Diabetes
associated with different Brain Injury
Patterns in Dementia
Newswise — Patients with dementia and
diabetes appear to display a different
pattern of injuries in their brains than
patients with dementia but without diabetes,
according to an article posted online today
that will appear in the March print issue of
Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
“The association between diabetes mellitus
and increased risk for dementia in the
elderly is well documented,” the authors
write as background information in the
article.
Several possible mechanisms have been
proposed for this association, including the
direct effects of high blood glucose and
insulin, the build-up of beta-amyloid
plaques in the brain and the effects of
diabetes-related vascular disease on blood
vessels in the brain.
Joshua A. Sonnen, M.D., of the University of
Washington, Seattle, and colleagues studied
196 individuals who were part of the Adult
Changes in Thought Study, a community-based
investigation of dementia.
After the participants died, their brains
were autopsied and their cases were divided
into four groups based on clinical
information: those with diabetes and
dementia, those with diabetes but not
dementia, those with dementia but not
diabetes and those without either disease.
In the 125 patients without dementia,
neuropathological and biochemical factors
did not differ based on diabetes status.
However, among the 71 with dementia, two
patterns of injury emerged based on whether
the patients had diabetes and received
diabetes treatment.
Those without diabetes had larger amounts of
beta-amyloid buildup and greater free
radical damage, whereas those with diabetes
had more microvascular infarcts (microscopic
injury to small blood vessels in the brain
known as arterioles) and more inflammation
in neural tissue.
This pattern was related to diabetes
treatment, in that patients with dementia
receiving treatment for diabetes had more
microvascular infarcts, and untreated
diabetic patients with dementia had beta-amyloid
build-up similar to non-diabetic patients
with dementia.
“These novel characterizations of two
apparently different patterns of injury in
dementia depending on diabetes mellitus
status may have important etiologic and
therapeutic implications,” the authors
conclude.