Human cerebral neuropathology of Type 2 diabetes mellitus

The cerebral neuropathology of Type 2 diabetes (CNDM2) has not been positively defined. This review includes a description of CNDM2 research from before the ‘Pubmed Era’. Recent neuroimaging studies have focused on cerebrovascular and white matter pathology. These and prior studies about cerebrovasc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochimica et biophysica acta 2009-05, Vol.1792 (5), p.454-469
Hauptverfasser: Nelson, Peter T., Smith, Charles D., Abner, Erin A., Schmitt, Frederick A., Scheff, Stephen W., Davis, Gregory J., Keller, Jeffrey N., Jicha, Gregory A., Davis, Daron, Wang-Xia, Wang, Hartman, Adria, Katz, Douglas G., Markesbery, William R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The cerebral neuropathology of Type 2 diabetes (CNDM2) has not been positively defined. This review includes a description of CNDM2 research from before the ‘Pubmed Era’. Recent neuroimaging studies have focused on cerebrovascular and white matter pathology. These and prior studies about cerebrovascular histopathology in diabetes are reviewed. Evidence is also described for and against the link between CNDM2 and Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. To study this matter directly, we evaluated data from University of Kentucky Alzheimer's Disease Center (UK ADC) patients recruited while non-demented and followed longitudinally. Of patients who had come to autopsy ( N = 234), 139 met inclusion criteria. These patients provided the basis for comparing the prevalence of pathological and clinical indices between well-characterized cases with ( N = 50) or without ( N = 89) the premortem diagnosis of diabetes. In diabetics, cerebrovascular pathology was more frequent and Alzheimer-type pathology was less frequent than in non-diabetics. Finally, a series of photomicrographs demonstrates histopathological features (including clinical–radiographical correlation) observed in brains of persons that died after a history of diabetes. These preliminary, correlative, and descriptive studies may help develop new hypotheses about CNDM2. We conclude that more work should be performed on human material in the context of CNDM2.
ISSN:0925-4439
0006-3002
1879-260X
DOI:10.1016/j.bbadis.2008.08.005