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Human, Porcine and Bovine Ultralente Insulin: Subcutaneous Administration in Normal Man
17
Citations
18
References
1986
Year
Bovine Ultralente InsulinEducationBovine UltralenteDermatologyBovine InsulinInsulin SignalingInsulin DeliveryAnimal PhysiologyInsulin ManagementNormal ManEndocrinologyPharmacologySubcutaneous AdministrationUrologyAnimal ScienceDiabetesPhysiologyVeterinary ScienceBlood Glucose MonitoringDiabetes MellitusMetabolismMedicine
Six normal subjects received subcutaneous human, porcine, and bovine ultralente insulin (0.30 U/kg) and diluent (control) in randomized order. Plasma glucose, C-peptide, and insulin were measured for 32 h after injection. From 10 h onward human ultralente produced significantly lower plasma glucose levels (p less than 0.05-0.01) compared to bovine ultralente. Porcine ultralente produced an intermediate hypoglycaemic response up to 16 h and was similar to the bovine insulin from 24-32 h. Estimated exogenous insulin concentration was higher (p less than 0.05-0.001) following human ultralente compared to bovine ultralente between 2 and 22 h after injection. Up to 24 h the porcine preparation led to intermediate insulin levels, but becoming identical to bovine ultralente from 28-32 h. Peak mean exogenous insulin values for human, porcine, and bovine ultralente were 0.054, 0.044, and 0.023 nmol/l at 14, 16, and 18 h, respectively, reaching 0.022, 0.013, and 0.013 nmol/l at 32 h. The different pharmacokinetic behaviour of human and bovine ultralente insulin must be considered when initiating treatment with human ultralente or transferring patients from bovine to human ultralente.
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