Clermont Université, Université d'Auvergne, Pharmacologie Fondamentale et Clinique de la Douleur, BP 10448, F-63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France.
J Physiol. 2010 Nov 1;588(Pt 21):4205-15. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2010.197004.
Neuropathic pain is a common diabetic complication affecting 8-16% of diabetic patients. It is characterized by aberrant symptoms of spontaneous and stimulus-evoked pain including hyperalgesia and allodynia. Magnesium (Mg) deficiency has been proposed as a factor in the pathogenesis of diabetes-related complications, including neuropathy. In the central nervous system, Mg is also a voltage-dependent blocker of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor channels involved in abnormal processing of sensory information. We hypothesized that Mg deficiency might contribute to the development of neuropathic pain and the worsening of clinical and biological signs of diabetes and consequently, that Mg administration could prevent or improve its complications. We examined the effects of oral Mg supplementation (296 mg l(-1) in drinking water for 3 weeks) on the development of neuropathic pain and on biological and clinical parameters of diabetes in streptozocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats. STZ administration induced typical symptoms of type 1 diabetes. The diabetic rats also displayed mechanical hypersensitivity and tactile and thermal allodynia. The level of phosphorylated NMDA receptor NR1 subunit (pNR1) was higher in the spinal dorsal horn of diabetic hyperalgesic/allodynic rats. Magnesium supplementation failed to reduce hyperglycaemia, polyphagia and hypermagnesiuria, or to restore intracellular Mg levels and body growth, but increased insulinaemia and reduced polydipsia. Moreover, it abolished thermal and tactile allodynia, delayed the development of mechanical hypersensitivity, and prevented the increase in spinal cord dorsal horn pNR1. Thus, neuropathic pain symptoms can be attenuated by targeting the Mg-mediated blockade of NMDA receptors, offering new therapeutic opportunities for the management of chronic neuropathic pain.
神经性疼痛是一种常见的糖尿病并发症,影响 8-16%的糖尿病患者。其特征是自发性和刺激诱发疼痛的异常症状,包括痛觉过敏和感觉异常。镁(Mg)缺乏被认为是糖尿病相关并发症发病机制的一个因素,包括神经病变。在中枢神经系统中,Mg 也是电压依赖性 N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸受体通道的阻断剂,参与异常的感觉信息处理。我们假设 Mg 缺乏可能导致神经性疼痛的发展,并加重糖尿病的临床和生物学体征,因此,Mg 给药可能预防或改善其并发症。我们检查了口服 Mg 补充(在饮用水中 296mg/L 持续 3 周)对链脲佐菌素(STZ)诱导的糖尿病大鼠神经性疼痛的发展以及糖尿病的生物学和临床参数的影响。STZ 给药诱导典型的 1 型糖尿病症状。糖尿病大鼠还表现出机械性痛觉过敏和触觉及热感觉异常。磷酸化 NMDA 受体 NR1 亚基(pNR1)在糖尿病痛觉过敏/感觉异常大鼠脊髓背角的水平升高。Mg 补充未能降低高血糖、多食和高镁尿,或恢复细胞内 Mg 水平和体重增长,但增加了胰岛素血症并减少了多饮。此外,它消除了热和触觉感觉异常,延迟了机械性痛觉过敏的发展,并防止脊髓背角 pNR1 的增加。因此,通过靶向 Mg 介导的 NMDA 受体阻断,可以减轻神经性疼痛症状,为慢性神经性疼痛的治疗提供新的机会。