Abstract
Objective To investigate whether glycemic control is associated with reversible changes in axonal excitability in human diabetic nerves. It is known that voluntary contraction or compression ischemia alters nerve Na+/K+) pump activity, and axonal excitability changes due to the pump activity can be estimated by threshold tracking.
Methods Threshold, the current required to produce a compound muscle action potential 50% of maximum, was determined from the stimulus-response curve, and threshold changes produced by maximal voluntary contraction or ischemia were measured before and after insulin treatment in 10 diabetic patients.
Results Within 3 weeks of the start of treatment, the threshold changes became greater following voluntary contractions (+13±4% versus +23±5%; mean±SEM; p=0.04) and during ischemia (-5±2% versus -11±2%; p=0.04).
Conclusions The extent of threshold fluctuation depends on multiple metabolic factors associated with diabetes such as decreased Na+/K+) ATPase activity, increased anaerobic glycolysis, and tissue acidosis, and nerve excitability can respond quickly to glycemic control in diabetic patients.
(Internal Medicine 41: 360-365, 2002)