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Hypoglycemia due to endogenous insulin can be congenital or acquired, apparent in the newborn period, or many years later. The hypoglycemia can be severe and life-threatening or a minor, occasional nuisance. By far the most common type of severe but transient hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia occurs accidentally in persons with type 1 diabetes who take insulin.
- Hypoglycemia due to endogenous insulin
- Congenital hyperinsulinism
- Transient neonatal hyperinsulinism (mechanism not known)
- Focal hyperinsulinism (K channel disorders)
- Paternal SUR1 mutation with clonal loss of heterozygosity of 11p15
- Paternal Kir6.2 mutation with clonal loss of heterozygosity of 11p15
- Diffuse hyperinsulinism
- K channel disorders
- SUR1 mutations
- Kir6.2 mutations
- Glucokinase gain-of-function mutations
- Hyperammonemic hyperinsulinism (glutamate dehydrogenase gain-of-function mutations)
- Short chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency
- Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome (Jaeken's Disease)
- Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome(suspected due to hyperinsulinism but pathophysiology uncertain: 11p15 mutation or IGF2 excess)
- Acquired forms of hyperinsulinism
- Insulinomas (insulin-secreting tumors)
- Islet cell adenoma or adenomatosis
- Islet cell carcinoma
- Adult nesidioblastosis
- Autoimmune insulin syndrome
- Noninsulinoma pancreatogenous hypoglycemia
- Reactive hypoglycemia (also see idiopathic postprandial syndrome)
- Gastric dumping syndrome
- Drug induced hyperinsulinism
- Sulfonylurea
- Aspirin
- Pentamidine
- Quinine
- Disopyramide
- Bordetella pertussis vaccine or infection
- D-chiro-inositol and myo-inositol
- Hypoglycemia due to exogenous (injected) insulin
- Insulin self-injected for treatment of diabetes (i.e., diabetic hypoglycemia)
- Insulin self-injected surreptitiously (e.g., Munchausen syndrome)
- Insulin self-injected in a suicide attempt or successful suicide
- Various forms of diagnostic challenge or "tolerance tests"
- Insulin tolerance test for pituitary or adrenergic response assessment
- Protein challenge
- Leucine challenge
- Tolbutamide challenge
- Insulin potentiation therapy
- Insulin-induced coma for depression treatment
The cause of congenital hyperinsulinism has been linked to anomalies in nine different genes. The diffuse form of this condition is inherited via the autosomal recessive manner(though sometimes in "autosomal dominant").
In terms of the mechanism of congenital hyperinsulinism one sees that channel trafficking requires K channels need the shielding of ER retention signal.E282K prevents the K channel surface expression, the C-terminus (SUR1 subunit) is needed in K channel mechanism.R1215Q mutations (ABCC8 gene) affect ADP gating which in turn inhibits K channel.
Several associated risk factors include the following:
- Genetic factors (inherited component):
- Family history of type 2 diabetes
- Insulin receptor mutations (Donohue syndrome)
- LMNA mutations (familial partial lipodystrophy)
- Cultural variables, such as diet varying with race and class; factors related to stress, socio-economic status and history have been shown to activate the stress response, which increases the production of glucose and insulin resistance, as well as inhibiting pancreatic function and thus might be of importance, although it is not fully corroborated by the scientific evidence.
- Particular physiological conditions and environmental factors:
- Age 40–45 years or older
- Obesity
- The tendency to store fat preferentially in the abdomen (also known as "abdominal obesity)", as opposed to storing it in hips and thighs
- Sedentary lifestyle, lack of physical exercise
- Hypertension
- High triglyceride level (hypertriglyceridemia)
- Low level of high-density lipoprotein (also known as HDL cholesterol or "good cholesterol")
- Prediabetes, blood glucose levels have been too high in the past, i.e. the patient's body has previously shown slight problems with its production and usage of insulin ("previous evidence of impaired glucose homeostasis")
- Having developed gestational diabetes during past pregnancies
- Giving birth to a baby weighing more than 9 pounds (a bit over 4 kilograms)
- Pathology:
- Obesity and overweight (BMI > 25)
- Metabolic syndrome (hyperlipidemia + HDL cholesterol level 2.82 mmol/L), hypertension (> 140/90 mmHg), or arteriosclerosis
- Liver pathologies
- Infection (Hepatitis C)
- Hemochromatosis
- Gastroparesis
- Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
- Hypercortisolism (e.g., Cushing's syndrome, glucocorticoid therapy)
- Medications (e.g., glucosamine, rifampicin, isoniazid, olanzapine, risperidone, progestogens, glucocorticoids, methadone, many antiretrovirals)
There are several genetic forms of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia:
Sedentary lifestyle increases the likelihood of development of insulin resistance. It has been estimated that each 500 kcal/week increment in physical activity related energy expenditure, reduces the lifetime risk of type 2 diabetes by 9%. A different study found that vigorous exercise at least once a week reduced the risk of type 2 diabetes in women by 33%.
