Frontiers in Public Health (Nov 2020)

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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2020.498056
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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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.

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