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1.
Diabetic cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy increases the risk of deterioration in renal function and is associated with increased mortality in patients with renal failure. Type 1 diabetic patients with long diabetes duration, matched for age (38 +/- 9 years) and diabetes duration (28 +/- 8 years) were studied regarding the association between cardiovascular autonomic nerve function and different degrees of diabetic nephropathy. Eighteen patients were normo- (< 30 mg/l), six micro- (30-300 mg/l), and 13 macroalbuminuric (> 300 mg/l) based on urinary albumin concentrations in three separate morning samples. They were compared with 33 control subjects with similar age. Autonomic nerve function was evaluated by measuring the response of heart rate to deep breathing and active standing. Beat-to-beat finger artery blood pressure (Finapres) was tested during active standing. During deep breathing both change in heart rate (17 +/- 11, 9 +/- 7 and 4 +/- 3 beats/min) and ratio between expiratory and inspiratory R-R intervals (1.32 +/- 0.24, 1.14 +/- 0.15 and 1.05 +/- 0.04) decreased from normo- over micro- to macroalbuminuria (p < 0.05 vs normoalbuminuric and control subjects [17 +/- 5 beats/min and 1.28 +/- 0.10, respectively]). Similar results were obtained during active standing with respect to change in systolic arterial blood pressure (3 +/- 8, 2 +/- 13 and -6 +/- 11 mmHg; p < 0.05 vs control subjects [8 +/- 11 mmHg]). However, the response of diastolic arterial blood pressure or mean heart rate to standing up did not differ between any of the groups. The ratio of maximum to minimum R-R interval during the dynamic response of heart rate to active standing decreased with the degree of nephropathy (1.27 +/- 0.17, 1.11 +/- 0.11 and 1.05 +/- 0.06) with significantly higher values in patients with normo- compared with patients with macroalbuminuria (p < 0.05). All patients groups had significantly lower values than control subjects (1.46 +/- 0.22, p < 0.05). The overshoot of the blood pressure after an initial fall during active standing decreased with the degree of diabetic nephropathy. In conclusion, type 1 diabetic patients with long duration of diabetes have signs of cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy, the severity of which is related to the degree of nephropathy.  相似文献   

2.
The prevalence of diabetic ocular complications and the correlation between diabetic retinopathy and systemic factors were examined in 2,300 cases (4,600 eyes) with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The prevalence of cataract was 66.7%, of retinopathy 37.0%, of refractive and accommodative change 6.2%, of glaucoma 1.9% (rubeotic glaucoma was 1.0%), of rubeosis iridis 1.5%, of iridocyclitis 0.8%, of extraocular muscle palsy 0.2%, and of ischemic optic neuropathy 0.1%. Duration of diabetes mellitus, HbA1C value, methods of diabetic control, age, diabetic nephropathy, diabetic neuropathy, hypertension, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, and arteriosclerosis obliterans were related with diabetic retinopathy. We suggest that the management of diabetic patients needs sufficient attention in the cases with oral administration of medication, insulin therapy, and diabetic nephropathy.  相似文献   

3.
The aim of the study was to compare the diurnal pattern of blood pressure in diabetic patients with normal urinary protein excretion, microalbuminuria and end stage renal failure due to diabetic nephropathy and on continuous ambulatory peritoneál dialysis. An ABPM-oscillometric blood pressure monitor was used. Cholesterol, triglicerides, HDL and LDH1 cholesterole, apolipoprotein A1 and B, endogenous creatinine urinary protein and albumin excretion, beta-2-microglobulin were measured. The mean age and the mean diabetes duration of the 12 normoalbuminuric patients 38.3 and 16.5 years, of the 12 patients treated for renal failure with continuous ambulatory peritoneál dialysis 54.4 and 19.5 years. In the group with end stage renal failure and continuous ambulatory peritoneál dialysis, the mean nocturnal and diurnal systolic and diastolic blood pressure and the average arterial mean pressure was significantly higher than in the normal and microalbuminuric groups. In microalbuminuric and dialysed patients the physiological nocturnal decline of arterial blood pressure was absent. 24 hour blood pressure monitoring may accurately identify the early stage of diabetic nephropathy, and it might be valuable in the correction of antihypertensive treatment from the early to the final stages of diabetic nephropathy.  相似文献   

4.
Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism has mainly been described in patients with diabetes mellitus. In order to elucidate the mechanisms of hyporeninemia in diabetic patients, the author studied the response of active renin concentration (ARC) and inactive renin concentration (IRC) to the administration of captopril or sodium depletion in patients with diabetes mellitus and glomerulonephritis and in normal subjects. The diabetic patients were separated into four groups: Group 0, diabetic patients without neuropathy or nephropathy; Group I, those with neuropathy without nephropathy; Group II, those without neuropathy with nephropathy; Group III, those with neuropathy and nephropathy. Diabetic patients with some complications had slightly lower plasma active renin levels than those without complications. The mean increase in plasma active renin after captopril (delta ARC) and sodium depletion was lower in group I than in group 0, and there was no difference between group II and group 0. There was no correlation between delta ARC and creatinine clearance (Ccr) in diabetes mellitus. Plasma prorenin was higher in group I than in group 0, and there was no difference between group II and group 0. No significant change of prorenin after captopril was observed in all groups, but the mean increase in plasma inactive renin after sodium depletion was slightly higher in groups I and III than in groups 0 and II. ARC/IRC was significantly lower in group I than in group 0, and there was no difference between group II and group 0. There was no correlation between ARC/IRC and Ccr in diabetes mellitus, but significant correlation between ARC/IRC and postural change in systolic blood pressure. In three diabetic patients with hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism, the postural fall in systolic blood pressure was significant, and ARC/IRC was significantly low, but IRC was not high. These results suggest that autonomic dysfunction is a major factor in an impairment of the processing of prorenin to active renin in diabetic patients, and severe autonomic dysfunction may impair the biosynthesis of prorenin in patients with hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism.  相似文献   

5.
In Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus a genetic predisposition exists to nephropathy and is related to parental hypertension. Enhanced G-protein activation, a cellular phenotype observed in cultured cells from patients with essential hypertension, was recently documented in Type I diabetic subjects with nephropathy. This enhanced G-protein activation has been associated with a genetic variant in the G-protein beta3 subunit, GNB3. A C-->T polymorphism at position 825 in exon 10 is associated with G-protein activation, the T allele associated with enhanced activity. Furthermore the T allele was observed more frequently in a group with essential hypertension. In this report we have analysed the role of the C825T polymorphism in the predisposition to diabetic nephropathy in Type I diabetes. We have investigated the frequency of this polymorphism in a large case-control study and found no association of the T allele with diabetic nephropathy. Specifically carriage of the T allele as CT or TT was observed in 49% of 200 Type I diabetic control subjects with normoalbuminuria (diabetes duration 24 years) compared with 53% of 216 Type I diabetic subjects with nephropathy (overt proteinuria or end-stage renal failure). Within this group we have also examined the inheritance of C825T alleles in a family study and found no evidence for excess transmission of the T allele to Type I diabetic offspring with nephropathy (T allele transmitted to 51% of nephropathy offspring, C allele transmitted to 49% of nephropathy offspring, p = 0.79). In none of the Type I diabetic datasets examined was there any effect of genotype on variation in systolic or diastolic blood pressure. In conclusion we can find no evidence for the C825T polymorphism of the beta3 G-protein subunit as a major gene in the susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy in Type I diabetes.  相似文献   

6.
