Strelitz Diabetes Center for Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, VA 23510, USA.
Curr Diab Rep. 2013 Aug;13(4):517-32. doi: 10.1007/s11892-013-0392-x.
In this review of thermoregulatory function in health and disease, we review the basic mechanisms controlling skin blood flow of the hairy and glabrous skin and illustrate the major differences in blood flow to glabrous skin, which is, in essence, sympathetically mediated, while hairy skin is dependent upon neuropeptidergic signals, nitric oxide, and prostaglandin, among others. Laser Doppler methods of quantification of blood flow--in response to iontophoresis of acetylcholine or heat--and nociceptor-mediated blood flow have relatively uniformly demonstrated an impaired capacity to increase blood flow to the skin in diabetes and in its forerunners, prediabetes and the metabolic syndrome. This reduced capacity is likely to be a significant contributor to the development of foot ulcerations and amputations in diabetes, and means of increasing blood flow are clearly needed. Understanding the pathogenic mechanisms is likely to provide a means of identifying a valuable therapeutic target. Thermoregulatory control of sweating is intimately linked to the autonomic nervous system via sympathetic C fibers, and sweat glands are richly endowed with a neuropeptidergic innervation. Sweating disturbances are prevalent in diabetes and its precursors, and quantification of sweating may be useful as an index of diagnosis of somatic and, probably, autonomic dysfunction. Moreover, quantifying this disturbance in sweating by various methods may be useful in identifying the risk of progression from prediabetes to diabetes, as well as responses to therapeutic intervention. We now have the technological power to take advantage of this physiological arrangement to better understand, monitor, and treat disorders of small nerve fibers and the somatic and autonomic nervous system (ANS). Newer methods of sudomotor function testing are rapid, noninvasive, not technically demanding, and accessible to the outpatient clinic. Whether the potential applications are screening for diabetes, following poorly controlled diabetes subjects during alteration of their treatment regimen, or simply monitoring somatic and autonomic function throughout the course of treatment, sudorimetry can be an invaluable tool for today's clinicians.
在这篇关于健康和疾病中体温调节功能的综述中,我们回顾了控制有毛和无毛皮肤血流的基本机制,并说明了无毛皮肤血流的主要差异,本质上是交感神经介导的,而有毛皮肤则依赖于神经肽信号、一氧化氮和前列腺素等。激光多普勒血流定量方法——响应于乙酰胆碱或热的离子电渗——和伤害感受器介导的血流已经相对一致地表明,糖尿病及其前身(前驱糖尿病和代谢综合征)中皮肤血流增加的能力受损。这种能力的降低很可能是导致糖尿病患者足部溃疡和截肢的重要原因,显然需要增加血流量。了解发病机制可能为确定有价值的治疗靶点提供一种手段。通过交感 C 纤维,体温调节对出汗的控制与自主神经系统密切相关,而汗腺富含神经肽支配。出汗障碍在糖尿病及其前身中很常见,出汗的定量可能作为躯体和可能的自主神经功能障碍的诊断指标有用。此外,通过各种方法量化这种出汗障碍,可能有助于识别从前驱糖尿病进展为糖尿病的风险,以及对治疗干预的反应。我们现在拥有利用这种生理安排的技术能力,可以更好地理解、监测和治疗小纤维和躯体及自主神经系统(ANS)的紊乱。新的出汗功能测试方法快速、非侵入性、技术要求不高,并且可以在门诊使用。无论是用于糖尿病的筛查、在改变治疗方案期间监测控制不佳的糖尿病患者,还是仅仅在治疗过程中监测躯体和自主功能,发汗量测定都可以成为当今临床医生的宝贵工具。