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A retrospective 5-year study examined the relationship between blood pressure and the severity and progression of mild background retinopathy in 48 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes and 38 with insulin-dependent diabetes who did not receive treatment in either eye for at least 3 years from their initial visit. All patients had annual medical and ophthalmic examinations including fundus photography. Retinopathy was assessed from fundus photographs using the Hammersmith grading system. Initial mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures (mm Hg) were significantly higher in those with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (149/88) than in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes (129/81). The former had significantly worse retinopathy than the latter initially and at 5 years. When non-insulin-dependent patients were grouped according to systolic blood pressure, those with readings above 160 mm Hg had significantly more severe retinopathy than those with readings below 140 mm Hg. Blood pressures initially and at 3 years were not significantly different between patients who received photocoagulation (five with insulin-dependent and six with non-insulin-dependent diabetes and those who did not in either group. There was significant correlation between systolic blood pressure and severity of retinopathy in patients with non-insulin-dependent disease, but the change in severity of retinopathy at 5 years did not correlate with blood pressure in either group.
Hypertension
PMID:Blood pressure and the progression of mild background diabetic retinopathy. 407 41

Ten diabetic patients with secondary manifestations of their disease have undergone pancreatic transplantation either alone (2 cases), with a hepatic transplant (1 case), or with renal transplantation (7 cases). Two patients died within a short period of the surgery. Of the remainder, five patients retained pancreatic graft function for less than 6 months and none of these has shown any change in visual function. Three patients, all with background retinopathy, retained function in the pancreatic graft for 12 months or longer. One of these patients has had some regression of retinopathy and an improvement in visual acuity. The other two have shown no change in retinopathy, except transiently associated with systemic hypertension.
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PMID:Visual status of diabetic patients after pancreatic and other organ transplantation. Preliminary report. 676 15

Diabetic retinopathy was found in 47.8% of 153 consecutive diabetic clinic patients examined in Maseru, Lesotho. Background retinopathy was present in 78% of patients with retinopathy, compared with 22% with proliferative changes. While no difference in prevalence of diabetic retinopathy could be demonstrated between the sexes, an association between diabetic retinopathy and hypertension and peripheral neuropathy was observed. The prevalence and severity of diabetic retinopathy was significantly related to the duration of disease. The pitfalls inherent in comparing the results of the current study with other published reports are considered. Better epidemiological surveys are required to determine the true prevalence of diabetic retinopathy among different racial, ethnic, religious, and tribal groups in Africa.
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PMID:Diabetic retinopathy in Lesotho. 728 68

This study evaluates the wall thickness of common carotid arteries and the atherosclerotic involvement of the carotid bifurcations in patients with noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), with and without microvascular complications. Seventy subjects affected by NIDDM, and 17 healthy controls were evaluated by means of high-resolution echo-Doppler scan. Twenty-six diabetics (Group A) and complications (overnight proteinuria > 500 mg, background retinopathy, sensory neuropathy), while 44 (Group B) had no complications. The two groups were comparable for age, sex, plasma lipid profile, and smoking habit. Arterial hypertension was present in 15 of 26 (58%) complicated patients (Group A) and in 18 of 44 (41%) uncomplicated patients (Group B). None of the patients had a history of cerebrovascular disease. The authors found that the wall thickness of the common carotid artery was greater and atherosclerotic lesions of the carotid bifurcation were more frequent in diabetic patients with microvascular complications than in uncomplicated diabetics (who had a similar distribution of other risk factors for atherosclerosis) and in nondiabetic controls. These data on the one hand confirm the role of diabetes as an independent risk factor for carotid atherosclerosis and, on the other hand, indicate a correlation between microvascular lesions and early atherosclerosis in diabetes.
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PMID:Wall thickening of common carotid arteries in patients affected by noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: relationship to microvascular complications. 766 82

