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Carnitine Infusion and Insulin Resistance

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC) logo

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC)

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Glucose Intolerance

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Placebo
Dietary Supplement: IntraLipid
Drug: Carnitor

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02722902
NL56319.068.16

Details and patient eligibility

About

Insulin resistant subjects and type 2 diabetic patients are characterized by a decreased metabolic flexibility: a reduced capability to switch from fat oxidation in the basal state to carbohydrate oxidation in the insulin-stimulated state. This metabolic inflexibility is an early hallmark in the development of diabetes. Recent evidence suggests that a low carnitine availability may limit acetylcarnitine formation, thereby reducing metabolic flexibility. Thus, when substrate flux in the muscle is high, acetyl-CoA concentrations increase, leading to inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and thereby reducing glucose oxidation. The conversion of acetyl-CoA to acetylcarnitine relieves this acetyl-CoA pressure on PDH. To provide more direct insight into the effect of carnitine in preventing metabolic inflexibility and insulin resistance and to further explore the mechanism of action is the focus of this research. Here, we hypothesize that the capacity to form acetylcarnitine may rescue lipid-induced insulin resistance. To this end, insulin resistance will be induced by lipid infusion in healthy volunteers and it will be tested whether carnitine co-infusion can alleviate insulin resistance.

Full description

Rationale: Insulin resistant subjects and type 2 diabetic patients are characterized by a decreased metabolic flexibility: a reduced capability to switch from fat oxidation in the basal state to carbohydrate oxidation in the insulin-stimulated state. This metabolic inflexibility is an early hallmark in the development of diabetes. Recent evidence suggests that a low carnitine availability may limit acetylcarnitine formation, thereby reducing metabolic flexibility. Thus, when substrate flux in the muscle is high, acetyl-CoA concentrations increase, leading to inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and thereby reducing glucose oxidation. The conversion of acetyl-CoA to acetylcarnitine relieves this acetyl-CoA pressure on PDH. To provide more direct insight into the effect of carnitine in preventing metabolic inflexibility and insulin resistance and to further explore the mechanism of action is the focus of this research. Here, we hypothesize that the capacity to form acetylcarnitine may rescue lipid-induced insulin resistance. To this end, insulin resistance will be induced by lipid infusion in healthy volunteers and it will be tested whether carnitine co-infusion can alleviate insulin resistance.

Objective: The primary objectives are to investigate whether L-carnitine infusion may rescue lipid-induced insulin resistance and whether L-carnitine infusion is improving metabolic flexibility in the state of lipid-induced insulin resistance. Furthermore, a secondary objective is to examine the molecular pathways of carnitine and acetylcarnitine, responsible for muscle insulin sensitivity.

Study design: The current study is an interventional randomized crossover trial in which each subject serves as it owns control. Subjects will be blinded for the intervention.

Study population: n=10, healthy young (18-40 years) male subjects will be included.

Intervention (if applicable): Ten healthy subject will be subjected to the intervention of L-carnitine infusion. To investigate whether L-Carnitine infusion may rescue lipid induced insulin resistance and improve metabolic flexibility three intervention trials are included. The first trial includes lipid infusion combined with L-Carnitine infusion (=LIPID + CAR). In the second trial, L-carnitine infusion will be replaced by placebo infusion in the form of saline (= LIPID + PLAC) in order to investigate the effect of L-Carnitine. During the third trial, lipid infusion will be replaced by infusion of saline and will serve as a control for the lipid infusion (=SALINE + PLAC) and is necessary to investigate to what extend L-carnitine can rescue lipid induced insulin resistance. All three trials will be separated by at least one week. Subjects will be blinded, so no information about the infused substances will be provided to them. The three different trials will be allocated in a random order.

Main study parameters/endpoints: The primary study endpoint is whole body insulin sensitivity, measured by the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. Secondary endpoints are maximal acetylcarnitine concentrations after exercise, metabolic compounds in the blood and measurements regarding skeletal muscle metabolism in skeletal muscle tissue obtained by needle biopsies.

Enrollment

17 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • • Caucasian

    • Healthy (as determined by responsible physician based on a medical questionnaire)
    • Male
    • Age: 18-40 years
    • Normal BMI: 18-25 kg/m2
    • Stable dietary habits
    • No use of medication interfering with investigated study parameters (as determined by responsible physician)

Exclusion criteria

  • • Female

    • Haemoglobin levels < 7.8 mmol/L
    • Uncontrolled hypertension
    • Use of anticoagulants
    • Engagement in exercise > 3 hours a week
    • Being vegetarian or vegan (because of altered whole body carnitine status)
    • Smoking
    • Alcohol and/or drug abuse
    • Unstable body weight (weight gain or loss > 5kg in the last 3 months)
    • Significant food allergies/intolerances (seriously hampering study meals)
    • Participation in another biomedical study within 1 month before the first study visit, which would possibly hamper our study results
    • Medication use known to hamper subject's safety during the study procedures
    • Medication use known to interfere with investigated study parameters
    • Subjects with contra-indications for MRI
    • Subjects who intend to donate blood during the intervention or subjects who have donated blood less than three months before the start of the study
    • Subjects who do not want to be informed about unexpected medical findings
    • Subjects who do not want that their treating physician is informed

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

17 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group

LIPID + Carnitor
Experimental group
Description:
intravenous Lipid infusion (IntraLipid) combined with carnitor (L-carnitine) infusion L-Carnitine will be administrated intravenously as continuous infusion during the 6-hour hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. The administration will start with a bolus of 15mg/kg for 10 minutes. Subsequently, continuous L-carnitine infusion of 10mg/kg will start for the remaining 350 minutes. Intralipid will be administrated intravenously as continuous infusion during the 6-hour hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. The maximum dosage will not exceed 90 mL/h.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: IntraLipid
Drug: Carnitor
LIPID + PLAC
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Intravenous Lipid infusion (IntraLipid) combined with placebo infusion (saline) Intralipid will be administrated intravenously as continuous infusion during the 6-hour hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. The maximum dosage will not exceed 90 mL/h.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: IntraLipid
Dietary Supplement: Placebo
PLAC
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Infusion of saline (no IntraLipid and no carnitor) Saline will be administrated intravenously as continuous infusion during the 6-hour hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. The maximum dosage will not exceed 90 ml/h.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Placebo

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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