Family studies point to an important genetic element in the genesis of diabetic nephropathy, but it is not known whether renal abnormalities are present prior to the onset of diabetes. To address this issue we examined all consecutive patients suffering from type II diabetes with a duration of more than 10 years who attended a diabetes outpatient clinic. Ninety-four patients had nephropathy, 307 did not. All offspring who were phenotypically normal (no hypertension, normal oral glucose tolerance, non-smoking) and agreed to participate were examined, 26 from nephropathic and 30 from non-nephropathic diabetic parents. They were compared with 30 offspring matched for age, gender and BMI from non-diabetic parents as controls. We measured urinary albumin excretion under baseline conditions and at several time points after ingestion of 300 g cooked beef and submaximal treadmill exercise, respectively. In addition, casual blood pressure, ambulatory blood pressure, urinary albumin and urinary alpha-1-microglobulin were measured. Primary renal disease was excluded by clinical examination. Under baseline conditions, median urinary albumin excretion rate (AER; microgram/min) was significantly (P < 0.005) higher in offspring of nephropathic type II diabetic patients (7.8; range 1.04 to 19.5) than in the offspring of non-nephropathic type II diabetic patients (4.8; 0.36 to 17.5) and controls (4.4; 0.16 to 18.4). Submaximal treadmill exercise caused a greater proportional increase of AER in offspring of nephropathic type II diabetics (median 16-fold) than in offspring of non-nephropathic diabetic patients (6.3-fold) or controls (4.8-fold). In offspring of nephropathic diabetic patients casual and particularly ambulatory systolic blood pressures were significantly higher, but AER was not correlated with blood pressure. In summary, higher values, albeit within the normal range, for baseline and postexercise albuminuria were noted in phenotypically normal offspring of parents with type II diabetes and nephropathy. The observation suggests that changes in transglomerular albumin traffic are demonstrable prior to the onset of diabetes and diabetic nephropathy in subjects with a potential genetic predisposition to these conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The relationship between erythrocyte sodium lithium countertransport activity (SLC), total exchangeable sodium (NaE), and hormonal control of renal function was examined in 40 normotensive, normoalbuminuric, non-neuropathic Type 1 diabetic subjects, of whom 8 had elevated SLC (> 0.40 mmol Li h-1l-1 rbc). Eleven health controls with normal SLC, who were of comparable age, body mass, and blood pressure were also studied. By contrast with healthy controls, SLC in Type 1 diabetes was not associated with plasma renin activity (PRA), aldosterone, systolic blood pressure or lean body mass. SLC was also unrelated to atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) (Type 1 diabetes only) and NaE. NaE was not correlated with any other variables. The relationships between PRA and aldosterone in healthy controls were retained in Type 1 diabetes (R2 0.37 supine, p = 0.00001, and 0.27 ambulant, p = 0.0005), as were respective direct and inverse relations between vasopressin and ANP and both PRA (rs 0.54 to 0.57, rs -0.43 to -0.53), and aldosterone (rs 0.78 to 0.80, rs -0.71 to -0.80). Fasting free serum insulin and vasopressin were both inversely related to ANP (rs -0.91 and -0.71, respectively). In the absence of autonomic dysfunction, hypertension or early nephropathy in Type 1 diabetes, increased SLC or exchangeable sodium were unrelated to each other or with hormonal control of sodium balance, but the homeostatic factors controlling hormonal interaction appear to be maintained. The interaction between insulin and hormonal control of sodium and water balance may be modified by circulating free insulin concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: The difference between clinic and ambulatory average daytime blood pressures is frequently taken as a surrogate measure of the 'white-coat effect' (i.e. the pressor reaction triggered in the patient by the physician's visit). OBJECTIVE: To assess the reproducibility of this difference and its relationship with clinic and average ambulatory daytime blood pressure levels. DESIGN AND METHODS: These issues were addressed with two large groups of subjects in whom both clinic and ambulatory blood pressures were measured, namely 783 outpatients with systolic and diastolic essential hypertension [Group 1, aged 50.8+/-9.4 years (mean +/- SD)], participating in standardized Italian trials of antihypertensive drugs, and 506 elderly patients (group 2, age 71+/-7 years) with isolated systolic hypertension, participating in the European Syst-Eur trial. RESULTS: The clinic-daytime blood pressure difference for the essential systolic and diastolic hypertensive patients (group 1) was 13.6+/-14.3 mmHg for systolic and 9.1+/-8.6 mmHg for diastolic blood pressure (P always < 0.01). This difference for the elderly patients with isolated systolic hypertension (group 2) was 21.2+/-16.0 mmHg for systolic and only 1.3+/-10.2 mmHg for diastolic blood pressure (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05, respectively). In both studies little or no systematic clinic-daytime difference could be observed for heart rate. The reproducibility of the clinic-daytime blood pressure difference, tested for 108 essential systolic and diastolic hypertensive patients from group 1 and 128 isolated systolic hypertensives from group 2, was invariably lower than that both of daytime and of clinic blood pressure values. Finally, the clinic-daytime blood pressure difference was progressively higher for increasing levels of clinic blood pressure and progressively lower for higher levels of ambulatory daytime blood pressure. CONCLUSIONS: Thus, the clinic-daytime blood pressure difference has a limited reproducibility; depends not only on clinic but also on daytime average blood pressure, which means that its size is a function of the blood pressure criteria employed for selection of the patients in a trial; and is never associated with a systematic clinic-daytime difference in heart rate, which further questions its use as a reliable surrogate measure of the true pressor response induced in the patient by the doctor's visit.  相似文献   

9.
