Jahagirdar Vaishali, Ramcharitar Justin, Cotero Victoria E, McNay Ewan C
Behavioral Neuroscience and Center for Neuroscience Research, University at Albany, Albany, NY 12222, USA ; Excelsior College, Albany, NY 12203, USA.
Behavioral Neuroscience and Center for Neuroscience Research, University at Albany, Albany, NY 12222, USA.
Open Diabetes J. 2012;5:1-7. doi: 10.2174/1876524601205010001.
Recurrent hypoglycemia (RH) is the major complication of intensive insulin treatment for diabetes mellitus. Of particular concern is the perceived potential for long-term impact of RH on cognition. Because diabetic patients have been reported to have deficits in mental flexibility and judgment, both generally considered to be mediated predominantly by the prefrontal cortex, the purpose of the present study was to determine whether RH would affect prefrontal cortex function. Medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)-mediated set-shifting ability was tested in male Sprague-Dawley rats using a maze-based, food-reward Set-Shift task analogous to the Wisconsin card-sorting task. The performance measure was the number of trials to criterion on both day 1 (initial rule-learning) and day 2 (set-shifting in response to a changed contingency). microdialysis was used to measure mPFC extracellular glucose, lactate, pyruvate, glutamate, and dopamine. Post-mortem measures within the mPFC included glucose transporter 3 (GluT3) and c-Fos. RH animals had enhanced performance on day 1, consistent with previous work that showed RH to improve subsequent hippocampal function when euglycemic. The key finding of the present work is that RH led to impaired set-shifting performance on day 2, suggesting impairment in e.g. mental flexibility. Consistent with this finding, RH animals show decreased mPFC glycolysis on day 2 compared to controls. Our data show that RH can lead to subsequent impaired judgment, accompanied by reduced prefrontal cortex function. The findings suggest a potential underlying mechanism for the impaired judgment seen in diabetic patients.
反复低血糖(RH)是糖尿病强化胰岛素治疗的主要并发症。RH对认知的长期潜在影响尤其令人担忧。因为据报道糖尿病患者在心理灵活性和判断力方面存在缺陷,而这两者通常被认为主要由前额叶皮层介导,所以本研究的目的是确定RH是否会影响前额叶皮层功能。使用类似于威斯康星卡片分类任务的基于迷宫的食物奖励集转换任务,在雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠中测试内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)介导的集转换能力。性能指标是第1天(初始规则学习)和第2天(根据变化的条件进行集转换)达到标准所需的试验次数。使用微透析测量mPFC细胞外葡萄糖、乳酸、丙酮酸、谷氨酸和多巴胺。mPFC内的死后测量包括葡萄糖转运体3(GluT3)和c-Fos。RH动物在第1天的表现有所增强,这与之前的研究结果一致,即RH在血糖正常时可改善随后的海马功能。本研究的关键发现是,RH导致第2天的集转换表现受损,这表明例如心理灵活性受损。与这一发现一致的是,与对照组相比,RH动物在第2天的mPFC糖酵解减少。我们的数据表明,RH可导致随后的判断力受损,并伴有前额叶皮层功能下降。这些发现提示了糖尿病患者判断力受损的潜在潜在机制。