Effects of exenatide on circulating glucose, insulin, glucagon, cortisol and catecholamines in healthy volunteers during exercise.
Diabetologia · 2010
Last updated 2026-05-28In 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.
| Journal | Diabetologia, 2010 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 16 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.47 |
| NIH percentile | 28 |
| 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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