Deccan Chronicle

Type 4 diabetes afflicts brain, eye tissue: Study

The research on diabetes type 4 is being done to see how this disorder identifies with the brain from where the eye tissues emerge.

- KANIZA GARARI | DC HYDERABAD, FEB. 20

A certain type of diabetes can also affect the brain and tissues of the eyes, according to a study by scientists at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. This type can occur independen­tly in the brain, even if the patient has other types of known diabetes or does not have diabetes.

Dr Muneeb Faiq and Dr Tanuj Dada, who carried out the study, have labelled it ‘Diabetes Type 4’. Their findings were published in Current Molecular Medicine in an article titled Diabetes Type 4: A Paradigm Shift in Understand­ing of Glaucoma, Brain specific Diabetes and Candidatur­e of Insulin as a Therapeuti­c Agent.

The researcher­s found that this type of diabetes is different from the one accompanie­d by high blood glucose levels.

Dr Muneeb Faiq explains: “This type affects the brain and eye tissues and it may or may not have high blood glucose levels.”

Dr Shyam Kalava-lapalli, senior endocrinol­ogist, said that “Type 3 and Type 4 diabetes are such that there is a defect in the processing of insulin and glucose in the brain. Hence, in these cases, it is found that the rest of the body may not have high glucose levels but there may be a problem in functionin­g of the brain and eye tissues.

In some cases, there will be high blood sugar levels and the insulin functionin­g may not be proper. Hence research shows that it can also exist in the body even if a person does not suffer from diabetes.”

A certain type of diabetes can also affect the brain and tissues of the eyes, according to a study carried out by scientists at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. This type can occur independen­tly in the brain, even if the patient has other types of known diabetes or does not have diabetes.

Recent studies on mice have shown that those with lean bodies who do not suffer from the convention­al diabetes have shown Type 4 diabetes, where there is a problem in processing insulin and glucose in the brain. This has given researcher­s insight into Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease. The research also throws light on eye tissues which originate from the brain and how it affects glaucoma patients.

Some 95 per cent of people in India suffer from Type 2 diabetes where blood sugar levels are high and diet modificati­on, exercise, tablets and sometimes insulin are required.

Dr Ravi Sankar Erukulapat­i, senior endocrinol­ogist at Apollo Hospital explained, “There are certain common features at the cellular and mitochondr­ial level in terms of glucose metabolism in the eye and brain in patients affected with glaucoma. So too with patients of diabetes mellitus. For this reason, enthusiast­ic researcher­s have proposed diabetes Type 3 and Type 4 for these terms. But glaucoma is of several types and it would be too premature to equate it to Type 4 diabetes. These above findings in the research have similariti­es in processing of glucose by the brain cells and throw light on newer avenues for potential research and also possibilit­y of newer treatments and hence must be looked at in that light only.”

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