Abstract
Distal diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy (DDSP) is the most prevalent form of diabetic neuropathy, and some of the patients develop gradual pain. Specialized sensory structures present in the skin encode different modalities of somatosensitivity such as temperature, touch, and pain. The cutaneous sensory structures responsible for the qualities of mechanosensitivity (fine touch, vibration) are collectively known as cutaneous mechanoreceptors (Meissner corpuscles, Pacinian corpuscles, and Merkel cell–axonal complexes), which results are altered during diabetes. Here, we used immunohistochemistry to analyze the density, localization within the dermis, arrangement of corpuscular components (axons and Schwann-like cells), and expression of putative mechanoproteins (PIEZO2, ASIC2, and TRPV4) in cutaneous mechanoreceptors of subjects suffering clinically diagnosed non-painful and painful distal diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy. The number of Meissner corpuscles, Pacinian corpuscles, and Merkel cells was found to be severely decreased in the non-painful presentation of the disease, and almost disappeared in the painful presentation. Furthermore, there was a marked reduction in the expression of axonal and Schwann-like cell markers (with are characteristics of corpuscular denervation) as well as of all investigated mechanoproteins in the non-painful distal diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy, and these were absent in the painful form. Taken together, these alterations might explain, at least partly, the impairment of mechanosensitivity system associated with distal diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy. Furthermore, our results support that an increasing severity of DDSP may increase the risk of developing painful neuropathic symptoms. However, why the absence of cutaneous mechanoreceptors is associated with pain remains to be elucidated.
Highlights
Diabetic neuropathy includes a group of neuropathies associated with diabetes mellitus, which are the main cause of morbidity and mortality in these patients
7).neuropathy lyzed is evolution broadly accepted that diabetic neuropathy is accompanied by a progressive impairment in the somatosensory system that affects the quality of life of patients gressive impairment in the somatosensory system that affects the quality of life of patients
This topic has been partially analyzed it is broadly accepted that diabetic neuropathy is accompanied by a progressive impairment in the somatosensory system that affects the quality of life of patients [27,28]
Summary
Diabetic neuropathy includes a group of neuropathies associated with diabetes mellitus, which are the main cause of morbidity and mortality in these patients. The most common complication during the evolution of type 2 diabetes mellitus is distal diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy (DDSP) which may affect up to 50% of patients [1], leading to neuropathic pain in as many as 50% of patients [2,3]. Diagnostic of DSSN is frequently delayed due to the scarcity of early diagnostic tests, and recently, axonal swellings in cutaneous biopsies have been proposed as an early marker of sensory nerve injury in type 2 diabetes mellitus [4,5]. More severe small fiber damage in the skin of patients with painful diabetic neuropathy compared with painless diabetic neuropathy has been observed, and the density of intraepithelial nerve fibers was lower in subjects with painful compared with painless neuropathy [11,12]
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