DIABETES
VOL. 46, SUPPLEMENT 2, SEPTEMBER 1997
The Roles of Oxidative Stress
and Antioxidant Treatment in Experimental Diabetic
Neuropathy
Phillip A. Low
Kim K. Nickander
Hans J. Tritschler
Oxidative stress is present in the diabetic state. Our
work has focused on its presence in peripheral nerves.
Antioxidant enzymes are reduced in peripheral nerves and
are further reduced in diabetic nerves. That lipid
peroxidation will cause neuropathy is supported by
evidence of the development of neuropathy de novo when
normal nerves are rendered -tocopherol deficient and by the
augmentation of the conduction deficit in diabetic nerves
subjected to this insult. Oxidative stress appears to be
primarily due to the processes of nerve ischemia and
hyperglycemia auto-oxidation. The indexes of oxidative
stress include an increase in nerve, dorsal root, and
sympathetic ganglia lipid hydroperoxides and conjugated
dienes. The most reliable and sensitive index, however,
is a reduction in reduced glutathione. Experimental
diabetic neuropathy results in myelinopathy of dorsal
roots and a vacuolar neuropathy of dorsal root ganglion.
The vacuoles are mitochondrial; we posit that lipid
peroxidation causes mitochondrial DNA mutations that
increase reduced oxygen species, causing further damage
to mitochondrial respiratory chain and function and
resulting in a sensory neuropathy. -lipoic acid is a potent
antioxidant that prevents lipid peroxidation in vitro and
in vivo. We evaluated the efficacy of the drug in doses
of 20, 50, and 100 mg/kg administered intraperitoneally
in preventing the biochemical, electrophysiological, and
nerve blood flow deficits in the peripheral nerves of
experimental diabetic neuropathy. -lipoic acid dose- and
time-dependently prevented the deficits in nerve
conduction and nerve blood flow and biochemical
abnormalities (reductions in reduced glutathione and
lipid peroxidation). The nerve blood flow deficit was 50%
(P < 0.001). Supplementation dose-dependently
prevented the deficit; at the highest concentration,
nerve blood flow was not different from that of control
nerves. Digital nerve conduction underwent a
dose-dependent improvement at 1 month (P <
0.05). By 3 months, all treated groups had lost their
deficit. The antioxidant drug is potentially efficacious
for human diabetic sensory neuropathy. Diabetes
46 (Suppl. 2):S38S42, 1997
Copyright © 1997 American Diabetes
Association
Last updated: 8/97
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