This not known with certainty but is estimated to be about one per million. It appears to be more common in females than males.
The condition is transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait, and often affects children of consanguineous parents. The physical findings and symptoms vary greatly among each individual.
Genetic diseases are determined by two genes, one from the mother and one from the father. Recessive genetic disorders occur when an individual inherits the same abnormal gene for the same trait from each parent. If one of the inherited genes is normal, while the other is for the disease, the person will only be a carrier and will not display any symptoms.
The risk for two carrier parents to both pass the defective gene and, therefore, have an affected child is 25 percent with each pregnancy. The risk to have a child who is a carrier like the parents is 50 percent with each pregnancy. The chance for a child to receive normal genes from both parents and be genetically normal for that particular trait is 25 percent.
Researchers have determined that the Rabson–Mendenhall syndrome is caused by mutations of the insulin receptor gene. The insulin receptor gene is located on the short arm (p) of chromosome 19. Mutations of the insulin-receptor gene lead to an alteration of structure or reduced number of insulin receptors. This results in reduced binding of insulin, and may also lead to abnormalities in the post-receptor pathway.
Individuals with Rabson-Mendenall syndrome will need ways to compensate for their insulin resistance, and may do this by increasing insulin secretion. This can lead to excessive insulin levels in the blood (hyperinsulinemia), which can be responsible for multiple symptoms. Definitive genotype–phenotype correlation for insulin receptor defects is difficult to establish primarily due to the rarity of these syndromes. However, researchers believe more severe phenotype changes are due to a mutation in the alpha subunit of the receptor.
If known causes for ketotic hypoglycemia such as the ketotic Glycogen Storage Disease subtypes can be ruled out, it has been proposed that this condition simply represents the extreme edge of the normal population in terms of tolerance for fasting and ability to maintain normoglycemia. It is also possible that some children given this diagnosis have still-undiscovered defects of metabolism which will eventually be identified.
Rabson–Mendenhall syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by severe insulin resistance. The disorder is caused by mutations in the insulin receptor gene. Symptoms include growth abnormalities of the head, face and nails, along with the development of acanthosis nigricans. Treatment involves controlling blood glucose levels by using insulin and incorporating a strategically planned, controlled diet. Also, direct actions against other symptoms may be taken (e.g. surgery for facial abnormalities) This syndrome usually affects children and has a prognosis of 1–2 years.
No sexual predilection is observed because the deficiency of glycogen synthetase activity is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.
At present, there is no international standard classification of diabetes in dogs. Commonly used terms are:
- Insulin deficiency diabetes or primary diabetes, which refers to the destruction of the beta cells of the pancreas and their inability to produce insulin.
- Insulin resistance diabetes or secondary diabetes, which describes the resistance to insulin caused by other medical conditions or by hormonal drugs.
While the occurrence of beta cell destruction is known, all of the processes behind it are not. Canine primary diabetes mirrors Type 1 human diabetes in the inability to produce insulin and the need for exogenous replacement of it, but the target of canine diabetes autoantibodies has yet to be identified. Breed and treatment studies have been able to provide some evidence of a genetic connection. Studies have furnished evidence that canine diabetes has a seasonal connection not unlike its human Type 1 diabetes counterpart, and a "lifestyle" factor, with pancreatitis being a clear cause. This evidence suggests that the disease in dogs has some environmental and dietary factors involved.
