By understanding how the brain links the effects of insulin to light,
researchers are deciphering how insulin sensitivity fluctuates according
to circadian cycles, but also according to the organs involved. At the
heart of their discovery are neurons of the ventromedial hypothalamic
nucleus, a part of the brain that masters this delicate balance. These
results, to be discovered in the journal Cell Reports, should also
encourage diabetic patients and their doctors to consider the best time
to take insulin to properly control its effect and limit the risk of hyperglycemia.
The disruption of our internal clocks seems to play a significant role
in the explosion of metabolic diseases observed in recent decades, and
particularly of diabetes. Indeed, if the importance of day-night
alternation on the effect of insulin and on the body's glycaemic
management is beginning to be known, what about the mechanisms involved?
How does the organism synchronize its clocks? By understanding how the
brain links the effects of insulin to light, researchers at the
University of Geneva (UNIGE) are deciphering how insulin sensitivity
fluctuates according to circadian cycles, but also according to the
organs involved. At the heart of their discovery are neurons of the
ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, a part of the brain that masters this
delicate balance. These results, to be discovered in the journal Cell Reports,
should also encourage diabetic patients and their doctors to consider
the best time to take insulin to properly control its effect and limit
the risk of hypoglycaemia.
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