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Infectious Disorders - Drug Targets

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1871-5265
ISSN (Online): 2212-3989

Chromium-Picolinate Therapy in Diabetes Care: Molecular and Subcellular Profiling Revealed a Necessity for Individual Outcome Prediction, Personalised Treatment Algorithms & New Guidelines

Author(s): Kristina Yeghiazaryan, Viktoriya Peeva, Aparna Shenoy, Hans H. Schild and Olga Golubnitschaja

Volume 11, Issue 2, 2011

Page: [188 - 195] Pages: 8

DOI: 10.2174/187152611795589717

Price: $65

Abstract

Aims: Global figures clearly demonstrate inadequacy of current diabetes care: every 10 seconds one patient dies of diabetes-related pathologies. Nephropathy is the leading secondary complication of the disease. Nutritional supplement by chromium-picolinate is assumed to have beneficial therapeutic effects. However, potential toxic effects reported increase concerns about safety of chromium-picolinate. The experimental design aimed at determining, whether the treatment with clinically relevant doses of chromium-picolinate can harm through DNA damage and extensive alterations in central detoxification / cell-cycle regulating pathways in treatment of diabetes. Methods: Well-acknowledged animal model of db/db-mice and clinically relevant doses of chromium-picolinate were used. As an index of DNA-damage, measurement of DNA-breaks was performed using “Comet Assay”-analysis. Individual and group-specific expression patterns of SOD-1 and P53 were evaluated to give a clue about central detoxification and cell-cycle regulating pathways under treatment conditions. The study was performed in a double-blind manner. Results: Experimental data revealed highly individual reaction under treatment conditions. However, group-specific patterns were monitored: highest amount of damaged DNA - under the longest treatment with high doses, in contrast to groups with low doses of chromiumpicolinate. Comet patterns were intermediate between untreated diabetised and control animals. Expression patterns demonstrated a correlation with subcellular imaging and dosage-dependent suppression under chromium-picolinate treatment. Conclusions: This article highlights possible risks for individual long-term effects, when chromium-picolinate is used freely as a therapeutic nutritional modality agent without application of advanced diagnostic tools to predict risks and individual outcomes. Targeted measures require a creation of new guidelines for advanced diabetes care.

Keywords: Diabetes care, chromium-picolinate therapy, therapy response, subcellular imaging, molecular patterns, risk prediction, navigating diagnostic systems, individualised treatment algorithms, new guidelines, personalised medicine, Nephropathy, detoxification, Comet Assay-analysis, dosage-dependent suppression, individual outcomes, Diabetes mellitus


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