SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

Synonyms

  • Insulin
  • Serum insulin
  • Fasting insulin
  • Immunoreactive insulin (IRI)
  • Endogenous insulin
  • Total insulin

Units of Measurement

  • pmol/L
  • µIU/mL
  • mIU/L

Key Conversions

1 µIU/mL = 6 pmol/L
1 pmol/L = 0.1667 µIU/mL
1 µIU/mL = 1 mIU/L (direct unit shift)

Thus:

  • mIU/L = µIU/mL × 1
  • pmol/L = µIU/mL × 6

Description

Insulin is a 51-amino-acid peptide hormone produced by pancreatic β-cells in the Islets of Langerhans.

Released in response to:

  • Rising blood glucose
  • Amino acids
  • Incretins (GLP-1, GIP)

Physiological roles:

  • Facilitates glucose uptake in muscle & adipose tissue
  • Suppresses hepatic glucose production
  • Stimulates glycogen synthesis
  • Inhibits lipolysis & ketogenesis
  • Promotes protein synthesis

Measured clinically to evaluate:

  • Insulin resistance
  • Hyperinsulinemia
  • Hypoglycemia (endogenous vs exogenous)
  • PCOS
  • Insulinoma

Physiological & Metabolic Role

1. Glucose Regulation

Insulin lowers blood glucose by:

  • Increasing GLUT-4 translocation
  • Suppressing hepatic gluconeogenesis

2. Lipid Metabolism

  • Inhibits hormone-sensitive lipase → ↓ lipolysis
  • Promotes fatty acid & triglyceride synthesis

3. Protein Metabolism

  • Increases amino acid uptake
  • Inhibits proteolysis

4. Appetite & Weight Regulation

High insulin → energy storage → obesity risk when chronic.

Clinical Significance

High Insulin (Hyperinsulinemia)

1. Insulin Resistance

Most common cause. Seen in:

  • Obesity
  • Prediabetes / Type 2 diabetes (early)
  • PCOS
  • Metabolic syndrome

Often characterized by:

  • Elevated fasting insulin
  • Elevated post-load insulin (OGTT)

2. Insulinoma

Pancreatic β-cell tumor → excessive endogenous insulin
Features:

  • Whipple's triad
  • Elevated insulin with high C-peptide
  • Hypoglycemia with detectable insulin

3. Exogenous Causes

  • Overdose of insulin therapy
    (C-peptide low, insulin high)

4. Post-prandial Hyperinsulinemia

Seen in:

  • Early T2DM
  • Reactive hypoglycemia
  • Post-bariatric surgery dumping syndrome

5. Drugs / Conditions

  • Sulfonylureas (↑ insulin, ↑ C-peptide)
  • Corticosteroids
  • Acromegaly
  • Cushing syndrome

Low Insulin

1. Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

Autoimmune β-cell destruction → very low or absent insulin.

2. Late Stage Type 2 Diabetes

β-cell burnout after prolonged hyperinsulinemia.

3. Pancreatic Diseases

  • Chronic pancreatitis
  • Pancreatectomy
  • Pancreatic cancer

4. Prolonged Fasting / Starvation

5. Severe Stress States

Catecholamines suppress insulin.

Reference Intervals

Fasting Insulin

  • 3 – 20 µIU/mL
  • 18 – 120 pmol/L

Interpretive notes:

  • < 3 µIU/mL → consider Type 1 DM, β-cell failure
  • 20 µIU/mL → suggests insulin resistance

  • 50–60 µIU/mL → significant hyperinsulinemia

OGTT Stimulated Insulin (2 hours)

  • Normal: < 50–60 µIU/mL
  • Insulin resistance: 60–150 µIU/mL
  • Severe resistance: >150 µIU/mL

Hypoglycemia Evaluation (during 72-hr fast)

  • Insulin > 3 µIU/mL when glucose <55 mg/dL is INAPPROPRIATE
  • Insulin > 6 µIU/mL strongly suggests insulinoma/sulfonylurea effect

Diagnostic Uses

1. Evaluate Insulin Resistance

With fasting glucose:

  • HOMA-IR = (Glucose × Insulin) / 405
    • 2.0 mild

    • 2.5 moderate

    • 3–4 severe (population dependent)

2. Diagnose Insulinoma

High insulin with high C-peptide, low glucose.

3. Differentiate Endogenous vs Exogenous Hypoglycemia

  • Endogenous → insulin HIGH, C-peptide HIGH
  • Exogenous → insulin HIGH, C-peptide LOW

4. PCOS Evaluation

Often elevated fasting/post-load insulin.

5. Metabolic Syndrome

Insulin is an early marker before glucose rises.

6. Post-bariatric Surgery Hypoglycemia

Excessive post-prandial insulin spikes.

Analytical Notes

  • Fasting sample (8–12 hrs) preferred
  • Hemolysis minimal effect
  • Insulin unstable at room temperature → quick separation needed
  • High-dose biotin can interfere with assays
  • Immunoassays may cross-react with insulin analogs

Clinical Pearls

  • Insulin should never be interpreted alone—always correlate with C-peptide, glucose, and clinical context.
  • High fasting insulin is an early signal of metabolic disease, years before glucose abnormalities.
  • A normal or low insulin level during hypoglycemia rules OUT insulinoma.
  • SGLT2 inhibitors cause fasting insulin to fall (due to lower glucose).
  • Obesity is the strongest modifiable factor raising fasting insulin.

Interesting Fact

Insulin was first purified in 1921, and the first human insulin was used in 1922, transforming type 1 diabetes from a fatal disease into a chronic manageable condition.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Hormones & Insulin.
  2. ADA Standards of Care - Diabetes & insulin evaluation.
  3. Endocrine Society Guidelines - Hypoglycemia & Insulinoma.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Insulin Assay.
  5. ARUP Consult - Insulin & C-peptide Interpretation.
  6. NIH / MedlinePlus - Insulin Test.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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