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Effects of exenatide on circulating glucose, insulin, glucagon, cortisol and catecholamines in healthy volunteers during exercise.

Diabetologia · 2010

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of eight healthy men, a single 5 microgram dose of exenatide lowered fasting blood sugar by about 1 mmol/l to 3.4 mmol/l at rest. During 75 minutes of cycling exercise, blood sugar levels dropped with a placebo but unexpectedly rose with exenatide, while stress hormones adrenaline and noradrenaline increased more with exenatide.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetologia, 2010
Citations16
Relative citation ratio0.47
NIH percentile28
Molecules exenatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Exenatide, a glucagon like peptide-1 agonist, is a treatment for type 2 diabetes mellitus that stimulates insulin and suppresses glucagon secretion in a glucose-dependent manner. By contrast, during aerobic exercise, the serum insulin concentration normally falls, with a rise in plasma glucagon. We therefore assessed whether exenatide might predispose to hypoglycaemia during exercise. METHODS: We studied eight non-diabetic men, who were 35.3 +/- 6.3 years of age with BMI of 24.7 +/- 1.7 kg/m(2) (mean +/- SD), using a randomised, crossover, double-blind design investigation. After an overnight fast, participants received 5 microg of subcutaneous exenatide or placebo and rested for 105 min before cycling at 60% of their maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2max)) for 75 min and then recovering for a further 60 min. RESULTS: The insulin/glucagon molar ratio rose with exenatide at rest (p < 0.01), then fell during exercise with placebo and with exenatide. At rest, fasting blood glucose fell by approximately 1 mmol/l with exenatide to a nadir of 3.4 +/- 0.1 mmol/l (p < 0.01). During exercise, blood glucose fell with placebo but, unexpectedly, rose with exenatide. Plasma adrenaline (epinephrine) and noradrenaline (norepinephrine), but not cortisol concentrations increased to a greater extent during exercise after exenatide. No participant developed symptomatic hypoglycaemia and the lowest individual blood glucose recorded was 2.8 mmol/l with exenatide at 50 min in the pre-exercise period. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: In non-diabetic participants given exenatide, blood glucose concentrations rise rather than fall during aerobic exercise with an associated greater catecholamine response.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 19898831 ↗

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