The long and short: Chromium hampers insulin sensitivity in normoglycemic individuals
For their experiment lead author Umesh Masharani and his colleagues from the UCSA recruited a group of 27 non-obese, non-diabetic, healthy subjects between the ages of 20 and 50 with a body mass index of less than 27 kg/m² and <24 kg/m² for subjects with Asian heritage (the cut-off limits were set so that they would be below a BMI that has not yet been shown to be an independent risk factor for insulin resistance; cf. Clausen. 1996; Newell-Morris. 1998).
To evaluate whether chromium picolinate (ChrPic) supplements, which contributed with $150,000,000 to the revenue of the supplement industry in 1996 (Nielsen. 1996), could come up to the claims that they would exert beneficial effects on glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, the study participants were randomized to take either a placebo or a high dose 500µg CrPic supplement twice daily for 4 months (the dosage was selected in view of previews studies reporting greater benefits of 1,000 vs. 200mcg of CrPic in - you already guessed it - diabetic subjects; cf. Morris. 2000).
"Due to the apparent variation in the degree of chromium absorption between subjects, we examined the relationship between serum chromium and change in insulin resistance. After controlling for baseline patient characteristics, results of a multiple regression analysis showed a strong association between serum chromium and worsening of insulin–mediated glucose disposal (β= -0.83, p<0.01), where subjects with the highest serum chromium had a decline in their insulin sensitivity. To further explore the association between chromium absorption and insulin resistance, patients within the chromium group were divided (based on a medial split at 3.10 µg/L) into a high (n=6) and low (n=8) serum chromium group [...] There were no group differences at baseline; however, at post-assessment participants in the high serum chromium group (> 3.1 µg/L) were more insulin resistant than participants in the low serum chromium group (≤3.1 µg/L) or the placebo group (p=0.02, p=0.05 respectively) (Figure 3)." (my emphases in Masharani. 2012)Due to the fact that the scientists did not observe any differences between the placebo and low serum chromium groups (on a side note, contrary to many other studies insulin Masharani et al. measured the insulin sensitivity in a very reliable way with an euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp; cf. Defronzo. 1979), the scientists also conducted a post-hoc analysis to identify potential confounding factors that may have influenced the outcome of the trial. Neither changes in triglycerides levels LDL, BMI, or truncal fat were yet associated with the differences they observed between the supplemented and non-supplemented participants. Interactions that would reduce the significance of the observed correlations were likewise absent:
"Furthermore, when changes in triglycerides, LDL, BMI, and truncal fat were individually added to the model, none were independent significant predictors of change in insulin sensitivity, and chromium absorption remained a significant predictor of reduced insulin sensitivity in each model." (Masharani. 2012)Against that background the scientists conclude that there must be a "direct effect of chromium on changes in insulin action". A mechanism, by the way, which is totally independent of classic markers of insulin resistance such as high serum lipids and abdominal / truncal adiposity .
Being healthy is a good predictor of increased chromium absorption and more pronounced negative effects, so if you are healthy and want to stay this way don't even think of taking high dose chromium supplements.
Despite the fact that the changes in insulin resistance did not depend on changes in serum lipids and other markers of metabolic health, Masharani and his colleagues were able to show that the increase in chromium levels in response to supplementation did. With the already mentioned statistically significant correlation between increases in serum chromium levels (higher response to supplementation = higher increase), on the one hand, and the worsening of insulin sensitivity, on the other hand, this means that the healthiest subjects, namely ...
"[...] subjects with lower triglycerides, and those with lower levels of homocysteine [who had] a greater likelihood of being in the high absorption group" (Masharani. 2012)... were at the same time those who were at the greatest risk of the ill side-effects high dose chromium supplements exert on the insulin tolerance of healthy, non-diabetic, normal-weight individuals.
References:
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- Defronzo RA, Tobin JD, Andres R. Glucose clamp technique: a method for quantifying insulin secretion and resistance. Am J Physiol. 1979; 237:E214–E223.
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- Masharani U, Gjerde C, McCoy S, Maddux BA, Hessler D, Goldfine ID, Youngren JF. Chromium supplementation in non-obese non-diabetic subjects is associated with a decline in insulin sensitivity. BMC Endocr Disord. 2012 Nov 30;12(1):31.
- Morris BW, Kouta S, Robinson R, MacNeil S, Heller S. Chromium supplementation improves insulin resistance in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus. DiabetMed. 2000; 17(9):684–685.
- Newell-Morris LL, Treder RP, Shuman WP, Fujimoto WY. Fatness, fat distribution, and glucose tolerance in second-generation Japanese-American (Nisei) men. Am J Clin Nutr. 1989; 50(1):9–18.
- Nielsen FH. Controversial Chromium: Does the superstar minearal of the mountebanks receive appropriate attention from clinicians and nutritionists? Nutr Today. 1996; 31(6):226–233.
- Vincent JB: The nutritional biochemistry of chromium (III). Amsterdam, Boston: Elsevier. 2007.