Saturday, August 10, 2013
Why type 2 diabetes sometimes disappears after gastric bypass surgery
though existing research has shown that gastric bypass surgery resolves
type 2 diabetes, the reason has remained unclear. A research team led by
Nicholas Stylopoulos, HMS assistant professor of pediatrics at Boston
Children’s Hospital, has identified the small intestine—widely
believed to be a passive organ—as the major contributor to the body’s
metabolism, based on a study in rats. The report appears in the July 26,
2013, issue of Science. Weight loss and improved diabetes often go hand
in hand, but type 2 diabetes often disappears even before weight loss
occurs after gastric bypass. To investigate why this happens,
Stylopoulos and his team spent one year studying rats. They observed
that after gastric bypass surgery, the small intestine changes the way
it processes glucose. The team saw the intestine using and disposing of
glucose, thereby regulating blood glucose levels in the rest of the body
and helping to eliminate type 2 diabetes. “We have seen type 2 diabetes
resolve in humans after gastric bypass, but have never known why,” said
Stylopoulos. “People have been focusing on hormones, fat and muscle,
but we have shown in this study that the answer lies somewhere in the
small intestine most of the time.” Gastric bypass surgery, a weight-loss
treatment typically reserved for severely obese patients, reroutes food
into a small pouch of the stomach and bypasses the rest of the stomach
and duodenum. Before gastric bypass, intestines typically do not contain
GLUT-1, a specific transporter responsible for removing glucose from
circulation and utilizing it within the organ. After gastric bypass, the
researchers found that the intestine reprograms itself to contain
GLUT-1, taking glucose from circulation and disposing of it, swiftly
stabilizing blood glucose levels in the rest of the body. “Previously,
we had not considered the intestine as a major glucose-utilizing organ.
We have found this process is exactly what happens after surgery,” said
Stylopoulos. Based on their findings, Stylopoulos and his colleagues
found that type 2 diabetes was resolved in 100 percent of the rats that
underwent gastric bypass. Sixty-four percent of type 2 diabetes was
resolved by the intestine, and the researchers hypothesize that the
remaining 36 percent may be due to weight loss or other factors. These
findings pave the way for future investigations of how to create a
medical pathway to mimic the intestine’s reprogramming, without the
surgery. “With further research, we may find ways to bypass the bypass,”
said Stylopoulos. “The results of our study are promising because,
unlike the brain and other organs, intestines are easily accessible.
Furthermore, since cells in the intestine have such a short lifespan, we
can easily study and pharmacologically manipulate them to use glucose,
without long-term problems.” This research was supported with funds from
the National Institutes of Health and the Division of Endocrinology,
Department of Medicine and the Clinical and Translational Executive
Committee at Boston Children’s Hospital. Read more at http://scienceblog.com/65058/why-type-2-diabetes-sometimes-disappears-after-gastric-bypass-surgery/#f9moeQLUpEH28x4m.99
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