Ethnic Differences in the Relationship Between Insulin Sensitivity and Insulin Response
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital · Stanford University · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Human blood glucose levels have likely evolved toward their current point of stability over hundreds of thousands of years. The robust population stability of this trait is called canalization. It has been represented by a hyperbolic function of two variables: insulin sensitivity and insulin response. Environmental changes due to global migration may have pushed some human subpopulations to different points of stability. We hypothesized that there may be ethnic differences in the optimal states in the relationship between insulin sensitivity and insulin response. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We identified studies that measured the insulin sensitivity index (SI) and acute insulin response to glucose (AIRg) in three major ethnic groups: Africans, Caucasians, and East Asians. We identified 74 study cohorts comprising 3,813 individuals (19 African cohorts, 31 Caucasian, and 24 East Asian). We calculated the hyperbolic relationship using the mean values of SI and AIRg in the healthy cohorts with normal glucose tolerance.
We found that Caucasian subpopulations were located around the middle point of the hyperbola, while African and East Asian subpopulations are located around unstable extreme points, where a small change in one variable is associated with a large nonlinear change in the other variable.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
6- KKKeiichi KodamaCorresponding
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University
- DTDamon Tojjar
Scania (Sweden), Lund University
- SYSatoru Yamada
Kitasato Institute Hospital
- KTKyoko Toda
Kitasato Institute Hospital, Kitasato University
- CJChirag J. Patel
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Insulin
- Diabetes mellitus
- Insulin sensitivity
- Population
- Internal medicine
- Ethnic group
- Insulin resistance