Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, UK.
Diabetes Research Group, King's College London, King's College Hospital Campus, Weston Education Centre, 10 Cutcombe Road, London, SE5 9RJ, UK.
Diabetologia. 2018 Jul;61(7):1676-1687. doi: 10.1007/s00125-018-4622-2. Epub 2018 May 12.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia (IAH) in type 1 diabetes increases the risk of severe hypoglycaemia sixfold and can be resistant to intervention. We explored the impact of IAH on central responses to hypoglycaemia to investigate the mechanisms underlying barriers to therapeutic intervention.
We conducted [O]water positron emission tomography studies of regional brain perfusion during euglycaemia (target 5 mmol/l), hypoglycaemia (achieved level, 2.4 mmol/l) and recovery (target 5 mmol/l) in 17 men with type 1 diabetes: eight with IAH, and nine with intact hypoglycaemia awareness (HA).
Hypoglycaemia with HA was associated with increased activation in brain regions including the thalamus, insula, globus pallidus (GP), anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), orbital cortex, dorsolateral frontal (DLF) cortex, angular gyrus and amygdala; deactivation occurred in the temporal and parahippocampal regions. IAH was associated with reduced catecholamine and symptom responses to hypoglycaemia vs HA (incremental AUC: autonomic scores, 26.2 ± 35.5 vs 422.7 ± 237.1; neuroglycopenic scores, 34.8 ± 88.8 vs 478.9 ± 311.1; both p < 0.002). There were subtle differences (p < 0.005, k ≥ 50 voxels) in brain activation at hypoglycaemia, including early differences in the right central operculum, bilateral medial orbital (MO) cortex, and left posterior DLF cortex, with additional differences in the ACC, right GP and post- and pre-central gyri in established hypoglycaemia, and lack of deactivation in temporal regions in established hypoglycaemia.
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Differences in activation in the post- and pre-central gyri may be expected in people with reduced subjective responses to hypoglycaemia. Alterations in the activity of regions involved in the drive to eat (operculum), emotional salience (MO cortex), aversion (GP) and recall (temporal) suggest differences in the perceived importance and urgency of responses to hypoglycaemia in IAH compared with HA, which may be key to the persistence of the condition.
目的/假设:1 型糖尿病患者的低血糖意识受损会使严重低血糖的风险增加六倍,并且可能对干预措施产生抗性。我们探讨了低血糖意识受损对低血糖中枢反应的影响,以研究治疗干预的障碍的潜在机制。
我们对 17 名 1 型糖尿病男性进行了[O]水正电子发射断层扫描研究,研究了在血糖正常(目标 5mmol/L)、低血糖(达到水平 2.4mmol/L)和恢复(目标 5mmol/L)期间大脑区域的局部脑灌注。其中 8 人有低血糖意识受损,9 人有完整的低血糖意识。
有低血糖意识的低血糖症与大脑区域的激活增加有关,包括丘脑、岛叶、苍白球(GP)、前扣带皮层(ACC)、眶额皮层、背外侧额(DLF)皮层、角回和杏仁核;而在颞叶和海马旁回区域则出现了去激活。与有低血糖意识相比,低血糖意识受损患者的儿茶酚胺和症状反应降低(增量 AUC:自主评分,26.2±35.5 与 422.7±237.1;神经低血糖评分,34.8±88.8 与 478.9±311.1;均 p<0.002)。在低血糖期间存在大脑激活的细微差异(p<0.005,k≥50 个体素),包括在右侧中央脑回、双侧内侧眶额(MO)皮层和左侧背外侧额后皮质的早期差异,以及在 ACC、右侧 GP 和前后中央回的额外差异,以及在建立低血糖时颞叶区域缺乏去激活。
结论/解释:在对低血糖反应降低的人群中,可能预期在前后中央回存在激活差异。在与进食驱动(脑回)、情感显著(MO 皮层)、厌恶(GP)和回忆(颞叶)相关的区域的活动改变,表明低血糖意识受损患者对低血糖的感知重要性和紧迫性与低血糖意识相比存在差异,这可能是该疾病持续存在的关键。