Abstract

An autoradiographic study was conducted to determine whether kinin receptors are altered in the rat spinal cord in two experimental models of chronic hyperglycemia and insulin resistance. Sprague-Dawley rats were given 10% d-glucose in their drinking water alone or with insulin (9 mU/kg/min with osmotic pumps) for 4 weeks. Both groups and control rats were treated either with a normal chow diet or with an alpha-lipoic acid-supplemented diet as antioxidant therapy. After 4 weeks of treatment, glycemia, insulinemia, blood pressure, insulin resistance index, the production of superoxide anion in the aorta and the density of B 1 receptor binding sites in the dorsal horn were significantly increased in the two models. These effects were prevented or attenuated by alpha-lipoic acid. In contrast, B 2 receptor binding sites of most spinal cord laminae were increased in the glucose group only and were not affected by alpha-lipoic acid. Results show that chronic hyperglycemia associated with insulin resistance increases B 1 and B 2 receptor binding sites in the rat spinal cord through distinct mechanisms, including the oxidative stress for the B 1 receptor.

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