The ABCD (Appropriate Blood Pressure Control in Diabetes) Trial is a large, prospective, randomized clinical trial of 950 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) designed to compare the effects of intensive blood pressure control with moderate control on the prevention and progression of diabetic nephropathy, retinopathy, cardiovascular disease, and neuropathy in NIDDM. The secondary objective is to determine equivalency of the effects of a calcium channel blocker (nisoldipine) and an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor (enalapril) as a first-line antihypertensive agent in the prevention and/or progression of these diabetic vascular complications. The study consists of two study populations aged 40-74 years, 470 hypertensive patients (diastolic blood pressure of > or = 90.0 mmHg at time of randomization) and 480 normotensive patients (diastolic blood pressure of 80.0 mmHg at time of randomization). The study duration is 5 years and is scheduled to end in May of 1998. Patients are randomized to receive either intensive antihypertensive drug therapy or moderate antihypertensive drug therapy. Patients are also randomized to nisoldipine or enalapril, with open-label medications added if further blood pressure control is necessary. The primary outcome measure is glomerular filtration rate as assessed by 24-h creatinine clearance. Secondary outcome measures are urinary albumin excretion, left ventricular hypertrophy, retinopathy, and neuropathy. Cardiovascular morbidity and mortality will also be evaluated. Given the data showing the impact of hypertension on complications in NIDDM, the ABCD Trial is designed to determine if intensive antihypertensive therapy will be more efficacious than moderate antihypertensive therapy on the outcome of diabetic complications in NIDDM.  相似文献   

10.
Ambulatory 24-h blood pressure monitoring was conducted in 135 healthy, normotensive, middle-aged (35 to 60 years) men, with no antihypertensive medication, to study the influence of habitual smokeless tobacco use (n = 47) and smoking (n = 29) on diurnal blood pressure and heart rate. Comparisons were made with nonusers of tobacco (n = 59). Adjustments were made for differences in age, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, physical fitness, and alcohol intake. Daytime ambulatory heart rates were significantly (P < .05) elevated in both smokeless tobacco users and smokers compared with nonusers (69 +/- 14 and 74 +/- 13 beats/min, respectively, versus 63 +/- 12 beats/min). In subjects > or = 45 years old, ambulatory daytime diastolic blood pressures were significantly elevated, on average by 5 mm Hg, in both smokeless tobacco users and smokers (P < .001) compared with nonusers. Clinical measurements of heart rate and systolic blood pressure in smokers were significantly lower compared with the ambulatory mean values. Nighttime measurements showed only minor differences between the tobacco habit groups. The higher heart rates and blood pressures noted during the daytime in smokers and smokeless tobacco users were most likely due to the effects of nicotine. A strong positive relationship was found between cotinine (major nicotine metabolite) and blood pressure in smokeless tobacco users (systolic blood pressure, r = 0.48, P < .001; diastolic blood pressure, r = 0.41, P = .005), whereas an inverse relationship was found in smokers (systolic blood pressure, r = -0.12, P = .47; diastolic blood pressure, r = -0.03, P = .84), indicating additional and more complex influences on vascular tone in smokers than the influence of nicotine in smokeless tobacco users.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of our study was to access the 24-hr ambulatory blood pressure (BP) in diabetic patients with autonomic neuropathy (AN). Twenty-two NIDDM patients without hypertension, being treated with sulfonylureas, were studied. The 24-hr ambulatory blood pressure recordings were performed using portable non-invasive automatic system. Autonomic neuropathy was assessed by standard cardiovascular reflex tests. There were ten patients with and 12 without AN, matched for age, body mass index, duration of diabetes and glycemic control. Mean BP increased at night in four of the subjects with AN and decreased in the remaining 18 patients. The group of subjects with nocturnal increases in BP had more severe autonomic nerve dysfunction compared with those with decreases in nocturnal BP. No significant difference between clinical and ambulatory day-time measurements was found. In three patients with AN after 5 weeks intensified therapy. 24-hr BP did not show any significant difference.