Litcius/Paper detail

The Mechanisms of Type 2 Diabetes-Related White Matter Intensities: A Review

Jing Sun, Baofeng Xu, Xuejiao Zhang, Zhidong He, Ziwei Liu, Rui Liu, Guangxian Nan

2020Frontiers in Public Health29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The continually increasing number of patients with type 2 diabetes is a worldwide health problem, and the incidence of microvascular complications is closely related to type 2 diabetes. Structural brain abnormalities are considered an important pathway through which type 2 diabetes causes brain diseases. In fact, there is considerable evidence that type 2 diabetes is associated with an increased risk of structural brain abnormalities such as lacunar infarcts (LIs), white matter hyperintensities (WMHs), and brain atrophy. WMHs are a common cerebral small-vessel disease in elderly adults, and it is characterized histologically by demyelination, loss of oligodendrocytes, and vacuolization as a result of small-vessel ischemia in the white matter. An increasing number of studies have found that diabetes is closely related to WMHs. However, the exact mechanism by which type 2 diabetes causes WMHs is not fully understood. This article reviews the mechanisms of type 2 diabetes-related WMHs to better understand the disease and provide help for better clinical treatment.

Topics & Concepts

HyperintensityDiabetes mellitusType 2 diabetesWhite matterMedicineDiseaseInternal medicineLeukoencephalopathyMicroangiopathyLacunar strokeAtrophyType 1 diabetesCardiologyPathologyIschemiaMagnetic resonance imagingEndocrinologyIschemic strokeRadiologyNeurological and metabolic disordersParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and TreatmentsNeurological Disease Mechanisms and Treatments