Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes
Objectives Serum and urinary C-peptide has clinical implications in people with/without diabetes. Recently, C-peptide was detected in hair samples of healthy adults but not studied in people with diabetes. It is not known whether C-peptide can be detectable in nail tissue or not. This study aims to...
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doaj-eabbbf510b7e4098ba1c7d9973bf59022021-06-10T10:06:47ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care2052-48972020-04-018110.1136/bmjdrc-2020-001297Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetesJamal M Salih0Darya S Abdulateef1Physiology, University of Sulaimani College of Medicine, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, IraqPhysiology, University of Sulaimani College of Medicine, Sulaimani, Kurdistan, IraqObjectives Serum and urinary C-peptide has clinical implications in people with/without diabetes. Recently, C-peptide was detected in hair samples of healthy adults but not studied in people with diabetes. It is not known whether C-peptide can be detectable in nail tissue or not. This study aims to assess the detection of C-peptide in hair and nail samples and to find whether hair and nail C-peptide levels are different in type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) compared with healthy individuals.Research design and methods In a prospective case-control study on 41 subjects with T1DM and 42 control subjects, hair and nail samples were collected and prepared. C-peptide was extracted by incubating the samples with methanol and measuring the extract with an immunoassay. The hair and nail C-peptide values were compared between the T1DM and control group and their correlations with each other and with other variables were assessed with a significant level set at 0.05.Results Hair and nail C-peptide levels were detected in both groups, with significantly lower values in T1DM compared with the control group. T1DM with >7-year diabetes duration had significantly lower C-peptide in serum, nails and hair. Hair and nail C-peptide levels have significant positive correlations with each other and negative correlations with age.Conclusions We conclude that C-peptide are detectable in the hair and nails of healthy persons and persons with T1DM. Compared with the healthy persons, persons with T1DM had significantly lower hair and nail C-peptide and significant hair/nail C-peptide reduction after 7 years of diagnosis. Our results suggest that hair and nails are suitable matrices for the measurement of C-peptide in healthy persons and persons with T1DM.https://drc.bmj.com/content/8/1/e001297.full |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jamal M Salih Darya S Abdulateef |
spellingShingle |
Jamal M Salih Darya S Abdulateef Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care |
author_facet |
Jamal M Salih Darya S Abdulateef |
author_sort |
Jamal M Salih |
title |
Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
title_short |
Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
title_full |
Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
title_fullStr |
Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Detection of C-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
title_sort |
detection of c-peptide in human hair and nail: a comparison between healthy persons and persons with type 1 diabetes |
publisher |
BMJ Publishing Group |
series |
BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care |
issn |
2052-4897 |
publishDate |
2020-04-01 |
description |
Objectives Serum and urinary C-peptide has clinical implications in people with/without diabetes. Recently, C-peptide was detected in hair samples of healthy adults but not studied in people with diabetes. It is not known whether C-peptide can be detectable in nail tissue or not. This study aims to assess the detection of C-peptide in hair and nail samples and to find whether hair and nail C-peptide levels are different in type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) compared with healthy individuals.Research design and methods In a prospective case-control study on 41 subjects with T1DM and 42 control subjects, hair and nail samples were collected and prepared. C-peptide was extracted by incubating the samples with methanol and measuring the extract with an immunoassay. The hair and nail C-peptide values were compared between the T1DM and control group and their correlations with each other and with other variables were assessed with a significant level set at 0.05.Results Hair and nail C-peptide levels were detected in both groups, with significantly lower values in T1DM compared with the control group. T1DM with >7-year diabetes duration had significantly lower C-peptide in serum, nails and hair. Hair and nail C-peptide levels have significant positive correlations with each other and negative correlations with age.Conclusions We conclude that C-peptide are detectable in the hair and nails of healthy persons and persons with T1DM. Compared with the healthy persons, persons with T1DM had significantly lower hair and nail C-peptide and significant hair/nail C-peptide reduction after 7 years of diagnosis. Our results suggest that hair and nails are suitable matrices for the measurement of C-peptide in healthy persons and persons with T1DM. |
url |
https://drc.bmj.com/content/8/1/e001297.full |
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