OBJECTIVE - To clarify whether the circulating insulin level influences hormonal responses, glucagon secretion in particular, during hypoglycemia in patients with insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - Nine type I diabetic patients were studied. During two separate experiments, hypoglycemia was induced by low-dose (244 pmol.kg-1.h-1) and high-dose (1034 pmol.kg-1.h-1) intravenous insulin infusion for 180 min in each case. The arterial blood glucose level was directly monitored every 1.5 min, and glucose was infused in the high-dose test to clamp the arterial blood glucose level to be identical as in the low-dose test. RESULTS - Despite the fact that the plasma insulin level was four times higher in the high-dose than in the low-dose test (740 +/- 50 vs. 180 +/- 14 pM), a close to identical arterial hypoglycemia of approximately 3.3 mM was obtained in the two experiments. During hypoglycemia, a significant rise of the plasma glucagon level was found only in the low-dose test (188 +/- 29 vs. 237 +/- 37 ng/L, P < 0.05), and the incremental area under the glucagon curve was significantly greater in the low-dose than in the high-dose test (140 +/- 19 vs. -22.7 +/- 34 ng/L.h-1, P < 0.005). The responses of plasma epinephrine, norepinephrine, growth hormone, pancreatic polypeptide, and somatostatin were similar in both tests and, consequently, were not significantly modified by the circulating insulin level. CONCLUSIONS - This study demonstrates that, in type I diabetic patients, the glucagon response to hypoglycemia is suppressed by a high level of circulating insulin within the physiological range. Our findings may help to explain the impairment of glucagon secretion during hypoglycemia frequently seen in these patients.