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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
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The clinical linkage of hypertensive cardiovascular disease, left ventricular hypertrophy, and accelerated atherosclerosis with a spectrum of metabolic disturbances including peripheral insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia, obesity, and frank non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, has been increasingly appreciated. However, the underlying biologic basis mediating this clinical association remains unclear. Nuclear magnetic resonance techniques have been used to measure various intracellular ion species in human erythrocytes and have found that common, shared intracellular abnormalities of cytosolic free calcium, free magnesium, and pH occur in each of these clinical syndromes. Specifically, essential hypertension is characterized by higher fasting free cytosolic calcium concentrations and reciprocally lower intracellular free magnesium and pH levels compared with those of normotensive control subjects. Furthermore, for all subjects, free calcium and free magnesium levels were closely related both to the left ventricular mass and to the degree of insulin resistance present. Moreover, these same intracellular ionic lesions were found in normotensive obese and/or non-insulin diabetic individuals. Last, evidence has recently been provided that the cardiovascular consequences of increased dietary sugar and salt intake may well be determined by their concurrent influence on cellular ion metabolism. These data led to a hypothesis for a central role for altered cellular ion homeostasis in mediating the clinical linkage of cardiovascular and metabolic disease. According to this ionic hypothesis, essential hypertension, non-insulin dependent diabetes, and their frequently associated features of obesity, left ventricular hypertrophy, and accelerated atherosclerosis all derive from and reflect different clinical manifestations of the same underlying cellular lesion, characterized at least in part by elevated cytosolic free calcium and suppressed free magnesium levels.
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PMID:Cellular ions in hypertension, insulin resistance, obesity, and diabetes: a unifying theme. 145 64

Doxazosin is a long-acting alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist structurally related to prazosin and terazosin. Its antihypertensive effect is produced by a reduction in the smooth muscle tone of peripheral vascular beds resulting in a decrease in total peripheral resistance without significant effect on cardiac output or heart rate. In benign prostatic hyperplasia, doxazosin's effect of relieving bladder outflow obstruction is produced through a reduction in prostatic tone mediated via alpha 1-adrenoceptor blockade. In most comparative trials doxazosin has proven to be equally effective as the comparator drug in the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension. It has been used in a variety of patient populations including the elderly, Blacks, smokers, and patients with concomitant disease states such as renal dysfunction, hypercholesterolaemia, non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and respiratory disease. Doxazosin has also been used successfully in combination with beta-adrenoceptor antagonists, diuretics, calcium channel antagonists, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in patients with hypertension that is uncontrolled with monotherapy. Doxazosin has a beneficial effect on some of the risk factors associated with coronary heart disease including elevated serum lipid levels, impaired glucose metabolism, insulin resistance and left ventricular hypertrophy. Modest decreases in total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides are seen with doxazosin therapy while small increases in high density lipoprotein cholesterol and the high density lipoprotein cholesterol/total cholesterol ratio are consistently reported. Some studies have reported an improvement in glucose tolerance although this effect has been more consistently seen in nondiabetic patients than in patients with NIDDM. Additionally, doxazosin produces a similar reduction in left ventricular hypertrophy to other antihypertensive agents. Modelling-based calculations suggest that doxazosin significantly reduces the risk of developing coronary heart disease in patients with mild to moderate hypertension, although this remains to be confirmed in long term prospective studies. Doxazosin appears to be a promising agent in the treatment of urinary symptoms associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia. Similar to other alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonists, doxazosin treatment produces increases in peak and mean urinary flow rates and improves other objective and symptomatic measures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Doxazosin. An update of its clinical pharmacology and therapeutic applications in hypertension and benign prostatic hyperplasia. 753 94

