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July 5, 2007
High Glucose Levels Can 'Lock' body's Metabolism In A Diabetic State
Topics: Health IssuesResearch has speculated that exposure to high glucose levels quickly creates a metabolic memory in which diabetes persists long after glucose levels have been corrected. Studies to date suggested that oxidation played a role but the exact mechanism was unknown. Now, researchers at the University of Warwick Medical School near Coventry, England have uncovered a process that locks the body's metabolism in a diabetic state after only relatively limited exposure to high glucose levels:
The Warwick research team, led by Dr Antonio Ceriello, have now proven that the damage seems to be done in a process called glycation when early on in a period of high glucose levels glucose sugar molecules are able to bind to proteins in the mitochondria of cells (the parts of cells governing the production and regulation of energy). This persists even if glucose levels later fall to normal. This inhibits and distorts the mitochondria's normal function and results in an overabundance of the production of free radicals (or Reactive Oxygen Species - ROS) which cause oxidation and thus continued diabetic complications.Continue reading: Sugar Coated Proteins Seal In A Memory Of Diabetes ...The Warwick Medical School researchers proved their hypothesis by taking tissue and exposing it to 2 weeks of high levels of glucose, followed by one week of normal glucose - however for half the tissue they also applied several antioxidants at the end of the two weeks of high glucose. The tissue without antioxidants levels of glucose stress remained high but where antioxidants had been applied there was a dramatic fall in the incidence of free radicals and there was also a significant drop in 5 of the 6 key markers for high glucose stress.
... research confirms the need for very early tight control of glucose levels to avoid diabetic complication and that that control must be supplemented with the use of antioxidant agents to mitigate the progression of complications.
However long term use of antioxidants can in itself produce health problems so in a further research published this month the Warwick Medical School team have tested the use of the AT-1 receptor blocker Telmisartan and found it can be used in exactly the same way to suppress the build up of free radicals without the side affects that long term use of antioxidants would cause.
Cross posted from Diabetologica
Posted by Richard at July 5, 2007 11:50 AM
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