Department of Neurology and Neurophysiology, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia
The University of New South Wales (UNSW), South West Sydney Clinical School, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Clin Sci (Lond). 2019 Jul 22;133(14):1603-1607. doi: 10.1042/CS20190492. Print 2019 Jul 31.
Diabetes is associated with poor recovery profiles following stroke. The pathophysiological mechanisms by which diabetes mediates neurological recovery after stroke are debatable. A recent paper published in the by Pintana et al. (Clinical Science (2019), 1367-1386) provides a possible explanation for the underlying mechanisms of poor long-term motor recovery after stroke in obesity-induced diabetes animal model. Authors report that stroke-induced neurogenesis and parvalbumin (PV)+ interneuron-mediated neuroplasticity is severely impaired due to obesity-induced type 2 diabetes (T2D). Poor long-term motor recovery after stroke in comorbid obese and diabetic mice was not associated with stroke-induced grey or white matter damage. Understanding these mechanisms is crucial to develop therapeutic strategies to improve recovery in the obesity-induced diabetic population. The strength of the present study lies in the use of a comorbid obese/diabetic animal model, which is more likely to reflect the clinical scenario. However, these findings should be understood from the context of this specific animal model and whether these findings hold true for another variant of the obesity/T2D model warrants further consideration. This is an interesting study from the perspective of understanding the stroke pathology in T2D; however, the interaction of microvascular changes (including vascular modelling, angiogenesis), oxidative stress and insulin resistance (IR) associated with T2D and poor recovery profile merit further discussions. Given the increasing burden of obesity, diabetes and/or stroke globally, understanding of mechanisms may be useful in developing cardiovascular risk management pathways in this subgroup of population who are at increased risk of poor clinical outcomes following acute stroke.
糖尿病与中风后恢复不良有关。糖尿病通过何种病理生理机制在中风后介导神经恢复仍存在争议。Pintana 等人最近在《临床科学》(Clinical Science (2019), 1367-1386)上发表的一篇论文,为肥胖诱导的糖尿病动物模型中风后长期运动恢复不良的潜在机制提供了一个可能的解释。作者报告说,由于肥胖诱导的 2 型糖尿病(T2D),中风诱导的神经发生和副甲状腺素(PV)+中间神经元介导的神经可塑性严重受损。肥胖合并糖尿病小鼠中风后长期运动恢复不良与中风引起的灰质或白质损伤无关。了解这些机制对于开发治疗策略以改善肥胖诱导的糖尿病人群的恢复至关重要。本研究的优势在于使用了肥胖/糖尿病合并的动物模型,这更有可能反映临床情况。然而,应从该特定动物模型的角度理解这些发现,并且这些发现是否适用于另一种肥胖/T2D 模型的变体需要进一步考虑。从了解 T2D 中风病理的角度来看,这是一项有趣的研究;然而,与 T2D 和不良恢复情况相关的微血管变化(包括血管建模、血管生成)、氧化应激和胰岛素抵抗(IR)的相互作用值得进一步讨论。鉴于肥胖、糖尿病和/或中风在全球的负担不断增加,了解这些机制可能有助于为这一亚组人群制定心血管风险管理途径,因为他们在急性中风后临床结局不良的风险增加。