1 型糖尿病:胰腺外分泌和内分泌失调

Brittany S. Bruggeman, Desmond A. Schatz
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摘要

1 型糖尿病历来被描述为一种内分泌(β 细胞)特异性自身免疫疾病。然而,胰腺器官大小的大幅缩小(20%-50%)以及亚临床或无症状的胰腺外分泌功能不全在诊断时就已存在,甚至可能在胰岛自身免疫发生之前就已开始。1 型糖尿病外分泌功能丧失的机制尚不十分清楚,但主要假说包括发育缺陷、β 细胞丧失导致外分泌萎缩,或外分泌细胞的自身免疫或炎症破坏。炎症变化包括急性和慢性胰腺炎、胰腺外分泌 T 细胞浸润和典型补体激活,以及 1 型糖尿病患者血清中的胰腺外分泌自身抗体,这表明自身免疫或炎症过程可能导致胰腺外分泌功能障碍。胰腺外分泌萎缩主要发生在临床发病之前。事实上,最近的研究表明,胰腺外分泌特异性基因和蛋白表达的改变是 1 型糖尿病发病的关键。测量胰腺外分泌的大小和功能可作为有用的补充,用于预测疾病的发病和识别潜在的疾病疗法应答者,然而,这是一个尚未充分开发的研究领域。此外,1 型糖尿病患者的胰腺外分泌功能不全诊断不足,缺乏个性化治疗方案。在这一领域仍有许多工作要做,但我们可以明确地说,1 型糖尿病很可能从一开始就是胰腺外分泌和内分泌失调。
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Type 1 Diabetes: A Disorder of the Exocrine and Endocrine Pancreas
Type 1 diabetes has historically been described as an endocrine (β-cell) specific autoimmune disease. However, a substantial reduction (20-50%) in pancreas organ size and subclinical to symptomatic exocrine pancreatic insufficiency are present at diagnosis and may begin even prior to the development of islet autoimmunity. The mechanisms of exocrine loss in type 1 diabetes are not well understood, but leading hypotheses include developmental defects, β-cell loss resulting in exocrine atrophy, or autoimmune or inflammatory destruction of exocrine cells. Inflammatory changes including acute and chronic pancreatitis, exocrine T cell infiltration and classical complement activation, and serum exocrine autoantibodies within type 1 diabetes individuals suggest that an autoimmune or inflammatory process may contribute to exocrine pancreatic dysfunction. Exocrine pancreas atrophy primarily occurs prior to the onset of clinical disease. Indeed, recent work implicates exocrine-specific alterations in gene and protein expression as key in type 1 diabetes development. Measures of exocrine size and function could be useful additions in the prediction of disease onset and in identifying potential therapeutic responders to disease therapies, however, this is an underdeveloped area of research. Additionally, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency is underdiagnosed in individuals with type 1 diabetes and individualized treatment protocols are lacking. Much work remains to be done in this area, but we can definitively say that type 1 diabetes is a disorder of both the exocrine and endocrine pancreas likely from the start.
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