Glucose: a Continuous Risk Factor for Cardiovascular Disease
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Wiley in Diabetic Medicine
- Vol. 14 (S3) , S25-S31
- https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9136(199708)14:3+<s25::aid-dia441>3.3.co;2-t
Abstract
The glucose level that defines diabetes mellitus is that level above which patients have a high risk of eye, kidney, and neuronal disease. The risk of these complications rises as glucose levels increase, and decreases as therapy brings the glucose level down. Thus, in patients with diabetes, glucose is a continuous, modifiable risk factor for eye, kidney and peripheral nerve disease. Plasma glucose concentrations in the diabetic range are also a continuous risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Moreover, epidemiological evidence shows that the relationship between plasma glucose concentration and CVD extends well below the glucose level defined for diabetes and even impaired glucose tolerance. This continuous relationship between glucose and CVD exists in all people, not just in those with a defined metabolic disease, and is therefore similar to the relationship between cholesterol or blood pressure and CVD. It may be secondary to either a direct effect of elevated glucose or to some underlying metabolic abnormality that raises both glucose and cardiovascular risk. Whether interventions that lower glucose will also lower the risk of CVD is still unknown; the results of clinical trials are awaited. (C) 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Feasibility of Intensive Insulin Management in Non-Insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus: Implications of the Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study on Glycemic Control and Complications in NIDDMAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study 17: A 9-Year Update of a Randomized, Controlled Trial on the Effect of Improved Metabolic Control on Complications in Non-Insulin-dependent Diabetes MellitusAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- Do Non-Insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus and Cardiovascular Disease Share Common Antecedents?Annals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- Exogenous Insulin Administration and Cardiovascular Risk in Non-Insulin-dependent and Insulin-dependent Diabetes MellitusAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- Mortality from coronary heart disease and stroke in relation to degree of glycaemia: the Whitehall study.BMJ, 1983
- CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE RISK AND IMPAIRED GLUCOSE TOLERANCE The Whitehall StudyThe Lancet, 1980
- Diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The Framingham studyJAMA, 1979
- Asymptomatic hyperglycemia and coronary heart disease in middle-aged men in two employed populations in ChicagoJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1979
- Glucose tolerance and coronary heart disease: Helsinki Policemen StudyJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1979
- Differences in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality between previously known and newly diagnosed adult diabeticsDiabetologia, 1977