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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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By the year 2025, there will be more than 300 million type 2 diabetes sufferers worldwide. This epidemic will be followed by a wave of cardiovascular disease. Diabetes is in fact a serious vascular disease with poor prognosis, and not only a disease characterized by elevated blood glucose. If adequate attention were paid to this, it would be much easier to relieve the burden of cardiovascular disease in type 2 diabetes patients. One important cardiovascular risk factor in type 2 diabetic people is dyslipidemia. This is characterized by low HDL-cholesterol, high serum VLDL-triglycerides, and a preponderance of small, dense LDL. Even slight elevations of LDL-cholesterol in type 2 diabetic patients are associated with a substantial increase in cardiovascular risk. The composition of lipid particles in diabetic dyslipidemia is more atherogenic than in dyslipidemia in general. This means in turn that normal lipid concentrations are more atherogenic in diabetic than in non-diabetic patients. Retrospective analyses show that, in terms of protection from cardiovascular endpoints, the benefit of lipid lowering in type 2 diabetic patients is at least as great as in the non-diabetic population. Lowering of LDL-cholesterol is a very attractive target for the reduction of coronary heart disease in type 2 diabetic people.
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PMID:Diabetic dyslipidemia. 1204 86

The coexistence of diabetes mellitus in hypertensive patients doubles the number of cardiovascular events (relative risk: 1.73-2.77) and cardiovascular mortality (relative risk: 2.25-3.66). Therapeutic interventions concentrating on elevated blood glucose alone for prevention of late complications were not effective in essential reduction of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. For that reason therapies, focussing on other macrovascular risk factors, did increase significantly in the last decade. Strategies for reduction of the macrovascular risk include the aggressive treatment of hypertension. In the now published hypertension intervention studies in diabetic patients many different objectives were studied. As we already know, lowering of blood pressure does reduce cardiovascular risk. The optimal blood pressure threshold is not known yet, but of major interest. To find the most effective antihypertensive agent and the most effective combination therapy for diabetic patients, the most frequently used antihypertensive agents were compared with each other. Very interesting are the special effects of some substances, which exceed the lowering of blood pressure, like effects on the endothelinn or on coagulation disturbances. These protective and antiatherosclerotic effects could possibly get relevance even in normotensive patients. Concerning this special question, ACE-inhibitors and Angiotensin II receptor antagonists are getting more and more in the focus of interest and seem to be superior compared to other substances. Concluding the existing evidence from hypertension studies the following recommendations can be deduced: Diabetic patients with at least one additional cardiovascular risk factor should get an ACE-inhibitor in combination with other antihypertensive agents or as monotherapy. For combination therapy all the available antihypertensive agents are appropriate and can lower blood pressure adequately.
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PMID:[Reduction of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality by combined antihypertensive drug therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus]. 1209 90

Sulfur amino acids (sAAs) are potential candidates as risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, we recently reported that chronic hemodialysis patients with CVD had a greater prevalence of malnutrition, hypoalbuminemia, and lower plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) levels than those without CVD. In this cross-sectional study, we examined the relationship of plasma sAAs to CVD and nutritional status in 151 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) close to the start of regular dialysis treatment (33 +/- 7 days before the first dialysis treatment). Clinical signs of CVD were present in 32% of patients with CRF, 41% had malnutrition assessed by subjective global nutritional assessment (SGNA) score, and 26% had diabetes mellitus (DM). Plasma tHcy levels were high in 91% of patients, as were plasma total cysteine (tCys) levels, whereas plasma methionine (Met) and taurine (Tau) levels were normal. Patients with CRF who had CVD were older, more often malnourished, and had lower tHcy and serum albumin (s-albumin) levels and a greater frequency of DM than those without CVD. Plasma tCys, Met, and Tau levels did not differ between patients with CRF with and without CVD. The tCys-tHcy ratio was higher in patients with CVD and related to SGNA score and DM. Moreover, this ratio, but not tHcy or tCys level, correlated with age and triglyceride, total cholesterol, and apolipoprotein B levels. Malnutrition and hypoalbuminemia were associated with low plasma sAA levels (tHcy, Met, and Tau); tCys was related to s-albumin level, but not SGNA score. Among patients with diabetes, sAA levels did not differ between patients with and without CVD or between malnourished and well-nourished patients. In conclusion, patients with CRF at the start of dialysis treatment with CVD were more often diabetic, malnourished, and had lower s-albumin and tHcy levels and a higher tCys-tHcy ratio than patients with no CVD. tCys-tHcy ratio, but not tHcy or tCys levels per se, was related to cardiovascular risk factors, suggesting that cysteine may have a role in the development of CVD. Malnutrition, hypoalbuminemia, and DM in patients with CRF influence sAA levels, mainly plasma tHcy, which should be considered when evaluating hyperhomocysteinemia as a cardiovascular risk factor.
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PMID:Plasma sulfur amino acids in relation to cardiovascular disease, nutritional status, and diabetes mellitus in patients with chronic renal failure at start of dialysis therapy. 1220 Jul 98

