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Benfotiamine

About: Benfotiamine is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 248 publications have been published within this topic receiving 7439 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the lipid-soluble thiamine derivative benfotiamine can inhibit three major biochemical pathways simultaneously, which might be clinically useful in preventing the development and progression of diabetic complications.
Abstract: Three of the major biochemical pathways implicated in the pathogenesis of hyperglycemia induced vascular damage (the hexosamine pathway, the advanced glycation end product (AGE) formation pathway and the diacylglycerol (DAG)-protein kinase C (PKC) pathway) are activated by increased availability of the glycolytic metabolites glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate. We have discovered that the lipid-soluble thiamine derivative benfotiamine can inhibit these three pathways, as well as hyperglycemia-associated NF-kappaB activation, by activating the pentose phosphate pathway enzyme transketolase, which converts glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate and fructose-6-phosphate into pentose-5-phosphates and other sugars. In retinas of diabetic animals, benfotiamine treatment inhibited these three pathways and NF-kappaB activation by activating transketolase, and also prevented experimental diabetic retinopathy. The ability of benfotiamine to inhibit three major pathways simultaneously might be clinically useful in preventing the development and progression of diabetic complications.

734 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 2003-Diabetes
TL;DR: High-dose thiamine and benfotiamine therapy is a potential novel strategy for the prevention of clinical diabetic nephropathy and countered the accumulation of triosephosphates in experimental diabetes and inhibited the development of incipient nephtropathy.
Abstract: Accumulation of triosephosphates arising from high cytosolic glucose concentrations in hyperglycemia is the trigger for biochemical dysfunction leading to the development of diabetic nephropathy-a common complication of diabetes associated with a high risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality. Here we report that stimulation of the reductive pentosephosphate pathway by high-dose therapy with thiamine and the thiamine monophosphate derivative benfotiamine countered the accumulation of triosephosphates in experimental diabetes and inhibited the development of incipient nephropathy. High-dose thiamine and benfotiamine therapy increased transketolase expression in renal glomeruli, increased the conversion of triosephosphates to ribose-5-phosphate, and strongly inhibited the development of microalbuminuria. This was associated with decreased activation of protein kinase C and decreased protein glycation and oxidative stress-three major pathways of biochemical dysfunction in hyperglycemia. Benfotiamine also inhibited diabetes-induced hyperfiltration. This was achieved without change in elevated plasma glucose concentration and glycated hemoglobin in the diabetic state. High-dose thiamine and benfotiamine therapy is a potential novel strategy for the prevention of clinical diabetic nephropathy.

361 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Encouraging results obtained in studies of various AGE inhibitors, conducted in vitro and in diabetic animals, are summarized in this review.

240 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Benfotiamine was used to prevent hyperglycemia-induced MG formation and post-prandial endothelial dysfunction in individuals with type 2 diabetes.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE— Diabetes is characterized by marked postprandial endothelial dysfunction induced by hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, advanced glycation end products (AGEs), and dicarbonyls (e.g., methylglyoxal [MG]). In vitro hyperglycemia-induced MG formation and endothelial dysfunction could be blocked by benfotiamine, but in vivo effects of benfotiamine on postprandial endothelial dysfunction and MG synthesis have not been investigated in humans until now. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS— Thirteen people with type 2 diabetes were given a heat-processed test meal with a high AGE content (HAGE; 15.100 AGE kU, 580 kcal, 54 g protein, 17 g lipids, and 48 g carbohydrates) before and after a 3-day therapy with benfotiamine (1,050 mg/day). Macrovascular flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) and microvascular reactive hyperemia, along with serum markers of endothelial disfunction (E-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and intracellular adhesion molecule-1), oxidative stress, AGE, and MG were measured during both test meal days after an overnight fast and then at 2, 4, and 6 h postprandially. RESULTS— The HAGE induced a maximum reactive hyperemia decrease of −60.0% after 2 h and a maximum FMD impairment of −35.1% after 4 h, without affecting endothelium-independent vasodilatation. The effects of HAGE on both FMD and reactive hyperemia were completely prevented by benfotiamine. Serum markers of endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress, as well as AGE, increased after HAGE. These effects were significantly reduced by benfotiamine. CONCLUSIONS— Our study confirms micro- and macrovascular endothelial dysfunction accompanied by increased oxidative stress following a real-life, heat-processed, AGE-rich meal in individuals with type 2 diabetes and suggests benfotiamine as a potential treatment.

207 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Novel evidence is provided for the presence of microangiopathy impinging on the integrity of diabetic BM and the framework for mechanistic solutions of BM dysfunction in diabetes is offered.
Abstract: Objective— The impact of diabetes on the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment was not adequately explored. We investigated whether diabetes induces microvascular remodeling with negative consequence for BM homeostasis. Methods and Results— We found profound structural alterations in BM from mice with type 1 diabetes with depletion of the hematopoietic component and fatty degeneration. Blood flow (fluorescent microspheres) and microvascular density (immunohistochemistry) were remarkably reduced. Flow cytometry verified the depletion of MECA-32+ endothelial cells. Cultured endothelial cells from BM of diabetic mice showed higher levels of oxidative stress, increased activity of the senescence marker β-galactosidase, reduced migratory and network-formation capacities, and increased permeability and adhesiveness to BM mononuclear cells. Flow cytometry analysis of lineage− c-Kit+ Sca-1+ cell distribution along an in vivo Hoechst-33342 dye perfusion gradient documented that diabetes depletes lineage− c-Kit+ Sca-1+ cells predominantly in the low-perfused part of the marrow. Cell depletion was associated to increased oxidative stress, DNA damage, and activation of apoptosis. Boosting the antioxidative pentose phosphate pathway by benfotiamine supplementation prevented microangiopathy, hypoperfusion, and lineage− c-Kit+ Sca-1+ cell depletion. Conclusion— We provide novel evidence for the presence of microangiopathy impinging on the integrity of diabetic BM. These discoveries offer the framework for mechanistic solutions of BM dysfunction in diabetes.

200 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202111
202011
201911
20189
201715
201611