Increased sciatic nerve blood flow in diabetic rats: assessment by "molecular" vs. particulate microspheres.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM(1997)

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摘要
Sciatic nerve blood flow in diabetic rats is typically increased or unchanged when assessed by the reference sample microsphere method in our laboratory In contrast, blood flow is generally reported to be decreased similar to 50% when assessed with laser Doppler flowmetry or hydrogen clearance polarography. To address concerns that increased blood flow observed with microspheres might be anomalous because of their particulate nature and/or because insufficient numbers of microspheres are captured in the nerve, a plasma-soluble "molecular microsphere" ([H-3]desmethylimipramine, mol mt = 266) and 11.3-mu m Gd-153-labeled microspheres were injected sequentially to assess blood flow in rats with streptozotocin diabetes of 2-4 wk duration. Nerve blood flows in diabetic rats were increased 1.5- to 2-fold (vs. control rats) with both tracers; these increases were prevented by tolrestat, an inhibitor of aldose reductase. These observations indicate that blood flow in sciatic nerve (like that in retina and kidney) is increased early after the onset of diabetes and is 1) demonstrable with a plasma-soluble tracer as well as with particulate microspheres and 2) linked to increased metabolism of glucose via the sorbitol pathway.
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[H-3]desmethylimipramine,aldose reductase
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