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OBJECTIVE: Limited data on patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RY-GBP) suggest that an improvement in insulin secretion after surgery occurs rapidly and thus may not be wholly accounted for by weight loss. We hypothesized that in obese patients with type 2 diabetes the impaired levels and effect of incretins changed as a consequence of RY-GBP. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Incretin (gastric inhibitory peptide GIP and glucagon-like peptide-1 GLP-1) levels and their effect on insulin secretion were measured before and 1 month after RY-GBP in eight obese women with type 2 diabetes and in seven obese nondiabetic control subjects. The incretin effect was measured as the difference in insulin secretion (area under the curve AUC) in response to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and to an isoglycemic intravenous glucose test. RESULTS: Fasting and stimulated levels of GLP-1 and GIP were not different between control subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes before the surgery. One month after RY-GBP, body weight decreased by 9.2 +/- 7.0 kg, oral glucose-stimulated GLP-1 (AUC) and GIP peak levels increased significantly by 24.3 +/- 7.9 pmol x l(-1) x min(-1) (P < 0.0001) and 131 +/- 85 pg/ml (P = 0.007), respectively. The blunted incretin effect markedly increased from 7.6 +/- 28.7 to 42.5 +/- 11.3 (P = 0.005) after RY-GBP, at which it time was not different from that for the control subjects (53.6 +/- 23.5%, P = 0.284). CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that early after RY-GBP, greater GLP-1 and GIP release could be a potential mediator of improved insulin secretion.
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Blandine Laferrère
New York State Department of State
Stanley Heshka
Columbia University
Krystle Wang
Thomas Jefferson University Hospital
Diabetes Care
Columbia University
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center
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Laferrère et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1240d541f2b0889a38d0c9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2337/dc06-1549