Abstract
The main aim was to investigate whether 1 month of aldose reductase inhibitor treatment could correct a deficit in sciatic nerve nutritive blood flow following 1 month of untreated streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats. Treatment was with two doses of WAY-121,509, both of which completely blocked neuronal sorbitol accumulation. The high dose fully corrected a motor conduction velocity deficit, whereas the low dose caused 51.3% amelioration. Nutritive endoneurial blood flow, monitored by hydrogen clearance, was 43.4% reduced after 1 month of diabetes. This was completely corrected by the high dose of WAY-121,509. In addition, vascular conductance was supranormal and there was a decrease in arteriovenous shunt flow. Low dose treatment caused a 55.6% improvement of the nutritive endoneurial blood flow deficit, paralleling the conduction velocity effect. WAY-121,509 did not alter nerve perfusion in nondiabetic rats. Data from multiple sciatic nerve penetrations by oxygen sensitive microelectrodes revealed a 42.0% deficit in mean endoneurial oxygen tension with diabetes, whereas tensions were in the nondiabetic range for high dose WAY-121,509 treatment. Thus, the data highlight neurovascular actions of aldose reductase inhibition, and suggest that neuronal polyol pathway metabolite levels are a poor predictor of functional efficacy.
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