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Early increase precedes a depletion of VIP and PGP-9.5 in the skin of insulin-dependent diabetics--correlation between quantitative immunohistochemistry and clinical assessment of peripheral neuropathy.

Authors :
Properzi G
Francavilla S
Poccia G
Aloisi P
Gu XH
Terenghi G
Polak JM
Source :
The Journal of pathology [J Pathol] 1993 Feb; Vol. 169 (2), pp. 269-77.
Publication Year :
1993

Abstract

Diabetic neuropathy affects both sensory and autonomic peripheral nerve fibres. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is present in autonomic fibres which modulate sweat secretion, while calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is localized to cutaneous sensory fibres. In this study, immunohistochemistry and image analysis were used to assess changes of VIP and CGRP, and of the pan-neuronal marker protein gene-product (PGP)-9.5, in skin biopsies of 18 patients affected by type 1 diabetes (age range 18-46 years) and from seven aged-matched controls. Patients were divided into three groups: group 1 (n = 6), with diabetes for 6 months to 3 years; group 2 (n = 5), with the disease for 5-10 years; and group 3 (n = 7), with diabetes for more than 10 years. VIP immunoreactivity (IR) and PGP-9.5-IR were significantly reduced around sweat glands (P < 0.005) in groups 2 and 3. Epidermal CGRP-IR and PGP-9.5-IR were significantly reduced in group 3 (P < 0.05). Twenty-eight per cent (5/18) of all patients showed high VIP-IR around sweat glands (> 95 per cent confidence limits of controls) and all of these patients had diabetes for less than 3 years. Conversely, 55 per cent (10/18) of patients had low VIP-IR (< 5 per cent confidence limit of controls). The latter, compared with the former, showed a significantly longer duration of diabetes (Fisher exact test P = 0.002), presence of clinical autonomic neuropathy (Fisher exact test P = 0.04), and a reduced sural nerve conduction velocity (Fisher exact test P = 0.04). These results suggest that quantitative immunohistochemical analysis of peptide-containing cutaneous nerves allows an objective evaluation of nerve fibre alterations at early stages of diabetes than is currently possible with neurophysiological functional tests.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022-3417
Volume :
169
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8445492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/path.1711690215