Affiliation:
1. Departments of Ophthalmology and Pathology, University of Wisconsin Madison
Abstract
Dogs were made alioxan-diabetic and randomly distributed into either of two prospective treatment groups. In one group it was intended that the metabolic signs of diabetes be controlled poorly, and commercial insulin was administered in doses inadequate to prevent chronic, severe hyperglycemie and glucosuria. In the other group it was intended that the metabolic disorder be well controlled, and the animals received food and commercial insulin twice daily such that the hyperglycemie and glucosuria became mild or infrequent. Experimental improvement of the carbohydrate disorder was accompanied by amelioration of hyperUpemia and other clinical signs of deficient insulin activity. By 60 months of diabetes, retinal capillary aneurysms, pericyte ghosts, obliterated vessels, and other microvascular abnormalities typical of diabetes were apparent In each animal of the poor-control group. Better control was found to reduce significantly the incidence and severity of microvascular lesions. The data suggest that the mechanism responsible for diabetic retinopathy is initiated as a result of deficient insulin activity and that the development of the microvascular complications of diabetes are preventable and may be inhibited by careful control of the metabolic disorder.
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Cited by
144 articles.
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