There is a paucity of high quality studies on the prognostic importance of arterial pressure in end-stage renal disease. Furthermore, the optimal timing for blood pressure (BP) measurements (pre- or postdialysis), and the prognostic value of 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring in these patients remain to be established. In end-stage renal disease patients without diabetes and heart failure, predialysis systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure are strongly and independently related to left ventricular mass, and the strength of these relationships is higher than that between the corresponding postdialysis values and left ventricular mass. Average predialysis systolic pressure (monthly average) is associated with left ventricular mass as strongly as 24-hour systolic BP, which suggests that the average routine predialysis BP taken over 1 month may be equally representative of the "true" BP (the integrated BP load) than 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring. Mortality is U shaped in large hemodialysis databases. In the only prospective study that adequately controlled for cardiac function at baseline, it was shown that hypertension is associated with a higher risk of developing congestive heart failure, and that patients with left ventricular hypertrophy or chronic heart failure are at a much higher risk of mortality than patients without these complications. The role of arterial stiffening (pulse pressure) as a cardiovascular risk factor has been firmly established in an analysis of a very large dialysis database in the United States, and by recent studies based on direct measurements of pulse wave velocity.
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PMID:Hypertension as a cardiovascular risk factor in end-stage renal failure. 1221 57

Cardiovascular disease is by far the major cause of morbidity and mortality in subjects with diabetes mellitus type 2. The risk of cardiovascular disease in persons with type 2 diabetes is greater for any given risk factor, alone or in combination, than it is in persons without diabetes. Independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease in type 2 diabetes are hyperglycemia, hypertension, dyslipidemia and smoking. Subjects with diabetes mellitus type 2 benefit from cardiovascular risk factor modification, either as a primary or secondary intervention, as much as or more than those without diabetes. Risk factor modification includes behavioral modification to affect regular physical activity, healthy diet, weight loss, and smoking cessation. In addition, an optimal glycemic control with HbA1c < 7% is crucial and, aggressive management of hypertension (< 130/80 mmHg) and dyslipidemia are particularly important. Finally, aspirin (100 mg/d) is standard in secondary prophylaxis of cardiovascular events and should strongly be considered in primary prophylaxis if subjects have more than 1 concomitant cardiovascular risk factors.
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PMID:[Management of cardiovascular risk factors in type 2 diabetes mellitus]. 1223 34

Low HDL cholesterol is a frequent cardiovascular risk factor in diabetes. Because of its pivotal role for the regulation of HDL plasma levels, we investigated in vivo and in vitro regulation of the ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1) by insulin and metabolites accumulating in diabetes. Compared with euglycemic control mice, ABCA1 gene expression was severely decreased in the liver and peritoneal macrophages of diabetic mice. Treatment with insulin restored this deficit. Incubation of cultivated HepG2 hepatocytes and RAW264.7 macrophages with unsaturated fatty acids or acetoacetate, but not with insulin, glucose, saturated fatty acids, or hydroxybutyrate, downregulated ABCA1 mRNA and protein. The suppressive effect of unsaturated fatty acids and acetoacetate became most obvious in cells stimulated with oxysterols or retinoic acid but was independent of the expression of the thereby regulated transcription factors liver-X-receptor alpha (LXRalpha) and retinoid-X-receptor alpha (RXRalpha), respectively. Unsaturated fatty acids and acetoacetate also reduced ABCA1 promotor activity in RAW264.7 macrophages that were transfected with a 968-bp ABCA1 promotor/luciferase gene construct. As the functional consequence, unsaturated fatty acids and acetoacetate inhibited cholesterol efflux from macrophages. Downregulation of ABCA1 by unsaturated fatty acids and acetoacetate may contribute to low HDL cholesterol and increased cardiovascular risk of diabetic patients.
Diabetes 2002 Oct
PMID:Polyunsaturated fatty acids and acetoacetate downregulate the expression of the ATP-binding cassette transporter A1. 1235 28

