Aims/hypothesis
In addition to nephropathy, retinopathy and peripheral neuropathy, a microvascular complication of type 1 diabetes that may
be tentatively referred to as ‘diabetic encephalopathy’ has gained increasing attention. There is growing evidence that lowered
cognitive performance in patients with type 1 diabetes is related to chronic hyperglycaemia rather than recurrent episodes
of severe hypoglycaemia, as previously speculated. The aim of our study was to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to establish
whether long-term hyperglycaemia, resulting in advanced retinopathy, contributes to structural changes in the brain (reduced
grey matter).
Subjects, materials and methods
We applied voxel-based morphometry on magnetic resonance images to compare grey matter density (GMD) between three groups
of participants. GMD is used as a marker of cortical atrophy. We compared 13 type 1 diabetic patients with a microvascular
complication (i.e. proliferative retinopathy) with 18 type 1 diabetic patients who did not have retinopathy in order to assess
the effects of microvascular changes on GMD. Both patient groups were compared with 21 healthy control subjects to assess
the effect of diabetes in itself.
Results
Patients with diabetic retinopathy showed reduced GMD in the right inferior frontal gyrus and right occipital lobe compared
both with patients without retinopathy and with healthy controls (p<0.05).
Conclusions/interpretation
Our data show that patients with type 1 diabetes, who, as a consequence of chronic hyperglycaemia, had developed advanced
retinopathy, also showed increased focal cortical atrophy on brain MRI.
Keywords Brain MRI - Grey matter density - Microvascular complications - Type 1 diabetes