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Modeling the dynamics of glucose, insulin, and free fatty acids with time delay: The impact of bariatric surgery on type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Citation
Murillo, A. L., et al. “Modeling The Dynamics Of Glucose, Insulin, And Free Fatty Acids With Time Delay: The Impact Of Bariatric Surgery On Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.”. Mathematical Biosciences And Engineering : Mbe, pp. 5765-5787.
Center University of Alabama at Birmingham
Author Anarina L Murillo, Jia Xu Li, Carlos Castillo-Chavez
Keywords free fatty acids, mathematical model, type 2 diabetes
Abstract

The role of free fatty acids (FFA) on Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) progression has been studied extensively with prior studies suggesting that individuals with shared familial genetic predisposition to metabolic-related diseases may be vulnerable to dysfunctional plasma FFA regulation. A harmful cycle arises when FFA are not properly regulated by insulin contributing to the development of insulin resistance, a key indicator for T2DM, since prolonged insulin resistance may lead to hyperglycemia. We introduce a hypothesis-driven dynamical model and use it to evaluate the role of FFA on insulin resistance progression that is mathematically constructed within the context of individuals that have genetic predisposition to dysfunctional plasma FFA. The dynamics of the nonlinear interactions that involve glucose, insulin, and FFA are modeled by incorporating a fixed-time delay with the corresponding delay-differential equations being studied numerically. The results of computational studies, that is, extensive simulations, are compared to the known minimal ordinary differential equations model. Parameter estimation and model validation are carried out using clinical data of patients who underwent bariatric surgery. These estimates provide a quantitative measure that is used to evaluate the regulation of lipolysis by insulin action measured by insulin sensitivity, within a metabolically heterogeneous population (non-diabetic to diabetic). Results show that key metabolic factors improve after surgery, such as the effect of insulin inhibition of FFA on insulin and glucose regulation, results that do match prior clinical studies. These findings indicate that the reduction in weight or body mass due to surgery improve insulin action for the regulation of glucose, FFA, and insulin levels. This reinforces what we know, namely, that insulin action is essential for regulating FFA and glucose levels and is a robust effect that can be observed not only in the long-term, but also in the short-term; thereby preventing the manifestation of T2DM.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Mathematical biosciences and engineering : MBE
Volume
16
Issue
5
Number of Pages
5765-5787
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1551-0018
DOI
10.3934/mbe.2019288
Alternate Journal
Math Biosci Eng
PMID
31499737
PMCID
PMC6765335
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