The high blood sugar from
diabetes affects the nerves and over time increases a
person's risk for nerve damage. Keeping blood sugar levels tightly within a
safe range helps prevent diabetic neuropathy.
- The most common type of nerve disease
(neuropathy) affects both sensory nerves, which send information to the spinal
cord and brain, and motor nerves, which relay impulses from the brain and spinal
cord to move muscles. This is called diabetic peripheral
neuropathy.
- Diabetes also affects the nerves that control
involuntary body functions, such as digestion. This is called diabetic
autonomic neuropathy.
- Diabetes can affect single nerves. This is
called diabetic focal neuropathy.
Diabetic peripheral neuropathy
With peripheral neuropathy, people experience a decrease in
sensation or even numbness as well as difficulty moving the feet and, later on,
the fingers and hands. As a result of this neuropathy, many people with
diabetes cannot feel when they have injured their feet, and they may not know if calluses or ulcers form. Because of the risk of serious foot
injury and infection, it is very important that people with diabetes learn how
to examine their feet daily, wear shoes that fit well, and protect their feet
from injury.
Sometimes, single nerves can be affected by diabetes (focal
neuropathy); these may be peripheral, such as the nerves in the legs and arms,
or cranial, such as the nerves that control eye movements.
When single nerves become affected, the result is weakness or
paralysis of the muscles controlled by the nerves. Usually these motor nerve
neuropathies resolve by themselves over a period of several months.
Diabetic autonomic neuropathy
Diabetes can affect the autonomic nervous system, which are nerves
that we cannot consciously control. The autonomic nervous system controls many
aspects of the body's functioning, such as heart rate and blood pressure, the
workings of the gastrointestinal system, and sexual function.
- When the autonomic nerves regulating the heart
and blood vessels are affected, a person's heart rate and blood pressure may
fluctuate abnormally or may not rise appropriately in response to a stimulus
such as exercise. Sometimes, people with diabetes can experience fainting
spells because their blood pressure drops rapidly.
- The autonomic
nerves affecting the gastrointestinal (GI) system control the way these organs
contract and relax in order to move food along. When the nerves that cause the
stomach to contract and move food are affected, it is called diabetic
gastroparesis. Sometimes the effects on the GI system becomes so severe that a
person has to be fed through a feeding tube placed in the small intestine,
bypassing the stomach. When diabetes damages these nerves, a wide range of
symptoms can result, including:
- A sensation of food getting stuck because
of problems with how the esophagus contracts and relaxes.
- Nausea
and vomiting because of problems with the stomach.
- Alternating
constipation and diarrhea because of abnormal functioning of the large
intestine.
- Occasionally, fecal incontinence.
- When the urinary system is affected, emptying of
the bladder may be delayed or incomplete. This increases the chances of
developing a urinary tract infection. Severely prolonged bladder emptying
(urinary retention) can lead to urinary incontinence and, sometimes, fluid
backup into the kidneys.
- When the nerves in the sexual organs are
affected, sexual difficulties develop. Diabetes can cause problems in the
autonomic nerves that allow a man to achieve an erection and ejaculate. Women
may experience vaginal dryness.
Autonomic symptoms can be helped by medicines. For
problems with low blood pressure (hypotension), your doctor may prescribe
midodrine (ProAmatine). Metoclopramide, which causes the stomach to contract,
can be used to treat diabetic digestive system problems.
Urinary retention can be treated with a medicine called bethanechol, or by
using a catheter. Penile implants and pumps or medicines such as sildenafil
citrate (Viagra) may help men with erectile dysfunction related to autonomic
neuropathy. Viagra cannot be taken by people who have severe heart problems nor by people who take certain heart medicines. Talk with
your doctor before taking medicine for erectile dysfunction.