Monday, November 15, 2010

Hyperinsulinemia and Anorexia?

In the course of a discussion over at Jimmy Moore's forum I came across something I did not know.  Anorexics -- the thinnest among us! -- can also become hyperinsulinemic!!!!   How can that be??  

If it's all about the insulin causing fat accumulation, one would think this condition would result in any dietary intake getting trapped in the fat tissues, making it unavailable to the anorexic for fat-burning, resulting in voracious hunger.  

But we would expect the anorexic to have very low postprandially-induced insulin levels.  No matter what they eat, they don't eat much.  So, where is this insulin coming from?  

It would seem to be, yet again, a defense mechanism of our bodies.  I've come across quite a bit of contradictory observations on this.

For example, in this article, anorexics had lower postprandial insulin responses and higher metabolic rates of insulin clearance and describe anorexia as being associated with improved insulin sensitivity.  They also have decreased basal insulin levels.  The authors propose this is an adaptive mechanism to protect the anorexic from hypoglycemia.  Here is another article describing improved insulin sensitivity in anorexia.  The hormonal levels from that study are shown below.


However searching on hyperinsulinemia and anorexia yields some interesting hits:

A brief review is made of the role of insulin in satiety and in the control of body weight, and of the newly available techniques to accurately quantify secretion, hepatic extraction, and post-hepatic delivery rates of insulin. Neural, metabolic, and endocrine stimuli affect insulin secretion. The hypothesis is therefore compatible with several etiologic factors leading to hyperinsulinemia in anorexia nervosa and major depression, and resulting in decreased food intake and weight loss.
There's also this case study (can't find anything of this paper)
How does the hyperinsulinemia develop?  Usually it's from insulin resistance, and IR would seem to be a reasonable physiological adaptation to starvation -- so as to preserve glucose for the tissues that need it most.    Elevated cortisol that is associated with anorexia could be the cause.  Perhaps the changes in insulin sensitivity are time/progression dependent, with one occurring early on, the other developing later?

Still, it is interesting that the elevated insulin is associated with further REDUCED intake, not vice versa.  


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