Abstract
According to WHO data more than 180 million people suffer from diabetes mellitus worldwide and this number could double within 15 years. Normal function of the brain is dependent on continuous supply of glucose. In hypoglycemia, production of counterregulatory hormones (glucagon, epinephrine, growth hormone, and cortisol) increases, the sympathetic system becomes stimulated, and features of neuroglycopenia appear in order to save the homeostasis. Hypoglycemia is an alarming, actually life threatening condition, but the exposure to chronic hyperglycemia has a more detrimental effect on the brain than recurrent exposure to severe hypoglycemia. The active neural response to hyperglycemia induces changes in gene expression and function. The first steps against hyperosmolality are initially adaptive, but later hyperactivation of the hypothalamic magnocellular neurosecretory cells leads to their structural damage. Changes in hippocampal gene transcription are partially implicated in the deterioration of declarative memory. Neurologically passive shunting of excess glucose through alternative cellular metabolic pathways induces atherogenic, vascular lesions, free radicals, leukoencephalopathy and atrophy of the brain and thus leading to cognitive deficits. In physiological conditions insulin has neuroprotective effect. However, insulin resistance in the central nervous system correlates with insulin resistance in the periphery. Loss of responsiveness to insulin could render neurons more susceptible to neurotoxic insults, the protective effect of insulin diminishes, and apoptosis, neurodegeneration and the resultant cognitive decline are all increased in insulin-resistant patients. Some unclear relations appear between diabetes mellitus and Alzheimer's disease. Diabetic patients with APOE-4 gene have an increased risk for Alzheimer's disease. Prevalence of depression is higher in patients with diabetes mellitus and in turn, depression is a risk factor for diabetes mellitus. Simultaneous presence of depression and diabetes mellitus tends to worsen the course of both.
Published Version
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