Secondary diabetes may be caused by use of steroid medications, the hormones of estrus, acromegaly, (spaying can resolve the diabetes), pregnancy, or other medical conditions such as Cushing's disease. In such cases, it may be possible to treat the primary medical problem and revert the animal to non-diabetic status. Returning to non-diabetic status depends on the amount of damage the pancreatic insulin-producing beta cells have sustained.
It happens rarely, but it is possible for a pancreatitis attack to activate the endocrine portion of the organ back into being capable of producing insulin once again in dogs. It is possible for acute pancreatitis to cause a temporary, or transient diabetes, most likely due to damage to the endocrine portion's beta cells. Insulin resistance that can follow a pancreatitis attack may last for some time thereafter. Pancreatitis can damage the endocrine pancreas to the point where the diabetes is permanent.
The major morbidity is a risk of fasting hypoglycemia, which can vary in severity and frequency. Major long-term concerns include growth delay, osteopenia, and neurologic damage resulting in developmental delay, intellectual deficits, and personality changes.
Although this hypothesis is well known among clinicians and individuals with diabetes, there is little scientific evidence to support it. Clinical studies indicate that a high fasting glucose in the morning is more likely because the insulin given on the previous evening fails to last long enough. Studies from 2007 onwards using continuous glucose monitoring show that a high glucose in the morning is not preceded by a low glucose during the night. Furthermore, many individuals with hypoglycemic episodes during the night don't wake due to a failure of release of epinephrine during nocturnal hypoglycemia. Thus, Somogyi's theory is not assured and may be refuted.
Developmental delay is a potential secondary effect of chronic or recurrent hypoglycemia, but is at least theoretically preventable. Normal neuronal and muscle cells do not express glucose-6-phosphatase, so GSD I causes no other neuromuscular effects.
Without adequate metabolic treatment, patients with GSD I have died in infancy or childhood of overwhelming hypoglycemia and acidosis. Those who survived were stunted in physical growth and delayed in puberty because of chronically low insulin levels. Mental retardation from recurrent, severe hypoglycemia is considered preventable with appropriate treatment.
Hepatic complications have been serious in some patients. Adenomas of the liver can develop in the second decade or later, with a small chance of later malignant transformation to hepatoma or hepatic carcinomas (detectable by alpha-fetoprotein screening). Several children with advanced hepatic complications have improved after liver transplantation.
Additional problems reported in adolescents and adults with GSD I have included hyperuricemic gout, pancreatitis, and chronic renal failure. Despite hyperlipidemia, atherosclerotic complications are uncommon.
With diagnosis before serious harm occurs, prompt reversal of acidotic episodes, and appropriate long-term treatment, most children will be healthy. With exceptions and qualifications, adult health and life span may also be fairly good, although lack of effective treatment before the mid-1970s means information on long-term efficacy is limited.
Diabetic hypoglycemia can occur in any person with diabetes who takes any medicine to lower their blood glucose, but severe hypoglycemia occurs most often in people with type 1 diabetes who must take insulin for survival. In type 1 diabetes, iatrogenic hypoglycemia is more appropriately viewed as the result of the interplay of insulin excess and compromised glucose counterregulation rather than as absolute or relative insulin excess alone. Hypoglycemia can also be caused by sulfonylureas in people with type 2 diabetes, although it is far less common because glucose counterregulation generally remains intact in people with type 2 diabetes. Severe hypoglycemia rarely, if ever, occurs in people with diabetes treated only with diet, exercise, or insulin sensitizers.
For people with insulin-requiring diabetes, hypoglycemia is one of the recurrent hazards of treatment. It limits the achievability of normal glucoses with current treatment methods. Hypoglycemia is a true medical emergency, which requires prompt recognition and treatment to prevent organ and brain damage.
Oxyhyperglycemia is most commonly caused by early dumping syndrome, but it can rarely caused by other conditions like Graves' disease. It was first described by Lawrence et al. in 1936 as often happening after gastroenterostomy. It is seen in most forms of gastrectomy, gastric bypass and gastrostomy procedures, all of which are surgical causes of dumping syndrome.
