Impaired Distal Thermoregulation in Diabetes and Diabetic Polyneuropathy
- Seward B. Rutkove, MD1,
- Aristidis Veves, MD2,
- Theophano Mitsa, PHD3,
- Rui Nie1,
- Patricia M. Fogerson1,
- Lindsay P. Garmirian1 and
- Rachel A. Nardin, MD1
- 1Department of Neurology, Division of Neuromuscular Diseases, Harvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts;
- 2Joslin-Beth Israel Deaconess Foot Center and Microcirculation Lab, Harvard Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts;
- 3Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, Massachusetts.
- Corresponding author: Seward B. Rutkove, srutkove{at}bidmc.harvard.edu.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine how thermoregulation of the feet is affected by diabetes and diabetic polyneuropathy in both wakefulness and sleep.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Normal subjects, diabetic subjects without neuropathy, diabetic subjects with small-fiber diabetic polyneuropathy, and those with advanced diabetic polyneuropathy were categorized based on neurological examination, nerve conduction studies, and quantitative sensory testing. Subjects underwent foot temperature monitoring using an iButton device attached to the foot and a second iButton for recording of ambient temperature. Socks and footwear were standardized, and subjects maintained an activity diary. Data were collected over a 32-h period and analyzed.
RESULTS A total of 39 normal subjects, 28 patients with diabetes but without diabetic polyneuropathy, 14 patients with isolated small-fiber diabetic polyneuropathy, and 27 patients with more advanced diabetic polyneuropathy participated. No consistent differences in foot temperature regulation between the four groups were identified during wakefulness. During sleep, however, multiple metrics revealed significant abnormalities in the diabetic patients. These included reduced mean foot temperature (P < 0.001), reduced maximal temperature (P < 0.001), increased rate of cooling (P < 0.001), as well as increased frequency of variation (P = 0.005), supporting that patients with diabetic polyneuropathy and even those with only diabetes but no diabetic polyneuropathy have impaired nocturnal thermoregulation.
CONCLUSIONS Nocturnal foot thermoregulation is impaired in patients with diabetes and diabetic polyneuropathy. Because neurons are highly temperature sensitive and because foot warming is part of the normal biology of sleep onset and maintenance, these findings suggest new potentially treatable mechanisms of diabetes-associated nocturnal pain and sleep disturbance.
Footnotes
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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- Received October 9, 2008.
- Accepted January 15, 2009.
- © 2009 by the American Diabetes Association.