The American Diabetes Association and the World Health Organisation have recently redefined the spectrum of abnormal glucose tolerance. The criteria for diabetes mellitus were sharpened and impaired fasting glucose (IFG) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) were classified as intermediate stages between normal glucose homeostasis and diabetes, based on fasting and challenged glucose levels, respectively. Criteria were established for 'the metabolic syndrome', as a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors that frequently coincides with the abnormal glucose tolerance state. The extent to which the glucose level itself should be regarded as a cardiovascular risk factor is the subject of ongoing debate. Recent research suggests that cardiovascular risk is related to the plasma glucose level even in the normal range of glucose concentrations. The impact of glucose in relation to cardiovascular events is discussed in this review.
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PMID:Glucose and cardiovascular risk. 1236 74

OBJECTIVE To investigate the degree and potential cardiovascular determinants of arterial stiffness, assessed by aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) measurements, and to relate arterial stiffness to absolute 10-12-year risks of stroke, coronary heart disease and death, as estimated by available risk functions, in postmenopausal women. METHOD We performed a cross-sectional study among 385 postmenopausal women, aged 50-74 years, sampled from the general population. Arterial stiffness was assessed non-invasively by measurement of aortic PWV using applanation tonometry. Information on health was obtained by medical history, registration of current medication, and physical examination. Height, weight, waist and hip circumferences, fasting glucose, total and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, resting blood pressure, and heart rate were measured. Three risk scores were used to estimate, for each individual, the absolute risk of stroke, coronary heart disease, and death within 10-12 years as a function of their cardiovascular risk factor profile. The relationship between PWV and these risk scores was subsequently determined. RESULTS Significant positive relationships with PWV were found for body mass index, fasting glucose, diabetes mellitus, and triglycerides in analyses adjusted for age, mean arterial blood pressure, and heart rate. Height and HDL cholesterol were inversely related to PWV. The risks of stroke, coronary heart disease, and death increased with increasing PWV in a linear graded manner. CONCLUSIONS This cross-sectional study among postmenopausal women provides evidence that most of the established cardiovascular risk factors are determinants of aortic PWV. Increased PWV marks an increased risk of stroke, coronary heart disease, and death within 10-12 years.
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PMID:Arterial stiffness in postmenopausal women: determinants of pulse wave velocity. 1240 54

Accelerated atherosclerosis is common in diabetes mellitus, although its extent is not always related to its strong association with classical cardiovascular risk factors. Diabetic patients, especially with type 2 diabetes, are prone to cardiovascular disease which is the leading cause of death in this population. Recent clinical studies among general population have shown that an even mild increase of homocysteinemia play an important role in the progression of atherosclerosis, either in coronary or peripheral arteries. An increasing amount of in vitro data is providing evidence that excess of homocysteine has a toxic effect on the arterial wall. This aminoacid thus appears to be not only a risk marker but also an emerging cardiovascular risk factor. The measurement of plasma homocysteine contributes to the identification, among the diabetic population, of patients at high cardio-vascular risk, with the aim of improving their global management. Moreover the addition of group B vitamins provides an easy and low-cost treatment to lower hyperhomocysteinemia.
Diabetes Metab 2002 Dec
PMID:[Clinical relevance of homocysteine monitoring in the diabetic patient]. 1252 34

Hypertension in diabetes is an important and treatable cardiovascular risk factor. Treatment targets from guidelines cannot always be achieved in everyday clinical practice. It is therefore of great importance to monitor trends in hypertension control in defined populations. Patients with type I diabetes (range 6685-10,100; treated hypertension 21-29%) or with type II diabetes (range 15,935-22,605; treated hypertension 47-56%) were included in four national samples between 1996 and 1999. This screening was part of the procedures for the National Diabetes Register in Sweden, which monitors trends in clinical practice and risk factors for patients with diabetes, recruited both in primary health care and at the hospital level. A favourable trend in mean and median blood pressure levels was noticed during the 4-year study period, based either on data from repeated surveys or on repeated measures in the same individual, both for type I diabetes (mean: -2/-2 mmHg; P < 0.01) and for type II diabetes (mean: -5/-3 mmHg; P < 0.001). Correspondingly, the proportion of hypertensive patients in acceptable control of blood pressure (< or =140/85 mmHg) increased (P < 0.001) both in type I diabetes (52.0-57.9%) and in type II diabetes (22.4-33.3%). It was concluded that hypertension is a widespread cardiovascular risk factor in patients with diabetes, especially systolic hypertension. A trend for a better systolic blood pressure control during the late 1990s in hypertensive patients with type II diabetes in Sweden could translate into substantial (estimated) clinical benefits in cardiovascular and diabetes-related morbidity. The National Diabetes Register makes a quality assessment of the hypertension treatment possible.
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PMID:Hypertension in diabetes: trends in clinical control in repeated large-scale national surveys from Sweden. 1257 15


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