PMID: 2507822Feb 1, 1989Paper

Clinical application of hair protein glycation in the assessment of blood glucose control and diabetic neuropathy

The Kobe Journal of Medical Sciences
S MasutaS Baba

Abstract

Glycation of hair protein was assessed in diabetic patients by the measurement of furosine, which is derived from fructose-lysine, a glycated lysine residue in protein. The level of furosine in 12-cm-long hair which grew over the course of one year was significantly better correlated with the mean values of four determinations of fasting plasma glucose (FPG) and four determinations of hemoglobin A1c, respectively, at the time of hair sampling. The level of glycation in hair, which corresponds to the time taken for hair growth, may represent the mean level of blood glucose during the time corresponding to the growth period. The values of motor nerve conduction velocity and sensory nerve conduction velocity were better correlated with the level of furosine in hair corresponding in the length to 1 year's growth than the levels of FPG and hemoglobin A1c at the time of the determination of nerve conduction velocity. These results suggest that hair glycation may serve as a valuable indicator both of long-term blood glucose trends and of the relationship between diabetic complications and blood glucose.

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