Bone marrow nerve damage linked to blindness-causing diabetic complication
January 7th, 2010 - 2:36 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Jan 7 (ANI): Bone marrow nerve damage has been found to play a crucial role in blindness-causing complications in diabetics, say researchers.
According to Julia Busik, an associate professor in MSU’s Department of Physiology, the key to better treating retinopathy - damage to blood vessels in the retina that affects up to 80 percent of diabetic patients - lies not in the retina but in damage to the nerves found in bone marrow that leads to the abnormal release of stem cells.
“With retinopathy, blood vessels grow abnormally in the retina, distort vision and eventually can cause blindness,” said Busik.
“There has been a lot of progress in treating the complication, but most treatments use a laser that is painful to the patient and destroys parts of the retina,” she added.
The research team found that nerve damage in diabetic bone marrow - where stem cells known as endothelial progenitor cells reside - affects the daily release of those EPCs into the bloodstream.
Normally EPCs would exit the bone marrow and repair damage done in the vascular system during sleep.
Using animal models, the research team observed that the pattern of EPC release is faulty in diabetic bone marrow, creating abnormally low levels of EPCs during sleep, when they are needed most.
That decrease in EPC release from a diabetic patient’s bone marrow preceded the development of retinopathy.
“When the bone marrow suffers nerve damage in diabetic patients, it no longer provides a signal for the timely release of these reparative stem cells,” Busik said.
This novel finding shows that bone marrow nerve damage represents a new therapeutic target for treatment of all diabetic vascular complications, such as retinopathy.
“This opens up new avenues to better treatments outside of the retina that focus on stem cells and the causes of the nerve damage in bone marrow,” said Busik.
“We know what happens in the retina and have treatments that are very invasive; we now can look at a host of other options,” she added.
The research appears in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. (ANI)
- Red wine ingredient prevents blinding - Jun 25, 2010
- Statins may prevent diabetic-related blindness - Feb 18, 2011
- Stem cells could cure 'silent thief of sight' - Mar 12, 2011
- Pine bark extract may help treat early diabetic retinopathy - Dec 03, 2009
- Drug therapy shows promise in treating leading cause of childhood blindness - Feb 17, 2011
- Stem-cell treatment helps American see again, view Taj Mahal - Dec 06, 2011
- Further evidence on benefits of BP drugs in diabetic retinopathy treatment - Feb 25, 2010
- Fish oil may hold key to leukaemia cure - Dec 23, 2011
- How omega-3 fatty acids keep blindness at bay - Feb 10, 2011
- Two therapies that may slow diabetic eye disease progression found - Jul 24, 2010
- Adult stem cells that do not age created - Oct 02, 2010
- Potential therapeutic target for diabetic retinopathy identified - Jan 15, 2010
- Stem cell therapy used to save man's leg - Jan 18, 2011
- Lasers to treat human heart after attack - Aug 12, 2011
- 'Smart' adult stem cells repair heart in 'landmark work' - Aug 17, 2010
Tags: animal models, blindness, blood vessels, bloodstream, bone marrow, diabetic complication, diabetic patient, diabetic patients, diabetics, endothelial progenitor cells, epcs, jan 7, nerve damage, new avenues, parts of the retina, stem cells, therapeutic target, timely release, vascular complications, vascular system