Fushimi H, Inoue T, Kishino B, Nishikawa M, Tochino Y, Funakawa S, Yamatodani A, Wada H
Life Sci. 1984 Sep 3;35(10):1077-81. doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(84)90072-9.
Plasma catecholamine levels, determined by high performance liquid chromatography, were elevated in response to blood withdrawal in normal rats. Such a response was also observed in streptozotocin diabetic rats 2 and 6 weeks after disease onset, but was no longer seen at 13 weeks. Tissue (adrenal, heart, skin, kidney) catecholamine levels in diabetic rats were increased at 6 weeks as well as at 13 weeks. These abnormalities were corrected by insulin treatment in at least a part of diabetic rats. The present data suggest that there might be a catecholamine accumulation, which is later accompanied with an impairment of catecholamine secretion, in diabetic rats, and they gave a basis for an inference that similar changes might play some role in the pathogenesis of diabetic autonomic neuropathy in man.