Department of Clinical and Molecular Medicine, "La Sapienza" University, Rome, Italy; Diabetes Unit, Sant'Andrea Hospital, Rome, Italy; Metabolic Fitness Association, Monterotondo, Rome, Italy.
Department of Human Movement and Sport Sciences, "Foro Italico" University, Rome, Italy.
Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2014 Jan;24(1):18-26. doi: 10.1016/j.numecd.2013.04.010. Epub 2013 Oct 3.
Apart from late motor nerve dysfunction, factors affecting muscle strength in diabetes are largely unknown. This study was aimed at assessing muscle strength correlates in diabetic subjects encompassing a wide range of peripheral nerve function and various degrees of micro and macrovascular complications.
Four-hundred consecutive patients with type 1 and 2 diabetes (aged 46.4 ± 13.9 and 65.8 ± 10.3 years, respectively) from the Study on the Assessment of Determinants of Muscle and Bone Strength Abnormalities in Diabetes (SAMBA) were examined for upper and lower body muscle isometric maximal voluntary contraction by dynamometry. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were applied to identify strength correlates. Isometric force at both the upper and lower limbs was significantly lower in subjects with than in those without any complication. At univariate analysis, it was strongly associated with age, diabetes duration, physical activity (PA) level, cardio-respiratory fitness, anthropometric parameters, surrogate measures of complications, and parameters of sensory and autonomic, but not motor (except amplitude) neuropathy. Multivariate analysis revealed that upper and lower body strength correlated independently with male gender and, inversely, with age, autonomic neuropathy score (or individual autonomic function abnormalities), and vibration perception threshold, but not sensory-motor neuropathy score. Diabetes duration and PA level were excluded from the model.
Both upper and lower body muscle strength correlate with measures of diabetic complications and particularly with parameters of sensory and especially autonomic nerve function, independently of diabetes duration and PA level, thus suggesting the involvement of mechanisms other than manifest motor nerve impairment.
除了晚期运动神经功能障碍外,影响糖尿病患者肌肉力量的因素还很大程度上未知。本研究旨在评估涵盖广泛的周围神经功能以及各种程度的微血管和大血管并发症的糖尿病患者的肌肉力量相关因素。
来自糖尿病肌肉和骨骼强度异常评估研究(SAMBA)的 400 名 1 型和 2 型糖尿病患者(年龄分别为 46.4±13.9 和 65.8±10.3 岁)接受了上肢和下肢肌肉等长最大自主收缩的力量测试。采用单变量和多变量回归分析来确定与力量相关的因素。与无任何并发症的患者相比,有并发症的患者上肢和下肢的等长肌力明显降低。在单变量分析中,它与年龄、糖尿病病程、身体活动(PA)水平、心肺功能适应性、人体测量参数、并发症替代指标以及感觉和自主神经的参数密切相关,但与运动神经(除了幅度)无关。多变量分析显示,上肢和下肢力量与男性性别独立相关,而与年龄、自主神经病变评分(或个体自主神经功能异常)以及振动感觉阈值呈负相关,但与感觉运动神经病变评分无关。糖尿病病程和 PA 水平被排除在模型之外。
上肢和下肢肌肉力量与糖尿病并发症的测量值相关,尤其是与感觉和自主神经功能的参数相关,与糖尿病病程和 PA 水平无关,因此提示除了明显的运动神经损伤外,还涉及其他机制。