Diabetes
-
Comparative Study
Impairment of cerebrovascular reactivity in long-term type 1 diabetes.
The early preclinical detection of cerebrovascular complications in individuals with diabetes is one of the goals of care described in the St. Vincent Declaration. In accordance with this goal, the aim of the present work was to investigate whether altered cerebral microvascular function in patients suffering from type 1 diabetes can be detected with a transcranial Doppler probe after the administration of acetazolamide. ⋯ Transcranial Doppler measurements of the changes in MCAV after stimulation with acetazolamide can detect altered cerebral microvascular function in patients with diabetes. Cerebrovascular reactivity and reserve capacity are reduced in patients with long-term diabetes. Further prospective studies should delineate the clinical significance of our results.
-
We investigated familial clustering of diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy in the families of 372 subjects from the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT). These subjects had 467 first-degree relatives with IDDM or NIDDM. Family sizes ranged from two to six. ⋯ None of these correlations is statistically significant. The lack of significant correlation for the severity of nephropathy may reflect the relatively short duration of diabetes in the offspring of these families and the known high intrasubject variability of AERs. These data provide the first available evidence that the severity of diabetic retinopathy is influenced by familial (possibly genetic) factors and confirmatory evidence that such factors influence the development