The determinants of left ventricular mass in normal control subjects and subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) are ill-defined. We therefore recorded M-mode and pulsed Doppler echocardiograms and 24-h ambulatory blood pressure in 57 normotensive subjects, 34 with NIDDM and 23 matched non-diabetic control subjects. Measurements of erythrocyte sodium-lithium counter-transport, plasma angiotensin II, plasma and platelet catecholamines and fasting plasma insulin were also made. Six control subjects (26%) and 15 diabetic subjects (44%) had some degree of left ventricular hypertrophy. Subjects with left ventricular hypertrophy (n = 21) had an elevated mean rate of sodium-lithium countertransport (0.40 +/- 0.13 vs 0.31 +/- 0.09 mmol.l-1.h-1; p < 0.01), parallel differences being observed in both the diabetic and control groups. Twelve of the subjects with left ventricular hypertrophy (57%) had elevated rates of sodium-lithium counter-transport compared to only seven (19%) of those without (p < 0.05). There was no consistent difference between those with and without left ventricular hypertrophy in any other clinical or biochemical variable. Multivariate analysis, with the presence or absence of left ventricular hypertrophy as the dependent variable, demonstrated that the maximal rate of sodium-lithium countertransport was the only variable that independently contributed to left ventricular hypertrophy (partial r = 0.35; F1.55 = 7.74; p = 0.007). This study demonstrates for the first time an association between left ventricular hypertrophy and erythrocyte membrane cation transport that is independent of hypertension, is present in both diabetic and non-diabetic groups, and may represent a link between elevated rates of membrane sodium transport and cardiovascular risk.
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PMID:Association between left ventricular hypertrophy and erythrocyte sodium-lithium exchange in normotensive subjects with and without NIDDM. 779 86

Diabetic nephropathy is the only increasing cause of renal failure in the Western world. It affects a large proportion of both insulin-dependent (IDDM) and non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients. A critical stage in the development of diabetic renal disease is the onset of microalbuminuria, defined as an albumin excretion rate of 30 to 300 mg/day. Microalbuminuria predicts progression to renal failure and early cardiovascular mortality in both IDDM and NIDDM patients. Microalbuminuria is associated with a constellation of other risk factors for small and large vessel damage which include raised blood pressure, poor glycemic control, plasma lipid and clotting factor abnormalities, left ventricular hypertrophy, and insulin resistance. Treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors corrects microalbuminuria and prevents progression to persistent proteinuria. Good blood glucose control significantly reduces the risk of progression from normoalbuminuria to microalbuminuria. The treatment of microalbuminuria appears highly cost-beneficial and substantially increases life expectancy. The development of microalbuminuria, for which all diabetic patients aged 12 to 70 years should be screened, should alert the physician to set in motion a program of assessment, monitoring, and correction of all risk factors for renal and cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of microalbuminuria. 781 38

The clinical coincidence of hypertension, obesity and non insulin diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) has long been recognized. Increasing interest has also been recently focused on the possible role of insulin and insulin resistance in mediating this association. There is also evidence that hyperglycemia per se may have a role in the pathogenesis of hypertension and atherosclerosis in NIDDM patients. Glucose is a determinant to cellular ion homeostasis, promoting an increase of intracellular calcium and suppressing intracellular free magnesium and pH. Moreover, hyperglycemia promotes glycosilation of proteins and the consequent accumulation of advanced glycosilation end products in tissues. It has recently been suggested that iter is a cellular ionic basis for the clinical and epidemiological linkage of hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), obesity and non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). These clinical conditions may be different expressions of a common underlying defect in ion handling, displayed by elevated cytosolic free calcium and suppressed free magnesium levels. Therapeutically, reversal of this excess free calcium accumulation and/or free magnesium deficit with ion specific agents, such as calcium channel blocker drugs, may thus ameliorate not only the elevated blood pressure of hypertension but also the concurrent cardiac, vascular and metabolic aspects of the hypertensive states.
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PMID:Diabetes, hypertension and atherosclerosis: pathophysiological role of intracellular ions. 820 15

