Horm Metab Res 1991; 23(10): 490-494
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1003736
Clinical

© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York

The Effect of Guanidino Substances from Uremic Plasma on Insulin Binding to Erythrocyte Receptors in Uremia

B. Ročić1 , D. Breyer1 , M. Granić1 , S. Milutinović2
  • 1Institute for Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases, Josip Kajfeš Hospital, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Yugoslavia
  • 2Department of Nephrology and Hemodialysis, Josip Kajfeš Hospital, Medical Faculty University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Yugoslavia
Further Information

Publication History

1990

1991

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary

We have studied insulin binding to erythrocyte receptors in a group of 25 nonobese, nondiabetic uremic patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis for 2-54 months and 14 healthy controls. Erythrocytes of predialyzed uremics bind significantly less insulin than control erythrocytes (p < 0.01). Dialysis resulted in a rapid increase of insulin binding (p < 0.001). The concentrations of plasma insulin and glucose remained essentially unchanged during 5-hour hemodialysis and did not significantly differ from the control values. The down regulation of insulin receptors in undialyzed patients in the presence of normal plasma insulin concentration indicates that factors other than insulin itself could be responsible for insulin receptor activity during uremia. The results demonstrated that creatinine, creatine and glycocyamine have a direct suppressive effect on insulin binding of postdialyzed plasma (p < 0.05) in concentration of 1 mmol/l. This suggested that specific uremic toxins could play an important role in the mechanisms of altered insulin binding during hemodialysis. Despite the high concentration of these compounds in blood of uremics, the only common feature for these compounds is the presence of the guanidino group in the molecule.