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of a single oral dose of indomethacin (1 mg kg-1) metoprolol (1.5 mg kg-1) and placebo on exercise-induced albumin excretion rate (AER) were compared in a randomized, crossover design in 14 normotensive, young Type 1 diabetes patients, nine of them with microalbuminuria (AER > 15 micrograms min-1) and five without microalbuminuria at rest. The albumin excretion rate, blood pressure, heart rate, blood glucose, and plasma concentrations of indomethacin and metoprolol were determined before and after 30 min submaximal physical exercise. In microalbuminuric patients the rise in albumin excretion rate after exercise on indomethacin (7 micrograms min-1) was lower than after placebo (29 micrograms min-1, p < 0.001) whereas the rise in albumin excretion rate with metoprolol during exercise (18 micrograms min-1) did not differ from placebo (p = 0.48), in spite of the expected less marked increase in blood pressure. In normoalbuminuric patients no significant increase in albumin excretion rate was noted by exercise in any of the treatment periods. A tendency to a linear correlation (r = -0.54, p = 0.07) was seen between the plasma concentration of indomethacin and the inhibition of exercise-induced increase in albumin excretion rate. No correlations were observed between exercise-induced changes in albumin excretion rate and systolic blood pressure, heart rate or blood glucose. In conclusion, acute indomethacin treatment, presumably through inhibition of renal prostaglandin synthesis, reduces the exercise-induced rise in albumin excretion rate in Type 1 diabetic patients with microalbuminuria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
To assess the physiologic response to daily life stress in patients with craniomandibular disorders (CMD), office and ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate were studied in 25 female patients and 25 controls. Significant differences (p < 0.05) were found between the groups for heart rate before the clinical examination and that in the patient group when compared before and after the clinical examination. Higher values were found for mean daytime systolic and diastolic blood pressure in the control group compared with the patient group (p < 0.05). The mean number of systolic blood pressure > or = 140 mmHg during 24 h and daytime was significantly higher (p < 0.05) in the control group than in the patient group. In this study the CMD patients with muscular diagnosis were not more stressed than healthy subjects in the daily activities as evaluated by ambulatory blood pressure measurements.  相似文献   

14.
Patients with autonomic neuropathy are more susceptible to insulin-induced hypotension than normal subjects, but the mechanisms are unclear. We quantitated the hemodynamic and metabolic effects of two doses of i.v. insulin (1 and 5 mU/kg.min, 120 min each) and several aspects of autonomic function in 28 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and in 7 matched normal subjects under standardized normoglycemic conditions. The autonomic function tests included those predominantly assessing the integrity of vagal heart rate control (the expiration inspiration ratio during deep breathing and high frequency power of heart rate variability) and tests measuring sympathetic nervous function (reflex vasoconstriction to cold and blood pressure responses to standing and handgrip). During hyperinsulinemia, heart rate increased less (2 +/- 1 vs. 6 +/- 2 beats/min; P < 0.04) and diastolic blood pressure fell more (-3.1 +/- 1.2 vs. 0.9 +/- 2.1; P = NS) in the patients with IDDM than in the normal subjects. Forearm vascular resistance decreased significantly in the patients with IDDM [by -7.1 +/- 1.4 mm Hg/(mL/dL.min); P < 0.001 for high vs. low dose insulin], but not in the normal subjects (-0.1 +/- 2.5 mm Hg/(mL/dL.min; P = NS). Reflex vasoconstriction to cold was inversely correlated with the decreases in diastolic (r = -0.51; P < 0.005) and systolic (r = -0.59; P < 0.001) blood pressure and forearm vascular resistance (r = -0.53; P < 0.005), but not with the change in heart rate. The expiration inspiration ratio was, however, directly correlated with the insulin-induced change in heart rate (r = 0.63; P < 0.001), but not with diastolic or systolic blood pressure or forearm vascular resistance. Whole body (48 +/- 2 vs. 67 +/- 5 mumol/kg.min; P < 0.005) and forearm (44 +/- 4 vs. 67 +/- 8 mumol/kg.min; P < 0.05) glucose uptake were significantly lower in the IDDM patients than in the normal subjects. The latter could be attributed to a defect in the forearm glucose arterio-venous difference (1.5 +/- 0.1 vs. 2.2 +/- 0.2 mmol/L, respectively; P < 0.01), but not in blood flow. We conclude that both impaired vagal heart rate control and sympathetic nervous dysfunction exaggerate the hemodynamic effects of insulin in patients with IDDM and could contribute to insulin-induced hypotension.