This list of risk factors for canine diabetes is taken from the genetic breed study that was published in 2007. Their "neutral risk" category should be interpreted as insufficient evidence that the dog breed genetically shows a high, moderate, or a low risk for the disease. All risk information is based only on discovered genetic factors.
High risk
- Cairn Terrier
- Samoyed
Moderate risk
- Bichon Frise
- Border Collie
- Border Terrier
- Collie
- Dachshund
- English Setter
- Poodle
- Schnauzer
- Yorkshire Terrier
Neutral risk
- Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
- Cocker Spaniel
- Doberman
- Jack Russell Terrier
- Labrador Retriever
- Mixed Breed
- Rottweiler
- West Highland Terrier
Low risk
- Boxer
- English Springer Spaniel
- German Shepherd
- Golden Retriever
- Staffordshire Bull Terrier
- Weimaraner
- Welsh Springer Spaniel
The NIH states: "The causes of most cases of reactive hypoglycemia are still open to debate. Some researchers suggest that certain people may be more sensitive to the body’s normal release of the hormone epinephrine, which causes many of the symptoms of hypoglycemia. Others believe deficiencies in glucagon secretion might lead to reactive hypoglycemia.
Stomach surgery or hereditary fructose intolerance are believed to be causes, albeit uncommon, of reactive hypoglycemia. myo-Inositol or D-chiro-inositol withdrawal can cause temporary reactive hypoglycemia.
There are different kinds of reactive hypoglycemia:
1. Alimentary hypoglycemia (consequence of dumping syndrome; it occurs in about 15% of people who have had stomach surgery)
2. Hormonal hypoglycemia (e.g., hypothyroidism)
3. Helicobacter pylori-induced gastritis (some reports suggest this bacteria may contribute to the occurrence of reactive hypoglycemia)
4. Congenital enzyme deficiencies (hereditary fructose intolerance, galactosemia, and leucine sensitivity of childhood)
5. Late hypoglycemia (occult diabetes; characterized by a delay in early insulin release from pancreatic β-cells, resulting in initial exaggeration of hyperglycemia during a glucose tolerance test)
"Idiopathic reactive hypoglycemia" is a term no longer used because researchers now know the underlying causes of reactive hypoglycemia and have the tools to perform the diagnosis and the pathophysiological data explaining the mechanisms.
To check if there is real hypoglycemia when symptoms occur, neither an oral glucose tolerance test nor a breakfast test is effective; instead, a hyperglucidic breakfast test or ambulatory glucose testing is the current standard.
The body requires a relatively constant input of glucose, a sugar produced upon digestion of carbohydrates, for normal functioning. Glucagon and insulin are among the hormones that ensure a normal range of glucose in the human body. Upon consumption of a meal, blood sugar normally rises, which triggers pancreatic cells to produce insulin. This hormone initiates the absorption of the just-digested blood glucose as glycogen into the liver for metabolism or storage, thereby lowering glucose levels in the blood. In contrast, the hormone glucagon is released by the pancreas as a response to lower than normal blood sugar levels. Glucagon initiates uptake of the stored glycogen in the liver into the bloodstream so as to increase glucose levels in the blood.
Sporadic, high-carbohydrate snacks and meals are deemed the specific causes of sugar crashes. The “crash” one feels is due to the rapid increase and subsequent decline of blood sugar in the body system as one begins and ceases consumption of high-sugar foods. More insulin than is actually needed is produced in response to the large, rapid ingestion of sugary foods.
Children "outgrow" ketotic hypoglycemia, presumably because fasting tolerance improves as body mass increases. In most the episodes become milder and more infrequent by 4 to 5 years of age and rarely occur after age 9. Onset of hypoglycemia with ketosis after age 5 or persistence after age 7 should elicit referral and an intensive search for a more specific disease.
Its exact cause is unknown, but present research points toward a genetic component, possibly following maternal genes.
It involves hypomethylation of "H19" and "IGF2". In 10% of the cases the syndrome is associated with maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) on chromosome 7. This is an imprinting error where the person receives two copies of chromosome 7 from the mother (maternally inherited) rather than one from each parent.
Like other imprinting disorders (e.g. Prader–Willi syndrome, Angelman syndrome, and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome), Silver–Russell syndrome may be associated with the use of assisted reproductive technologies such as in vitro fertilization.
