Insulin Resistance

The reduced ability of organs to respond to 'physiological' insulin levels, thought to primarily occur through reduced insulin sensing and/or signalling

Aetiology

  • Insulin resistance is most commonly associated with obesity, however near complete absence of adipose also results in insulin resistance
  • Normal adipose functionality should be considered a key mediator of insulin sensitivity (rather than fat being considered an antagonist of insulin action)
  • There are also some genetic forms of insulin resistance

Pathophysiology

Development of insulin resistance

  • Different tissues will have different mechanisms of insulin resistance
  • In skeletal muscle, insulin resistance is caused by impairment of insulin signalling
    • FFAs decreases insulin receptor tyrosine kinase which decreases the activation of downstream proteins
    • End result is that GLUT4 does not get translocated to the skeletal muscle cell membrane, so it is unable to take up glucose into the cell
  • In adipose tissue, insulin resistance is caused by obesity-induced inflammation as adipose tissue secretes pro-inflammatory cytokines e.g. TNF-⍺
    • Cytokines can move into other tissues e.g. liver, skeletal muscle to cause systemic resistance
  • Liver: pathway-selective hepatic insulin resistance
    • Hepatic lipogenesis remains elevated in insulin-resistant subjects - insulin signaling to glucose metabolism is impaired so glucose uptake is reduced, but insulin signaling to lipid metabolism is intact
    • The increased lipogenesis is caused by the increase of FFAs seen in obesity which allows VLDL secretion to increase

Insulin resistance and disease

  • 90% of people with T2DM have insulin resistance
  • Insulin resistance is also associated with hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, hyperglycaemia (even in the absence of diabetes), chronic kidney disease, Alzheimer's disease and others
  • Metabolic syndrome is associated with increased risk of CHD, MI, stroke and CV death

Genetic insulin resistance

  • Monogenetic severe insulin resistance can occur due to mutation in key signalling pathways but this is very rare
Leprechaunism (Donohue syndrome)
  • Rare autosomal genetic trait involving mutations in the insulin receptor
  • Severe insulin resistance and developmental abnormalities e.g. growth retardation, abscence of SC fat, caused by defects in insulin binding or insulin receptor signalling
Rabson Medenhall syndrome
  • Rare autosomal recessive trait which presents with severe insulin resistance, hyperglycaemia and compensatory hyperinsulinaemia
  • Other clinical features include developmental abnormalities and acanthosis nigricans
  • Patients have fasting hypoglycaemia (due to hyperinsulinaemia)
  • Patients are very prone to diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Severe cases linked to mutations in the insulin receptor that reduce sensitivity

Clinical presentation

  • No symptoms

Investigations

  • Risk factors can be reviewed by heath providers
  • If at risk, blood glucose levels should be checked for pre-diabetes/diabetes
  • The hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp is the gold standard for the measurement of insulin sensitivity

Risk factors

  • Overweight
  • Physically inactive
  • FHx of diabetes
  • Genetics
  • Race (African Americans, Hispanic/Latinos)
  • PCOS
  • Gestational diabetes
  • High blood pressure
  • Low HDL
  • High blood triglyceride
  • Heart disease
  • Smoking