| Literature DB >> 25104975 |
Marilia Brito Gomes1, Carlos Antonio Negrato2.
Abstract
Alpha-lipoic acid is a naturally occurring substance, essential for the function of different enzymes that take part in mitochondria's oxidative metabolism. It is believed that alpha-lipoic acid or its reduced form, dihydrolipoic acid have many biochemical functions acting as biological antioxidants, as metal chelators, reducers of the oxidized forms of other antioxidant agents such as vitamin C and E, and modulator of the signaling transduction of several pathways. These above-mentioned actions have been shown in experimental studies emphasizing the use of alpha-lipoic acid as a potential therapeutic agent for many chronic diseases with great epidemiological as well economic and social impact such as brain diseases and cognitive dysfunctions like Alzheimer disease, obesity, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, burning mouth syndrome, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, some types of cancer, glaucoma and osteoporosis. Many conflicting data have been found concerning the clinical use of alpha-lipoic acid in the treatment of diabetes and of diabetes-related chronic complications such as retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, wound healing and diabetic cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy. The most frequent clinical condition in which alpha-lipoic acid has been studied was in the management of diabetic peripheral neuropathy in patients with type 1 as well type 2 diabetes. Considering that oxidative stress, a imbalance between pro and antioxidants with excessive production of reactive oxygen species, is a factor in the development of many diseases and that alpha-lipoic acid, a natural thiol antioxidant, has been shown to have beneficial effects on oxidative stress parameters in various tissues we wrote this article in order to make an up-to-date review of current thinking regarding alpha-lipoic acid and its use as an antioxidant drug therapy for a myriad of diseases that could have potential benefits from its use.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-lipoic acid; Biochemical action; Chronic diseases; Diabetes mellitus
Year: 2014 PMID: 25104975 PMCID: PMC4124142 DOI: 10.1186/1758-5996-6-80
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetol Metab Syndr ISSN: 1758-5996 Impact factor: 3.320
Figure 1Enantiomers (R and S) of lipoic acid.
Figure 2Chemical structure of alpha lipoic acid (ALA) and its reduced from dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA).
Antioxidant action of ALA and DHLA upon reactive oxygen species and references
| Reactive oxygen species | ALA | DHLA |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrogen peroxide | Yes (12) | Yes (12) |
| (H2O2) | No (23) | No (23) |
| Superoxide | ||
| (O2-) | No (23) | Yes (12, 27,28) |
| No (23) | ||
| Hydroxyl radical | ||
| (HO-) | Yes | Yes |
| (23,24,27) | (27) | |
| SInglet oxygen | Yes (12,29) | Yes (29) |
| (O2 *) | No (24) | |
| Peroxynitrite | Yes (12,25) | Yes 12,(25) |
| (ONOO-) | ||
| Nitric oxide radical | Yes | Yes (12) |
| (NO) | (12, 26) | No (26) |
| Hypochlous acid | Yes (23, 24, 31) | Yes (31) |
| (HOCL) | ||
| Peroxyl radical | Yes (23) | Yes (23, 30) |
| (HO2..) | No (30) |
Clinical studies with ALA in patients with diabetes
| Author | Study type | ALA/other drugs | Analyzed parameters | Total participants | Duration of DM (years) | Follow up (weeks/ years) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| Udupa, AS [ | Randomized, double- blind placebo-controlled | Vitamin E, omega 3 fatty acids ALA 300 mg All of them daily/orally | Weight, waist glucose | 104 with IR | 5-10 y | 12 w | < HbA1c, weight, waist Better results with omega-3 followed by vitamin E and ALA |
| Porasuphatana S [ | Randomized, placebo- controlled | ALA 300 mg -1200 mg/d | HbA1c, FBG | 38 | 2.07 ± 0.26 | 24 w | <HbA1c, FBG |
| De Oliveira AM [ | Randomized, double- blind placebo-controlled | ALA 600 mg or Vitamin E 800 mg or ALA 600 mg plus Vitamin E 800 mgr | HOMA index, glucose, lipid profile insulin | 102 | 16 w | ||
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| Haritoglou C [ | Randomized ,double-blind placebo-controlled | ALA 600 mg/daily | Development of macular edema | 232 patients with type 2 and 170 with T1D | 86 w | no effect | |
