AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to understand how diabetic neuropathy progresses by examining nerve fiber density and other clinical measures in participants over 52 weeks.
  • Participants were divided into two groups: those who experienced significant nerve fiber loss (progressing neuropathy) and those who did not (nonprogressing neuropathy), with careful matching based on baseline characteristics.
  • Results showed that only the progressing group had a notable decrease in nerve fiber density, and elevated triglyceride levels were linked to nerve fiber loss, suggesting that high fat levels may play a role in worsening diabetic neuropathy.*

Article Abstract

Objective: To evaluate mechanisms underlying diabetic neuropathy progression using indexes of sural nerve morphometry obtained from two identical randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials.

Research Design And Methods: Sural nerve myelinated fiber density (MFD), nerve conduction velocities (NCVs), vibration perception thresholds, clinical symptom scores, and a visual analog scale for pain were analyzed in participants with diabetic neuropathy. A loss of > or =500 fibers/mm(2) in sural nerve MFD over 52 weeks was defined as progressing diabetic neuropathy, and a MFD loss of < or =100 fibers/mm(2) during the same time interval as nonprogressing diabetic neuropathy. The progressing and nonprogressing cohorts were matched for baseline characteristics using an O'Brien rank-sum and baseline MFD.

Results: At 52 weeks, the progressing cohort demonstrated a 25% decrease (P < 0.0001) from baseline in MFD, while the nonprogressing cohort remained unchanged. MFD was not affected by active drug treatment (P = 0.87), diabetes duration (P = 0.48), age (P = 0.11), or BMI (P = 0.30). Among all variables tested, elevated triglycerides and decreased peroneal motor NCV at baseline significantly correlated with loss of MFD at 52 weeks (P = 0.04).

Conclusions: In this cohort of participants with mild to moderate diabetic neuropathy, elevated triglycerides correlated with MFD loss independent of disease duration, age, diabetes control, or other variables. These data support the evolving concept that hyperlipidemia is instrumental in the progression of diabetic neuropathy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2699859PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-1771DOI Listing

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