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: Clinic blood pressure values are known to change according to seasonal influences. We therefore examined home and 24 h ambulatory blood pressure values to determine whether these measurements are also affected by the seasons. DESIGN AND METHODS: In 2051 subjects of the Pressione Arteriose Monitorate E Loro Associazioni (PAMELA) study, we measured clinic (sphygmomanometric measurements), home (semi-automatic device) and ambulatory (Spacelabs 90207) systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure and heart rate. Because the overall sample was evenly distributed over each month (except August), we were able to make a cross-sectional determination of whether the values differed between seasons. The corresponding heart rates were also evaluated. RESULTS: As expected, summer was associated with the lowest clinic blood pressure and winter with the highest, and this was the case also for home and 24 h average blood pressure, although seasonal differences in the latter were less pronounced. Seasonal clinic, home and ambulatory blood pressure patterns were similar for normotensive subjects (n = 1152), untreated hypertensives (n = 540) and treated hypertensives (n = 359). Heart rate values did not differ by season. CONCLUSIONS: Seasonal influences on blood pressure are not limited to conventional measurements but characterize daily values as well. These effects are visible in both normal and elevated blood pressure values, regardless of the effect of antihypertensive drugs. This has implications both for the clinician and for studies aimed at evaluating the effects of antihypertensive treatment.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to investigate to what extent the existence of objective signs of diabetic autonomic neuropathy affects the corrected QT interval (QTc) in diabetic subjects. A total of 105 diabetic subjects (type 1, n = 53; type 2, n = 52) as well as 40 matched (by age and sex) control subjects were studied. All subjects underwent the battery of five Ewing tests. Autonomic neuropathy was diagnosed if two of the five tests were abnormal. In addition, the result of each test was considered as normal (grade = 0), borderline (grade = 1) or abnormal (grade = 2), and on the basis of the sum of the scores we calculated a total score for autonomic neuropathy. The QTc interval was measured at rest, and a value > 440 ms was considered abnormal. The QTc interval was significantly more prolonged in diabetic persons with autonomic neuropathy than in those without neutopathy and in control subjects: 408.4 +/- 24.2 ms vs. 394.6 +/- 27.9 ms and 393.6 +/- 25.5 ms respectively (P = 0.001). Furthermore, multivariate analysis controlling for age, sex, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, body mass index (BMI), waist-hip ratio (WHR), smoking, type and duration of diabetes, type of treatment, HBA1c and total score of autonomic neuropathy eliminated the role of all these factors as potential confounders except for the total score of autonomic neuropathy, which was found to affect QTc interval independently and significantly (P = 0.012). In summary, the present study confirmed the well-known relation between autonomic neuropathy and QTc interval; in addition, it showed that QTc prolongation is associated with major degrees of autonomic neuropathy.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the presence of cardiovascular autonomic nerve dysfunction in children and adolescents with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. METHODOLOGY: We studied 110 patients (54 male, 56 female) and 100 healthy sex and age-matched children. Autonomic nerve function was assessed by standard cardiovascular reflex tests: (1) Fall in systolic blood pressure in response to standing. (2) Heart rate in response to standing. (3) Beat-to-beat rate variation during deep breathing. (4) Quotient of heart rate during and after Valsalva manoeuvre. (5) Change in blood pressure response to sustained handgrip. The coefficient of variation of heart rate was determined from 150 systoles using a microcomputer-based technique. The lower limits of normal were defined according to statistical analysis taking into account the relationship between heart rate variability and age. RESULTS: Forty-seven of the 110 diabetic children and adolescents studied showed one or more abnormal tests for cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction; many patients had an abnormality in more than one test. Twenty-two patients showed early involvement, 18 patients had definite and 7 severe involvement. No correlation was found between sex, glycaemic control, duration of diabetes or presence of retinopathy and persistent microalbuminuria and the autonomic nerve function. CONCLUSIONS: In the paediatric age group also, autonomic nerve dysfunction can be present in asymptomatic diabetic patients. Heart rate variation during Valsalva manoeuvre and maximum/minimum 30:15 ratio are the most sensitive indices to detect autonomic abnormalities in children.  相似文献   

18.
