| Literature DB >> 15207841 |
K Takebayashi1, Y Aso, R Sugita, Y Takemura, T Inukai.
Abstract
We measured sympathetic skin response (SSR), a measure of sympathetic sudomotor function, and compared SSR with other quantitative neurological tests including power spectral analysis (PSA) of heart rate variations in 60 type 2 diabetic subjects. SSR was detected in all 20 age-matched healthy subjects but was absent in 17 patients with type 2 diabetes (28%) (P<.01). Even after exclusion of diabetic patients with absent SSR, the SSR amplitude in diabetic patients was significantly lower than in healthy subjects (P<.05). Both the low frequency power of R-R intervals, which reflects both cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic function, and the postural fall in systolic blood pressure were significantly lower in the diabetic patients with absent SSR than in those with present SSR (P<.05 and.001, respectively). However, we found no significant difference in the high frequency power of R-R intervals, which reflects accurately cardiac parasympathetic function, between the diabetic patients with absent SSR and those with present SSR. In the diabetic patients with present SSR, SSR amplitude was also positively correlated with the postural fall in systolic blood pressure, low-frequency (LF) power, and high-frequency (HF) power. These results suggest that SSR is a useful and sensitive method for evaluating diabetic autonomic neuropathy, and that sympathetic sudomotor neuropathy may be preceded by cardiac parasympathetic neuropathy in patients with type 2 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15207841 DOI: 10.1016/S1056-8727(03)00090-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Complications ISSN: 1056-8727 Impact factor: 2.852