plasma
8
obese patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!