The Eurodiab Insulin Dependent Diabetes (IDDM) Complications Study was a cross-sectional investigation of a stratified random sample of IDDM patients attending 31 clinics in 16 European countries. We compared the findings in the only participating Irish centre (Cork Regional Hospital) with those of the study group as a whole. There were fewer episodes of ketosis but severe hypoglycaemia occurred more frequently in Cork patients, when compared to the full study group. There were no significant differences in the prevalence of background retinopathy, proliferative retinopathy, microalbuminuria, macroalbuminuria or peripheral neuropathy, when the two groups were compared. However, autonomic neuropathy was significantly less common in Cork. The prevalence of cardiovascular disease was slightly lower than the Eurodiab average in Cork patients, and cardiovascular risk factors were more favourable. Waist-hip ratio and total plasma cholesterol were significantly lower than in the full study group. The prevalence of hypertension was similar, but there were fewer smokers in Cork than in most other centres.
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PMID:Complications and cardiovascular risk factors in insulin-dependent diabetes--findings in an Irish clinic and in other European centres. 780 41

The objective of this study was to examine the feasibility and utility of screening for eye disease and hypertension in a group of diabetic patients. A sample of 338 outpatients in Santa Barbara County were included and had non-mydriatic retinal photography and measurement of blood pressure and visual acuity. Each patient completed a questionnaire including age, type of diabetes (type I or type II), duration of diabetes, and smoking history. Photographs were read by an internist and ophthalmologist, and grouped into one of five categories: (1) normal, (2) background retinopathy, (3) preproliferative retinopathy, (4) proliferative retinopathy, and (5) other abnormality. Patients with abnormalities were referred for treatment. Thirty-two percent of the population had retinopathy, and 16% had disease requiring urgent referral for treatment. Mean systolic blood pressure (MSBP) was found to be higher in patients with all types of retinopathy (132 mm Hg versus 124 mm Hg, p < 0.001). The relationship remained significant when smokers and nonsmokers were considered separately. No significant difference was found in MSBP between patients with severe retinopathy (preproliferative or proliferative) and those with background changes (133 mm Hg versus 131 mm Hg, respectively, p > 0.5). The other factor found to be related to retinopathy was the duration of diabetes. Type I patients with retinopathy had diabetes for 19 years versus 12 for those without (p < 0.01). Type II patients with retinopathy had diabetes for 10 years versus 6 for those without retinopathy (p < 0.02).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The Santa Barbara County diabetic retinopathy screening feasibility study: significance of diabetes duration and systolic blood pressure. 816 88

The importance of glycaemic control for the development of proliferative retinopathy and nephropathy was assessed by monitoring glycated haemoglobin for 5 years or more before the diagnosis of these complications. The study comprised Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients diagnosed at an age less than 31 years, and with diabetes duration 25 years or less. They were followed for an average of 7.9 years with 3.3 measurements per year. Of 172 patients screened for retinopathy 60 had no retinopathy, 104 had background retinopathy, and 8 had proliferative retinopathy The mean HbAlc (95% confidence intervals) of the groups was 6.4% (6.2-6.7%), 7.3% (7.1-7.5%) and 8.9% (8.1-9.6%), respectively (p < 0.0001); the mean duration of diabetes was 12, 18, and 17 years. Of 186 patients 7 had nephropathy (albuminuria > 200 mg/l). Mean HbAlc in patients without nephropathy was 7.0% (6.8-7.1%) and in patients with nephropathy 8.8% (7.8-9.9%, p < 0.001). Mean diabetes duration was 16 years in both groups. Multiple logistic regression including mean HbAlc, age at onset, duration, sex, and hypertension, was for both proliferative retinopathy and nephropathy significant only for mean HbAlc. In all cases, proliferative retinopathy and nephropathy were preceded by poor glycaemic control over several years, suggesting that these complications are caused by poor glycaemic control.
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PMID:Elevated long-term glycated haemoglobin precedes proliferative retinopathy and nephropathy in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients. 824 77

We studied the long-term outcome of 268 patients suffering from diabetic end-stage renal disease (DM-ESRD) treated with long-term haemodialysis between 1978 and 1991, with special emphasis on visual acuity as well as the heterogeneity of DM-ESRD. The 50% patient survival on haemodialysis was 60 months. Visual disturbances were found in 73.1% (392/536) of eyes at the start of haemodialysis. Chronological assessment of visual acuity demonstrated the stabilization of visual acuity and 87.1% (364/418) of eyes were stable, 4.8% (20/418) were improved, and 8.1% (34/418) were aggravated in the long term respectively. The change of visual acuity was frequently seen in the short term, and rapid shifts of body fluid to correct overhydration induced abrupt changes of glycaemic control as well as retraction of macular oedema. Hence it might be one of the factors affecting rapid change of visual acuity in the short term. Meanwhile, long-term deterioration of visual acuity resulted from either hypertension unresponsive to medical treatment or poor glycaemic control. Some DM-ESRD patients had only background retinopathy at the start of haemodialysis and these were likely to have the nephrosclerotic glomerular lesion. They were old, not nephrotic and had a mild degree of diabetes during the predialysis stage. Thus, DM-ESRD patients seem to have some heterogeneity in their clinical characteristics, and old DM-ESRD patients with only background retinopathy have the appearance of diabetic macroangiopathy rather than microangiopathy.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up study of 268 diabetic patients undergoing haemodialysis, with special attention to visual acuity and heterogeneity. 841 59