To assess the prevalence of an impaired diurnal blood pressure (BP) pattern in a population of both normotensive and hypertensive diabetics, noninvasive ambulatory BP monitoring (SpaceLabs 5200, Redmond, WA) was performed in 96 outpatients with type 2 diabetes (47 normotensives and 48 hypertensives) and in 103 control subjects without diabetes (50 normotensives and 53 hypertensives). Mean 24 h and daytime (06:00 to 22:00) BP and heart rate (HR) were not statistically different in diabetic patients compared to nondiabetic ones. Nighttime (22:00 to 06:00) BP and HR tended to be higher in both normotensive and hypertensive diabetics, although not significantly. Heart rate, diastolic BP (DBP), and especially the nocturnal systolic BP (SBP) decrease, were less marked in both normotensive and hypertensive diabetics, with a consequent increase in rate-pressure. A significant correlation was found between the percent decrease in nighttime SBP and the decrease in orthostatic SBP in casual BP measurements. The analysis of individual recordings allowed us to detect an impaired circadian pattern (the disappearance of the nocturnal BP decrease or a paradoxical BP increase) in 30% of the normotensive and 31% of the hypertensive diabetics (v 6% of the normotensive and 6.4% of the hypertensive nondiabetic subjects). As the absence of a nocturnal BP fall has been associated with the increased prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, its detection by ambulatory monitoring might be of prognostic and therapeutic importance.
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PMID:Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in normotensive and hypertensive type 2 diabetes. Prevalence of impaired diurnal blood pressure patterns. 842 56

The existence of a distinct diabetic cardiomyopathy, characterized by a raised left ventricular mass, has previously been suggested. However, as diabetes mellitus is associated with both left ventricular hypertrophy and hypertension a confounding effect of raised blood pressure in diabetic patients has to be considered. In the present cross-sectional study an echocardiographical examination was performed as part of a health screening survey in 582 males, aged 70 years. After the exclusion of subjects with coronary heart disease or those on regular antihypertensive treatment, 30 normotensive subjects with diabetes were compared with 10 subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) and a diastolic blood pressure 90 mm Hg or more and 203 normotensive control subjects with normal glucose tolerance. Both groups with NIDDM showed a significantly increased left atrial diameter (4.4 +/- 0.7 vs 4.0 +/- 0.5 cm, p < 0.05) and an increased atrial component in diastole (A-wave, p < 0.01) compared to the control subjects. Left ventricular mass was, however, only marginally and not significantly elevated in the diabetic subjects when compared to the healthy control subjects (133 +/- 19 and 133 +/- 28 vs 128 +/- 25 g/m2). Only in the subjects with concomitant diabetes and a raised blood pressure was the intraventricular septum significantly enlarged (p < 0.05). Thus, in the present sample no distinct diabetic cardiomyopathy with an increased left ventricular mass, independent of the influence of hypertension could be detected. The myocardial alterations in these diabetic males were restricted to an increased left atrial size and an impaired diastolic function.
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PMID:Relationship between diastolic hypertension and myocardial morphology and function in elderly males with diabetes mellitus. 896 Aug 49

Evaluation of coronary microvascular function can be obtained through coronary flow reserve measurements. The aim of this study was to evaluate the coronary microvascular function by using transesophageal-Doppler echocardiographic assessment of coronary flow reserve. The study included 32 normotensive patients with type II diabetes mellitus (group A) of short duration (6.1+/-3.8 years) aged 55.4+/-9.4 years and 14 healthy volunteers matched for age, gender and BMI (group B). No patients had clinical evidence of coronary artery disease and all of them produced a negative recent stress ECG test. Excluded from the study were patients with anemia, left ventricular hypertrophy, arrhythmia, congenital, or acquired structural heart disease. All subjects underwent transesophageal-Doppler echocardiography. Satisfactory coronary blood flow velocity recordings could be obtained from the initial segment of the left anterior descending coronary artery in healthy volunteers and in 27 patients at baseline and 2 min after dipyridamole infusion (0.56 mg/kg, for 4 min). In the remaining 5 patients no satisfactory recordings were available. The indexes of coronary flow reserve, i.e. the ratios of dipyridamole over basal maximum and mean diastolic velocities were calculated. Dipyridamole/rest maximal coronary reserve (Table 3) was 1.946+/-0.743, while this ratio for the mean diastolic velocity was 1.969+/-0.805 in group A. The respective values for group B, were 2.811+/-0.345 (P=0.000 vs. group A) and 2.914+/-0.303 (P=0.000 vs. group A). Thus, the increase in coronary flow reserve although present in both groups, it was more impressive in the normal group. Multiple regression logistic analysis of: age, sex, smoking, glucosylated hemoglobin, duration of diabetes and type of therapy, did not show any correlation of these parameters with the above ratios. This study shows that coronary flow reserve, as measured with transesophageal echocardiography-Doppler, is severely impaired in normotensive patients with type II diabetes, with relatively short duration of the disease.
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PMID:Coronary microcirculation evaluation with transesophageal echocardiography Doppler in type II diabetics. 915 62

