Cerebral function in diabetes mellitus
- PMID: 7958534
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00417687
Cerebral function in diabetes mellitus
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is a common metabolic disorder associated with chronic complications such as nephropathy, angiopathy, retinopathy and peripheral neuropathy. Diabetes is not often considered to have deleterious effects on the brain. However, long-term diabetes results in a variety of subtle cerebral disorders, which occur more frequently than is commonly believed. Diabetic cerebral disorders have been demonstrated at a neurochemical, electrophysiological, structural and cognitive level; however, the pathogenesis is still not clear. Probably alterations in cerebral blood supply and metabolic derangements play a role, as they do in the pathogenesis of diabetic neuropathy. Furthermore, the brain is also affected by recurrent episodes of hypoglycaemia and poor metabolic control. We describe herein the cerebral manifestations of diabetes and discuss the putative pathogenetic mechanisms.
Comment in
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Decreased cerebral blood perfusion in an NIDDM patient with an A-to-G mutation in the mitochondrial gene; a possible contribution to cognition deficits in diabetes.Diabetologia. 1995 Aug;38(8):1004-5. doi: 10.1007/BF00400594. Diabetologia. 1995. PMID: 7589871 No abstract available.
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Cerebral function in a relatively young subset of NIDDM patients.Diabetologia. 1995 Feb;38(2):251-2. doi: 10.1007/BF00400102. Diabetologia. 1995. PMID: 7713322 No abstract available.
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