A person with type 1 diabetes should balance insulin delivery to manage their blood glucose level. Occasionally, insufficient insulin can result in hyperglycemia. The appropriate response is to take a correction dose of insulin to reduce the blood sugar level and to consider adjusting the insulin regimen to deliver additional insulin in the future to prevent hyperglycemia. Conversely, excessive insulin delivery may result in hypoglycemia. The appropriate response is to treat the hypoglycemia and to consider adjusting the regimen to reduce insulin in the future.
Somogyi and others have claimed that if prolonged hypoglycemia is untreated, then stress due to low blood sugar can result in a high blood glucose rebound. The physiological mechanisms driving the rebound are defensive. When the blood glucose level falls below normal, the body responds by releasing the endocrine hormone glucagon as well as the stress hormones epinephrine, cortisol and growth hormone. Glucagon facilitates release of glucose from the liver that raises the blood glucose immediately, and the stress hormones cause insulin resistance for several hours, sustaining the elevated blood sugar.
A mutations in a number of genes have been associated with this condition. Mutations associated with FPL have been reported in "LMNA" (lamin A/C), "PPARG" (PPARγ), "AKT2" (AKT serine/threonine kinase 2), "PLIN1" (perilipin-1), and "CIDEC" (cell-death-inducing DFFA-like effector B).
Six types (1-6) have been described. Types 1-5 are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion.
Type 1 (Kobberling variety, FPL1) is very rare and has only been reported in women to date. Fat loss is confined to the limbs and mostly in the distal parts. Central obesity may be present. Complications include hypertension, insulin resistance and hypertriglyceridemia. The gene causing this condition is not yet known. This form was first described in 1975.
Type 2 (Dunnigan Variety, FPL2) is the most common form and is due to mutations in the LMNA gene. Over 500 cases have been reported to date. Development up to puberty is normal. Fat is then gradually lost in is the limbs and trunk. Fat may accumulate around the face and between the shoulder blades. Insulin resistance is common. Other conditions associated with this condition include acanthosis nigricans, fatty liver, hypertriglyceridemia and polycystic ovary syndrome in women. There is an increased risk of coronary heart disease. Cardiomyopathy and muscular dystrophy may occur rarely. Xanthoma and nail changes may occur.
Type 3 is due to mutations in the PPARG gene. It is rare with approximately 30 cases reported to date. It is similar to type 2 but tends to be milder.
Type 4 is due to mutations in the PLIN1 gene. It is rare with only a small number of cases reported. Fat loss tends to affect the lower limbs and buttocks. Insulin resistance and hypertriglyceridemia occur. Calf muscular hypertrophy may occur.
Type 5 is due to mutations in the AKT2 gene. It has been reported in four patients all members of the same family. Fat loss affects the upper and lower limbs. The patients also suffered from hypertension, insulin resistance and hypertriglyceridemia.
Type 6 due to mutations in the CIDEC gene. It is inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion and has been reported in only one patient to date. Features included fat loss, severe insulin resistance, fatty liver, acanthosis nigricans and diabetes.
Hyperinsulinism may also refer to forms of hypoglycemia caused by excessive insulin secretion. In normal children and adults, insulin secretion should be minimal when blood glucose levels fall below 70 mg/dL (3.9 mM). There are many forms of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia caused by various types of insulin excess. Some of those that occur in infants and young children are termed congenital hyperinsulinism. In adults, severe hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is often due to an insulinoma, an insulin-secreting tumor of the pancreas.
Insulin levels above 3 μU/mL are inappropriate when the glucose level is below 50 mg/dL (2.8 mM), and may indicate hyperinsulinism as the cause of the hypoglycemia. The treatment of this form of hyperinsulinism depends on the cause and the severity of the hyperinsulinism, and may include surgical removal of the source of insulin, or a drug such as diazoxide or octreotide that reduces insulin secretion.
That spontaneous hyperinsulinism might be a cause of symptomatic hypoglycemia was first proposed by Seale Harris, MD, 1924, in "Journal of the American Medical Association".
Dr. Seale Harris first diagnosed hyperinsulinism in 1924 and also is credited with the recognition of spontaneous hypoglycemia.