Analysis of Animal Model of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Based on Clinical Characteristics of Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine
10.13422/j.cnki.syfjx.20241714
- VernacularTitle:基于中西医临床病证特点的2型糖尿病动物模型分析
- Author:
Xiangning HUANG
1
;
Weiyi LEI
1
;
Yifan SHI
1
;
Tingyi HE
1
;
Nianqing CHEN
1
;
Yilin XU
2
;
Rong YU
2
Author Information
1. The First Hospital of Hunan University of Chinese Medicine,Changsha 410007,China
2. Hunan University of Chinese Medicine,Changsha 410208,China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
type 2 diabetes mellitus;
animal model;
evaluation criteria;
disease and syndrome combination of traditional Chinese and western medicine
- From:
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae
2025;31(17):211-219
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Based on the etiology and clinical diagnostic criteria of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), identification and typing of treatment from the perspective of traditional Chinese and western medicine, the criteria for evaluating the clinical compatibility of traditional Chinese and western medicine in animal models of T2DM were set up. The literature was reviewed to sort out and analyze the existing commonly used modeling methods, summarize the mechanism, compare the advantages and disadvantages, and calculate the consistency between the animal model and the clinical symptoms, syndromes, and indicators from the perspective of traditional Chinese and western medicine. The authors found that spontaneous animal models and high-fat diets combined with multiple low-dose streptozotocin (STZ) induction models were more in line with modern medical pathogenesis of T2DM. However, it fails to form some special syndromes required for traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) research. In addition, there are many methods of combining the etiology and pathogenesis of TCM, which can be divided into three categories: intervention carried out by drug administration, behavioral stimulation, or environmental changes according to TCM, or use of hormones according to clinical evidence and combination of the two methods mentioned above. All of them can successfully establish different types of animal models. However, different methods of establishing syndrome models have their own advantages and disadvantages, and there is no unified standard for the stability and evaluation of syndrome models. As for the clinical consistency criteria of traditional Chinese and western medicine established in this paper, the animal model with 100% consistency has not been calculated due to the conditions of incomplete symptoms and syndromes described in the studies and different selection indicators. Consequently, the establishment of a simple, easy-to-use, and affordable T2DM animal model with both traditional Chinese and western medicine disease characteristics and the improvement of the Chinese and western medicine evaluation system for different evidence types are of great significance for the future development of TCM research on T2DM.