| Nebioso M [ | Randomized not placebo-controlled | ALA 400 mg daily plus vitamins and genistein | ERG | 32 | NA | 4 w | Improvement in ERG |
|
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| Borcea V [ | Cross-sectional not placebo-controlled | ALA 600 mg/daily/orally | Lipid ROOH, HbA1c, urine albumin, α tocopherol | 107 patients [45 with T1D and 29 with T2D] | 21.7 ± 11.1 (with ALA); 15.3 ± 10.4 (without ALA) | >12 w | < ROOH < ROOH/(,α tocopherol/cholesterol The decrease was independent of HbA1c and urine albumin level |
| Cicek M [ | Randomized not placebo-controlled | ALA 600 mg/ /orally | CIN Plasma creatinine, Cystation C | 79 | NA | Prior coronary angiography | No effect in the incidence of CIN, creatinine, Cystatin C pré /pos exam |
| Chang JW [ | Randomized placebo-controlled | ALA 600 mg/orally | Cholesterol, HbA1c C-reactive protein, oxidizedLDL- ADMA | 50 patients on hemodyalisis treatment | NA | 12 w | Decrease the level of ADMA |
|
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| Heinisch BB [ | Randomized, Controlled,double- blind placebo parallel | Daily 600 mg of ALA IV | Endothelial function endothelium dependent and independent HbA1c, lipid profile | 30 patients with TD2 | 7 ± 6 | 3 w | Improvement in endothelium dependent function |
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| Pop-Busui R [ | Prospective, randomized, double- blind, placebo- controlled | ALA 600 mg/twice daily Nicotinamide 750 mg/twice daily Allupurinol 300 mg/daily All of them orally | Autonomic tests PET F2 urinary isoprostane HbA1c | 44 patients with T1D with mild/moderate cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy and retinopathy or microalbuminuria | 27 ± 12 | 2 y | No improvement in any analyzed parameter |
| Ziegler D [ | Randomized, double- blind, placebo- controlled | ALA 800 mg/daily (orally) | Heart rate variability HbA1c Autonomic symptoms | 73 patients with T2D | 15.3 ± 8.3 | 16 w | Improvement on root mean square successive difference and power spectrum in low frequency band No difference in the prevalence of symptoms |
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| ZiegleR D [ | Randomized,double- blind controlled parallel | ALA:1200 or 600 or 100 mg/daily (orally) | TSS HbA1c | 328 patients with T2D with symptomatic peripheral neuropathy | 10.4/12.3 | 3 w | Improvement in TSS HbA1c: no difference |
| Reljanovic M [ | Prospective randomized,double- blind controlled | ALA 1200 mg or 600 mg orally | Sensory and motor nerve function | 299 patients (T1D and T2D) with symptomatic polyneuropathy | NA | 2 y | Improvement in electrophysiological tests HbA1c: no difference |
| Ziegler D.[ | Prospective randomized, double- blind controlled | ALA 600 mg/ IV followed by 1800 mg of ALA or placebo orally | TSS NIS | 516 patients with T2D with symptomatic polyneuropathy | 11 | 3 w (IV) 24 w (orally) | No effect HbA1c:no difference |
| Ametov As [ | Randomized, double- blind ,parallel controlled, mono-center | ALA 600 mg IV | TSS | 120 (T1D and T2D) with DSPN | 15.1 ± 8.8 | 3 | Improvement |
| Ziegler D [ | Randomized, double- blind, parallel controlled, multicenter | ALA 600 to 1800 mg/orally | TSS | 181 (T1D and T2D) with DSPN | 14 | 5 | Improvement |
| Ziegler D [ | Randomized, double- blind, parallel controlled, multicenter | ALA 600 mg/orally | TSS Composite score( NIS–lower limbs plus 7 neurophisiologic tests (NIS-LL+7) | 460 (T1D and T2D) with DSPN | 13.3 | 4 years | TSS: no improvement NSI-LL+7:improvement |
| Ziegler D [ | Meta-analysis | ALA 600mg IV | TSS, NIS-LL | 1258 | 132 months | 3 w | Improvement in TSS (papin-prick,touch-pressure), burning,numbness) Improvement in NIS-LL |
| Mijnhout GS [ | Meta-analysis | ALA orally ( 600 to 1800 mg daily) ALA IV (100 to 1200 mg/daily) | TSS | 653 | NA | 3 to 5 w | Improvement in TSS but greater than 30% only in intravenously treated patients |
ALA, alpha-lipoic acid; w, weeks; y, years; IV, intravenously; HbA1c, glycated hemoglobin; FBG, fasting blood glucose; HOMA index, homeostasis model assessment; ERG, electroretinogram; ROOH, hidroxiperoxides; CIN, contrast induced nephropathy; ADMA, asymmetric dimethyl-arginine; PET, positron emission tomography; TSS, total symptoms score; NIS, neurophaty impairment score; NIS-LL, neuropathy improvement score of lower limbs; T1D, type 1 diabetes; T2D, type 2 diabetes; IR, insulin resistance; DSPN , distal symmetric sensory-motor polyneuropathy.