Increasing evidences have suggested that oxidative stress plays a major role in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus (DM). Oxidative stress also appears to be the pathogenic factor in underlying diabetic complications. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated by environmental factors, such as ionizing radiation and chemical carcinogens, and also by endogenous processes, including energy metabolism in mitochondria. ROS produced either endogenously or exogenously can attack lipids, proteins and nucleic acids simultaneously in living cells. There are many potential mechanisms whereby excess glucose metabolites traveling along these pathways might promote the development of DM complication and cause pancreatic β cell damage. However, all these pathways have in common the formation of ROS, that, in excess and over time, causes chronic oxidative stress, which in turn causes defective insulin gene expression and insulin secretion as well as increased apoptosis. Various methods for determining biomarkers of cellular oxidative stress have been developed, and some have been proposed for sensitive assessment of antioxidant defense and oxidative damage in diabetes and its complications. However, their clinical utility is limited by less than optimal standardization techniques and the lack of sufficient large-sized, multi-marker prospective trials.

Oxidative stress in diabetes mellitus / S. Comazzi - In: Studies on veterinary medicine / L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich, P.A. Schenck, M. Naziroglu, S. Comazzi, W. Baltzer, E. Head, S.C. Zickler, G.L. Zapata, G. Moe, J. Kuck, K.J. McGraw, M. Mezes, K. Balogh, P. Celi ; [a cura di] L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich. - New York : Humana Press, 2011. - ISBN 978-1-61779-070-6. - pp. 77-91

Oxidative stress in diabetes mellitus

S. Comazzi
Primo
2011

Abstract

Increasing evidences have suggested that oxidative stress plays a major role in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus (DM). Oxidative stress also appears to be the pathogenic factor in underlying diabetic complications. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated by environmental factors, such as ionizing radiation and chemical carcinogens, and also by endogenous processes, including energy metabolism in mitochondria. ROS produced either endogenously or exogenously can attack lipids, proteins and nucleic acids simultaneously in living cells. There are many potential mechanisms whereby excess glucose metabolites traveling along these pathways might promote the development of DM complication and cause pancreatic β cell damage. However, all these pathways have in common the formation of ROS, that, in excess and over time, causes chronic oxidative stress, which in turn causes defective insulin gene expression and insulin secretion as well as increased apoptosis. Various methods for determining biomarkers of cellular oxidative stress have been developed, and some have been proposed for sensitive assessment of antioxidant defense and oxidative damage in diabetes and its complications. However, their clinical utility is limited by less than optimal standardization techniques and the lack of sufficient large-sized, multi-marker prospective trials.
English
Settore VET/03 - Patologia Generale e Anatomia Patologica Veterinaria
Capitolo o Saggio
Studies on veterinary medicine
L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich, P.A. Schenck, M. Naziroglu, S. Comazzi, W. Baltzer, E. Head, S.C. Zickler, G.L. Zapata, G. Moe, J. Kuck, K.J. McGraw, M. Mezes, K. Balogh, P. Celi
L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich
New York
2011
77
91
978-1-61779-070-6
49
Volume a diffusione internazionale
S. Comazzi
Book Part (author)
none
268
Oxidative stress in diabetes mellitus / S. Comazzi - In: Studies on veterinary medicine / L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich, P.A. Schenck, M. Naziroglu, S. Comazzi, W. Baltzer, E. Head, S.C. Zickler, G.L. Zapata, G. Moe, J. Kuck, K.J. McGraw, M. Mezes, K. Balogh, P. Celi ; [a cura di] L. Mandelker, P. Vajdovich. - New York : Humana Press, 2011. - ISBN 978-1-61779-070-6. - pp. 77-91
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Prodotti della ricerca::03 - Contributo in volume
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/195530
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