학술논문

Vitamin E treatment in insulin-deficient diabetic rats reduces cardiac arrhythmias and mortality during severe hypoglycemia.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology & Metabolism. Nov2022, Vol. 323 Issue 5, pE428-E434. 7p.
Subject
*HYPOGLYCEMIA
*VITAMIN E
*ARRHYTHMIA
*TYPE 1 diabetes
*RATS
*OXIDATIVE stress
*SPRAGUE Dawley rats
*HEART block
Language
ISSN
0193-1849
Abstract
In people with type 1 diabetes, hypoglycemia can induce cardiac arrhythmias. In rodent experiments, severe hypoglycemia can induce fatal cardiac arrhythmias, especially so in diabetic models. Increased oxidative stress associated with insulin-deficient diabetes was hypothesized to increase susceptibility to severe hypoglycemia-induced fatal cardiac arrhythmias. To test this hypothesis, Sprague-Dawley rats were made insulin deficient with streptozotocin and randomized into two groups: 1) control (n = 22) or 2) vitamin E treated (four doses of α-tocopherol, 400 mg/kg, n = 20). Following 1 week of treatment, rats were either tested for cardiac oxidative stress or underwent a hyperinsulinemic-severe hypoglycemic (10-15 mg/dL) clamp with electrocardiogram recording. As compared with controls, vitamin E-treated rats had threefold less cardiac oxidative stress, sixfold less mortality due to severe hypoglycemia, and sevenfold less incidence of heart block. In summary, vitamin E treatment and the associated reduction of cardiac oxidative stress in diabetic rats reduced severe hypoglycemia-induced fatal cardiac arrhythmias. These results indicate that in the setting of diabetes, pharmacological treatments that reduce oxidative stress may be an effective strategy to reduce the risk of severe hypoglycemia-induced fatal cardiac arrhythmias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]