Long-range Correlated Glucose Fluctuations in Diabetes

Journal:Methods of Information in Medicine
ISSN:0026-1270
Issue:2007 (Vol. 46): Issue 2 2007
Pages:222-226

Long-range Correlated Glucose Fluctuations in Diabetes

H. Ogata1, K. Tokuyama1, S. Nagasaka2, A. Ando2, I. Kusaka2, N. Sato2, A. Goto2, S. Ishibashi2, K. Kiyono3, Z. R. Struzik3, Y. Yamamoto3

1Graduate School of Comprehensive Human Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Japan 2Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, Jichi Medical School, Japan 3Educational Physiology Laboratory, Graduate School of Education, The Unive

Summary

Objectives: Our objective is to investigate diabetesrelated alteration of glucose control in diurnal fluctuations in normal daily life by detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA). Methods: The fluctuations of glucose of 12 non-diabetic subjects and 15 diabetic patients were measured using a continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) over a period of one day. The glucose data was calculated by the DFA method, which is capable of revealing the presence of long-range correlations in time series with inherent non-stationarity. Results: Compared with the non-diabetic subjects, the mean glucose level and the standard deviation are significantly higher in the diabetic group. The DFA exponent α is calculated, and glucose time series are searched for the presence of negatively (0.5 < α < 1.5) or positively (1.5 < α) correlated fluctuations. A crossover phenomenon, i.e. a change in the level of correlations, is observed in the non-diabetic subjects at about two hours; the net effects of glucose flux /reflux causing temporal changes in glucose concentration are negatively correlated in a “long-range” (> two hours) regime. However, for diabetic patients, the DFA exponent α = 1.65 ± 0.30, and in the same regime positively correlated fluctuations are observed, suggesting that the net effects of the flux and reflux persist for many hours. Conclusions: Such long-range positive correlation in glucose homeostasis may reflect pathogenic mechanisms of diabetes, i.e., the lack of the tight control in blood glucose regulation. Using modern time series analysis methods such as DFA, continuous evaluation of glucose dynamics could promote better diagnoses and prognoses of diabetes and a better understanding of the fundamental mechanism of glucose dysregulation in diabetes

Keywords

Diabetes Mellitus, detrended fluctuation analysis, continuous glucose monitoring system, positive /negative correlation

You may also be interested in...

1.

W. Temsch1, A. Luger2, M. Riedl3

Methods of Information in Medicine 2008 47 4: 346-355

http://dx.doi.org/10.3414/ME0468

2.

P. Ströbel

Die Medizinische Welt 2008 59 6: 223-227

3.

Antonio Muscari1, Susanna De Pascalis1, Andrea Cenni1, Cosimo Ludovico1, Nicola Castaldini1, Serafina Antonelli2, Giampaolo Bianchi1, Donatella Magalotti1, Marco Zoli1

Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2008 99 6: 1079-1084

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH07-12-0712



Articles

You've 985 Article(s) in your Basket.