This article originally posted 19 August, 2008 and appeared in Issue 430
Diabetes Linked to Accelerated Atherosclerotic Plaque Progression
Patients with coronary artery disease and diabetes exhibit more extensive atherosclerosis and inadequate compensatory remodeling of the arterial wall, compared to patients without diabetes, according to new published findings.
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"Patients with diabetes have a markedly increased incidence of adverse cardiovascular events and less favorable outcomes from myocardial infarction or after coronary interventions," write Dr. Stephen J. Nicholls and colleagues from the Cleveland Clinic, Ohio. The underlying mechanisms, however, have not been well characterized.
The team performed a systematic analysis of data on 2237 patients with coronary artery disease who underwent serial evaluation by intravascular ultrasound in various randomized controlled studies of atherosclerosis progression.
Results of multivariate analysis controlling for differences in risk factors demonstrated that patients with diabetes had a greater percent atheroma volume (PAV) (p < 0.0001) and total atheroma volume (TAV) (p = 0.03).
Glycated hemoglobin was more closely related to PAV and TAV than was fasting glucose, Dr. Nicholls and colleagues report, although the difference failed to meet statistical significance after controlling for study.
Diabetic subjects had smaller lumen volume than non-diabetic subjects (291.1 mm versus 306.5 mm, p = 0.005). However, there was no difference between the groups in external elastic membrane volume (494.9 mm versus 498.8 mm, p = 0.61).
Patients with diabetes exhibited more rapid progression of PAV (p = 0.0001) and TAV (p = 0.03) on multivariate analysis.
Diabetic patients treated with insulin had smaller external elastic membrane and lumen volumes. This resulted in a larger PAV in these subjects, despite the presence of a similar TAV.
The investigators note that intensive low-density lipoprotein cholesterol lowering in patients improved the rate of plaque progression -- but only to the level seen in nondiabetic subjects with suboptimal lipid control.
The findings "support the need to develop new antiatherosclerotic strategies in diabetic patients," Dr. Nicholls and colleagues conclude. J Am Coll Cardiol 2008;52:255-262.
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FACT:
Heart Disease Risk Soars 80% With Obesity And Diabetes: People who are both obese and have diabetes are highly likely to develop heart disease during their lifetime, a new study shows. Researchers found that of more than 3,400 adults in a long-running U.S. heart study, women who were obese and diabetic had a nearly 80 percent chance of developing heart disease at some point. For their male counterparts, that figure was nearly 90 percent. See This Weeks’ Item # 5
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