Home | My Profile | Contact Us
Research Trends Products  |   order gateway  |   author gateway  |   editor gateway  
ID:
Password:
Register | Forgot Password

Author Resources
 Author Gateway
 Article submission guidelines

Editor Resources
 Editor/Referee Gateway

Agents/Distributors
 Regional Subscription Agents/Distributors
 
Current Trends in Neurology   Volumes    Volume 9 
Abstract
Diabetic central neuropathy: A complication of diabetes that affects cognition
John I. Malone
Pages: 55 - 63
Number of pages: 9
Current Trends in Neurology
Volume 9 

Copyright © 2015 Research Trends. All rights reserved

ABSTRACT
 
Diabetes mellitus is one of the most prevalent chronic health problems in humans. Its prevalence increases from 10% in people < 65 years to 12% in people < 70 years, and to 15% in people over 80 years of age. People with diabetes are identified by their blood glucose levels being higher than ‘normal’. This chronic metabolic abnormality is associated with pathologic changes involving both small and large blood vessels, causing eye, kidney, and myocardial failure, as well as loss of lower limbs. A more subtle complication associated with the hyperglycemia of diabetes mellitus is cognitive dysfunction, which should be termed diabetic central neuropathy, which currently is not generally recognized. It now appears that diabetes, with resulting exposure of the brain to chronic elevated glucose levels, results in slowly evolving neurodegenerative changes. Intelligence is noted to be reduced to the lower end of the average range; psychomotor processing speed, mental flexibility and attention are specific skills that are impaired in subjects with chronic hyperglycemia. The recent recognition of a greater prevalence of silent type 2 diabetes in subjects with Alzheimer’s disease has suggested a cause and effect relationship between the two. All Individuals with Down’s syndrome are believed to develop Alzheimer’s disease. Subjects with trisomy 21 have also been observed to have elevated levels of Inositol in their brains. Laboratory animals as well as humans with chronic hyperglycemia (diabetes) have also been noted to have elevated Inositol levels in the hippocampal region of the brain.  This elevated Inositol level has been linked to increased hippocampal amylin production and deposition. Amylin aggregates may be the cause of the dendritic tangles associated with Alzheimer’s dementia. This association may be a consequence of chronic hyperglycemia that should not be overlooked when managing older patients with diabetes mellitus. Prevention of Alzheimer’s dementia should be added to the list of reasons for prescribing the best metabolic control of diabetes in all patients who have diabetes mellitus, regardless of age.
View Full Article  


 
search


E-Commerce
Buy this article
Buy this volume
Subscribe to this title
Shopping Cart

Quick Links
Login
Search Products
Browse in Alphabetical Order : Journals
Series/Books
Browse by Subject Classification : Journals
Series/Books

Miscellaneous
Ordering Information Ordering Information
Downloadable forms Downloadable Forms