Ultrastructural aspects of cranial and peripheric nerves of cronically diabetic and malnourished rats: A short biochemical panorama

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Abstract

Diabetes Mellitus is one of the most common causes of neuropathies, which can be caused by molecular imbalances that impair metabolic pathways. Studies in rats showed the importance of sirtuins (SIRT), deacetylases that use NAD + as a cofactor, which have a widespread function in metabolism, and their relation when food deprived or calorie restricted. Additionally, diabetic neuropathy presents different structural biomarkers that cause morphological alterations in fibers that can be partially treated. SIRT1 is the principal sirtuin, which acts on hypothalamus, liver, kidney, among other organs, up regulating or down regulating the expression of some genes or enzymes crucial in the process of glucose absorption.

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APA

De Oliveira Saraiva, A., Pontes, L. Q., Pinho, L. G., Bezerra, M. R. L., Braga, H. A., Lima, N. N. R., … Valença, M. M. (2015). Ultrastructural aspects of cranial and peripheric nerves of cronically diabetic and malnourished rats: A short biochemical panorama. International Archives of Medicine. BioMed Central Ltd. https://doi.org/10.3823/1668

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