Neurological complication of persistently high blood sugar
Diabetic neuropathy includes various types of nerve damage associated with diabetes mellitus. The most common form, diabetic peripheral neuropathy, affects 30% of all diabetic patients.[1][2] Studies suggests that cutaneous nerve branches, such as the sural nerve, are involved in more than half of patients with diabetes 10 years after the diagnosis and can be detected with high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging.[3] Symptoms depend on the site of nerve damage and can include motor changes such as weakness; sensory symptoms such as numbness, tingling, or pain; or autonomic changes such as urinary symptoms. These changes are thought to result from a microvascular injury involving small blood vessels that supply nerves (vasa nervorum). Relatively common conditions which may be associated with diabetic neuropathy include distal symmetric polyneuropathy; third, fourth, or sixth cranial nerve palsy;[4]mononeuropathy; mononeuropathy multiplex; diabetic amyotrophy; and autonomic neuropathy.
^Sun J, Wang Y, Zhang X, Zhu S, He H (October 2020). "Prevalence of peripheral neuropathy in patients with diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis". Prim Care Diabetes. 14 (5): 435–444. doi:10.1016/j.pcd.2019.12.005. PMID31917119.
^Iqbal Z, Azmi S, Yadav R, Ferdousi M, Kumar M, Cuthbertson DJ, Lim J, Malik RA, Alam U (June 2018). "Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy: Epidemiology, Diagnosis, and Pharmacotherapy". Clin Ther. 40 (6): 828–849. doi:10.1016/j.clinthera.2018.04.001. PMID29709457.