The efficacy and safety of daily 20 mg betaxolol monotherapy was investigated in mild-moderate essential hypertension in a four week long, open label, single blind trial (with a placebo run-in). Twenty one patients of both sexes were enrolled. The systolic blood pressure in the supine position decreased from 158 to 142 mmHg, the diastolic blood pressure from 101 to 89 mmHg. The mean systolic values of the 24 hours ambulatory blood pressure monitoring decreased from 136 to 126 mmHg, the mean diastolic values from 87 to 80 mmHg. All decreases in blood pressure were significant. The reduction of the heart rate (80/min vs 63/min) was also significant. The decrease in blood pressure during daytime was significant, during night it was moderate. The blood pressure- and heart rate reducing effect of betaxolol was detectable however in the second half of the night, before wake-up. No side effect was recorded.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: The incidence of diabetic nephropathy in type 2 diabetes differs widely by race. Although clinical proteinuria is reportedly more common in East Asian type 2 diabetic patients than in their Caucasian counterparts, data on the incidence of microalbuminuria are not available. This study was undertaken to investigate the incidence and the determinants of microalbuminuria in Korean type 2 diabetic patients. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A cohort of 188 Korean type 2 diabetic patients with initial normoalbuminuria were followed prospectively for 5.5 +/- 0.9 years in an outpatient clinic of a university hospital. The incidence of elevated urinary albumin excretion (UAE) (> 20 micrograms/min) and its relationship with baseline characteristics and follow-up data were determined. RESULTS: Of the 146 patients who finished the study, 37 showed persistently elevated UAE during follow-up, giving an incidence of 52/1,000 person-years. Age, duration of diabetes, and baseline UAE were significantly higher in the progressors than in the nonprogressors. More patients in the progressor group had retinopathy at baseline and at the end of follow-up. The mean values of fasting plasma glucose, HbA1, and systolic and diastolic blood pressure during the follow-up period were significantly higher in the progressors than in the nonprogressors. Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed that presence of retinopathy, duration of diabetes, mean fasting plasma glucose, and mean systolic blood pressure during follow-up are independent variables that have a statistically significant influence on the development of microalbuminuria. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of microalbuminuria in Korean type 2 diabetic patients is lower than that reported in Pima Indians with type 2 diabetes but is as high as that in Caucasians with type 1 diabetes. Presence of diabetic retinopathy, poor glycemic control, and high blood pressure are risk factors for development of microalbuminuria in Koreans with type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   

20.
We aimed to determine the natural history of borderline increases in albuminuria in adolescents with insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and factors which are associated with progression to persistent microalbuminura. Fifty-five normotensive adolescents with IDDM and intermittent microalbuminura (overnight albumin excretion ratte of 20-200 micrograms min-1 on one of three consecutive timed collections, n = 29) or borderline albuminura (mean overnight albumin excretion rate of 7.2-20 micrograms min-1 on one of three consecutive timed collections, n = 30) were followed prospectively at 3 monthly intervals. The endpoint was persistent microalbuminuria defined as a minimum of three of four consecutive overnight albumin excretion rates of greater than 20 micrograms min-1. One hundred and forty-two adolescents with IDDM and normoalbuminura were also followed prospectively. Fifteen of the 59 patients (25.4%) with intermittent (9/29) or borderline (6/30) albuminura progressed to persistent microalbuminura (progressors) over 28 (15-50) months [median (range)] in comparison with two of the 142 patients with normoalbuminuria at entry (relative risk = 12.6; p = 0.001). Progressors to persistent microalbuminura were pubertal and had higher systolic (p = 0.02) and diastolic (p = 0.02) blood pressure, and HbA1c (p = 0.004) than non-progressors. All patients remained normotensive. Glomerular filtration rate, apolipoproteins, dietary phosphorus, protein and sodium intakes, and prevalence of smoking did not differ between progressors and non-progressors. Total renin was higher in the diabetic patients without a difference between progressors and non-progressors. In conclusion there is a relatively high rate of progression to persistent microalbuminuria in pubertal adolescents with borderline increases in albuminura and duration greater than 3 years. These patients require attention to minimize associated factors of poor metabolic control and higher blood pressure in the development of incipient nephropathy.  相似文献   

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