There have been lots of studies about the relationship between chronic use of  alcohol and the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Chronic use of  alcohol can be affected by the altered level of ghrelin and leptin which  regulate food-seeking behavior having similar mechanism of controlling  alcohol-craving behavior. Those peptides are known to be correlated with T2DM.  Ghrelin and leptin also have been regarded as possible regulators of glucose  metabolism and insulin function. Hence, there is the possibility that ghrelin  and leptin can be related with deteriorated pathophysiology of T2DM in alcoholic  patients.
 Patients with alcohol dependence diagnosed by Diagnostic  and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision  (DSM-IV-TR) underwent an 75 g oral glucose-tolerance test (OGTT), to classify  them to normal glucose tolerance (NGT, n = 52), pre-diabetes including  impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), impaired fasting glucose level (IFG) and  combination of IGT and IFG (Pre-DM, n = 26) and T2DM (n = 24)  groups. Fasting plasma ghrelin and leptin levels were compared among  groups.
 There was no difference of ghrelin concentration among the  groups but the leptin concentration was significantly different between NGT and  T2DM group (p < 0.05). Increased leptin levels were significantly  correlated with body mass index (BMI), insulin level, and insulin  resistance.
 Chronic alcohol drinking might produce leptin resistance  which makes leptin significantly correlated with fasting insulin concentration  and insulin resistance. Therefore, we suppose that increased level of leptin by  chronic alcohol use could be one of the main mechanisms that develop insulin  resistance in alcoholic patients.
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Request Reprint E-Mail: kdj922@catholic.ac.kr

 
