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Neuropathic pain is associated with increased nodal persistent Na+ currents in human diabetic neuropathy
Authors:Sonoko Misawa  Kenichi Sakurai  Kazumoto Shibuya  Sagiri Isose  Kazuaki Kanai  Jun Ogino  Ko Ishikawa  Satoshi Kuwabara
Affiliation:1. Department of Neurology;2. Department of Clinical Cell Biology and Medicine, Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba, Japan
Abstract:Abstract Peripheral nerve injury alters function and expression of voltage gated Na+ channels on the axolemma, leading to ectopic firing and neuropathic pain/paresthesia. Hyperglycemia also affects nodal Na+ currents, presumably due to activation of polyol pathway and impaired Na+–K+ pump. We investigated changes in nodal Na+ currents in peripheral sensory axons and their relation with pain in human diabetic neuropathy. Latent addition using computerized threshold tracking was used to estimate nodal persistent Na+ currents in radial sensory axons of 81 diabetic patients. Of these, 36 (44%) had chronic neuropathic pain and severe paresthesia. Compared to patients without pain, those with pain had greater nodal Na+ currents (p = 0.001), smaller amplitudes of sensory nerve action potentials (SNAP) (p = 0.0003), and lower hemoglobin A1c levels (p = 0.006). Higher axonal Na+ conductance was associated with smaller SNAP amplitudes (p = 0.03) and lower hemoglobin A1c levels (p = 0.008). These results suggest that development of neuropathic pain depends on axonal hyperexcitability due to increased nodal Na+ currents associated with structural changes, but the currents could also be affected by the state of glycemic control. Our findings support the view that altered Na+ channels could be responsible for neuropathic pain/paresthesia in diabetic neuropathy.
Keywords:diabetic neuropathy  latent addition  Na+ channel  neuropathic pain  persistent Na+ current
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