Affiliation:
1. Diabetes Institutes, Eastern Virginia Medical School Norfolk, Virginia
2. Department of Internal Medicine, Department of Physiology, Eastern Virginia Medical School Norfolk, Virginia
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To test the hypothesis that skin blood flow responses in the fingertip of diabetic patients are impaired and to examine the role of aging in both healthy control subjects and diabetic patients.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
We measured cutaneous blood flow using laser Doppler techniques in 40 people with diabetes and in 20 age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. To induce vasoconstriction, subjects were asked to perform three 1-min stressor tasks: mental arithmetic, contralateral hand grip, and immersion of the contralateral hand in ice water. To induce vasodilatation, a local heat stimulus of 45 degrees C was applied for 5 min.
RESULTS
Basal blood flow did not differ between groups, but vasoconstrictive responses induced by arithmetic or immersion of the contralateral hand in ice-cold water and vasodilatation induced by local heating were severely impaired in diabetic subjects, compared with healthy control subjects (P < 0.01). These responses correlated with autonomic nerve function and deteriorated significantly with advancing age in control subjects, but not in diabetic subjects. Blood flow in younger diabetic subjects resembled that of older control subjects.
CONCLUSIONS
These data demonstrate that diabetes has effects on precapillaries that may by direct or mediated via autonomic nerves, which result in a deficit that resembles premature aging.
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Subject
Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Cited by
88 articles.
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