Microalbuminuria predicts overt nephropathy in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients; however, the structural basis for this functional abnormality is unknown. In this study we evaluated renal structure and function in a cohort of 34 unselected microalbuminuric NIDDM patients (26 male/8 female, age: 58 +/- 7 years, known diabetes duration: 11 +/- 6 years, HbA1c: 8.5 +/- 1.6%). Systemic hypertension was present in all but 3. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was 101 +/- 27 ml.min-1.1.73 m-2 and albumin excretion rate (AER) 44 (20-199) micrograms/ min. Light microscopic slides were categorized as: C I) normal or near normal renal structure; C II) changes "typical" of diabetic nephropathology in insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM) (glomerular, tubulo-interstitial and arteriolar changes occurring in parallel); C III) "atypical" patterns of injury, with absent or only mild diabetic glomerular changes associated with disproportionately severe renal structural changes including: important tubulo-interstitial with or without arteriolar hyalinosis with or without global glomerular sclerosis. Ten patients (29.4%) were classified as C I, 10 as C II (29.4%) and 14 as C III (41.2%); none of these patients had any definable non-diabetic renal disease. GFR, AER and blood pressure were similar in the three groups, while HbA1c was higher in C II and C III than in C I patients. Diabetic retinopathy was present in all C II patients (background in 50% and proliferative in 50%). None of the patients in C I and C III had proliferative retinopathy, while background retinopathy was observed in 50% of C I and 57% of C III patients. In summary, microalbuminuric NIDDM patients are structurally heterogeneous with less than one third having "typical" diabetic nephropathology. The presence of both "typical" and "atypical" patterns of renal pathology was associated with worse metabolic control, suggesting that hyperglycaemia may cause different patterns of renal injury in older NIDDM compared to younger IDDM patients.
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PMID:Patterns of renal injury in NIDDM patients with microalbuminuria. 896 Aug 44

Endothelin-1 (ET-1), a novel 21-amino acid vasoconstrictive peptide secreted by endothelial cells, has been thought to play a role in various forms of vascular disease. Diabetes mellitus is well known for its association with microvascular damage. To investigate whether ET-1 levels may be related to microangiopathy in diabetes mellitus, plasma ET-1 levels were measured in two groups of diabetic patients: A) 47 patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and retinopathy (28 M, 19 F; mean age 60.7+/-8.5 yrs) but without nephropathy (microalbuminuria < 30 mg/day) and hypertension (SBP < 140, DBP < 90 mmHg); group A was divided in three subgroups based on the severity of retinopathy: a) 16 with background retinopathy; b) 21 with pre-proliferative retinopathy; c) 10 with proliferative retinopathy. B) 8 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) recently diagnosed (6 M, 2 F; 16.4+/-3.8 yrs) without complications. C) 28 healthy subjects (HS) (16 M, 12 F; 47.8+/-11.8 yrs) as controls. In the NIDDM group the ET-1 concentration was significantly higher (17.3+/-2.4 pg/ml) than both in the HS (8+/-4.7 pg/ml) and IDDM patients (10.2+/-3.7 pg/ml) (p < 0.0001). In the subgroups with retinopathy the ET-1 levels were a) 15.1+/-4.3 pg/ml; b) 22.2+/-6.8 pg/ml and c) 16.6+/-5.1 pg/ml. These values were significantly elevated as compared to HS (p<0.001; p < 0.0001; p < 0.002, respectively), being the highest levels of ET-1 observed in the NIDDM patients with pre-proliferative retinopathy. In conclusion our study revealed that the ET-1 concentrations are elevated in NIDDM patients with retinopathy especially in those patients with pre-proliferative retinopathy.
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PMID:Circulating endothelin-1 in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients with retinopathy. 922 11


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