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  Vol. 146 No. 11, November 1986 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Metabolic Impact of Autonomic Neuropathy in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus

Philip E. Cryer, MD

Arch Intern Med. 1986;146(11):2127-2129.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Long recognized as a cause of cardiovascular and gastrointestinal and genitourinary tract dysfunctions in patients with diabetes mellitus, there is substantial evidence that diabetic autonomic neuropathy plays a fundamental role in the pathogenesis of two clinical metabolic syndromes in patients with diabetes mellitus: hypoglycemia unawareness and defective glucose counterregulation.1-3

Hypoglycemia unawareness is clearly a neurologic syndrome. It is characterized by the absence of warning symptoms such as sweating, palpitations, and arousal with a decline in the plasma glucose concentration, resulting in neuroglycopenia as the initial and only manifestation of hypoglycemia. Its prototype occurs during experimental hypoglycemia in patients who have suffered cervical spinal cord transections. In patients with diabetes mellitus, hypoglycemia unawareness is associated with, and probably results from, a deficient sympathochromaffin response to plasma glucose decrements.4 It is generally thought that the absence of warning symptoms increases the frequency of severe iatrogenic hypoglycemia in patients with hypoglycemia . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations



Metabolism Division Washington University School of Medicine 660 S Euclid Ave St Louis, MO 63110



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