Abstract

Objective To investigate the effects of hyperglycemia on persistent Na + currents in human diabetic nerves, eliminating the factors of passive membrane properties as a factor. Previous studies show that strength–duration time constant of a nerve is shortened under hyperglycemia, suggesting reduced axonal persistent Na + currents. However, the time constant is also affected by changes in passive membrane properties. Latent addition using computerized threshold tracking is a new method that can separately evaluate Na + currents and passive membrane properties. Methods Latent addition was used to estimate nodal Na + currents in median motor axons of 83 diabetic patients. Brief hyperpolarizing conditioning current pulses were delivered, and threshold changes at the conditioning-test interval of 0.2 ms were measured as an indicator of nodal persistent Na + currents. Seventeen patients were examined before and after insulin treatment. Results There was an inverse linear relationship between hemoglobin A1c levels and threshold changes at 0.2 ms ( P=0.02); the higher hemoglobin A1c levels were associated with smaller threshold changes. After insulin treatment, there was a significant improvement in nerve conduction velocities associated with greater threshold changes at 0.2 ms ( P=0.03), suggesting an increase in persistent Na + currents. The fast component of latent addition, an indicator of passive membrane properties, was not affected by the state of glycemic control. Conclusions Hyperglycemia could suppress nodal persistent Na + currents, presumably because of reduced trans-axonal Na + gradient or impaired Na + channels, and this can be rapidly restored by glycemic control. Significance Reduced nodal Na + currents may partly contribute to the pathophysiology of human diabetic neuropathy.

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