The aim of our cross-sectional case-control study was to evaluate putative mechanisms of the increased cardiac morbidity and mortality in NIDDM patients with or without diabetic nephropathy. Fifty-one NIDDM patients with diabetic nephropathy (38 males, age 61 +/- 8 years, group 1), 53 NIDDM patients with normoalbuminuria (42 males, 61 +/- 7 years, group 2), and 22 non-diabetic control subjects (15 males, 58 +/- 8 years, group 3) were investigated. Previous antihypertensive treatment was withdrawn 2 weeks before the study. Left ventricular mass index (LVMI) and systolic function were determined by echocardiography. LVMI was elevated, mean +/- SE, in group 1: 157 +/- 6 g m(-2), and in group 2: 139 +/- 7 g m(-2), as compared with group 3: 95 +/- 5 g m(-2) (p < 0.001, for both), and in group 1 as compared with group 2 (p = 0.05). The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (LVMI > 131 g m(-2) in men and > 100 gm(-2) in women) was much higher in group 1: 75% (95% CI, 60-86), and group 2: 51% (95% CI, 37-65), as compared with group 3: 9% (95% CI, 1-29) (p < 0.001, for both), and in group 1 as compared with group 2 (p < 0.01). Shortening fraction of the left ventricle, % +/- SE, was relatively reduced in group 1: 32.5 +/- 1.1%, and group 2: 33.4 +/- 1.1%, as compared with group 3: 41.2 +/- 1.2% (p < 0.01, for both). In a subgroup of 26 normoalbuminuric normotensive NIDDM patients, LVMI was higher than in 14 normotensive non-diabetic control subjects: 137 +/- 10 g m(-2) vs 96 +/- 7 g m(-2), respectively (p < 0.005). The prevalence of LVH was 42% (95% CI, 23-63) and 14% (95% CI, 2-43) (p = 0.07) in these two groups, respectively. In conclusion, normotensive and hypertensive NIDDM patients with and without diabetic nephropathy frequently suffer from LVH and relatively reduced systolic function which may constitute independent risk factors for fatal and non-fatal cardiac events.
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PMID:Left ventricular hypertrophy in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients with and without diabetic nephropathy. 922 91

Approximately 80% of all patients with diabetes die of cardiovascular disease. The traditional management of type 2 diabetes has been ineffective in altering this dismal prognosis. Insulin resistance is the fundamental defect of type 2 diabetes. Insulin resistance often leads to hyperinsulinemia, which is associated with hypertension, atherogenic dyslipidemia, left ventricular hypertrophy, impaired fibrinolysis, visceral obesity, and sedentary lifestyle. Although all these conditions are associated with atherosclerosis and adverse cardiovascular events, the therapeutic efforts in patients with diabetes have focused predominantly on normalizing glucose levels. Improved insulin sensitivity through lifestyle modifications or pharmacologic therapy (troglitazone and metformin) will lower both insulin and glucose levels as well as diminish dyslipidemia and hypertension. In contrast, sulfonylurea agents lower glucose by increasing insulin levels and may increase the risk of cardiovascular events. Therapy including aspirin, lipid agents (for example, statins), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, beta-adrenergic blockers, postmenopausal estrogen replacement, and vitamin E should be considered for patients with type 2 diabetes. In most patients with diabetes who have multivessel coronary artery disease, coronary artery bypass grafting is superior to coronary angioplasty for improving long-term cardiovascular prognosis. This superiority is mediated in part by the use of a left internal mammary graft to the left anterior descending coronary artery. Urgent coronary angioplasty or thrombolytic therapy should be considered for all patients with diabetes who have acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Improving the adverse cardiovascular prognosis of type 2 diabetes. 1006 57


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