Cardiac consequences of diabetes mellitus
- 1 June 1995
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical Cardiology
- Vol. 18 (6) , 301-305
- https://doi.org/10.1002/clc.4960180604
Abstract
A variety of disciplines including noninvasive and invasive cardiac methodologies, as well as epidemiologic studies, have provided information that has altered our view on the relation of diabetes to cardiac disease. Instead of an exclusive focus on coronary artery disease, it is now recognized that heart muscle can be independently involved in diabetic patients. In diabetics without known cardiac disease, abnormalities of left ventricular mechanical function have been demonstrated in 40 to 50% of subjects, and it is primarily a diastolic phenomenon. Left ventricular hypertrophy may eventually appear in the absence of hypertension. The diastolic dysfunction appears related to interstitial collagen deposition, largely attributable to diminished degradation. The presence of even moderate obesity intensifies the abnormality. Reversibility of this process is not readily achieved with chronic insulin therapy. Experimental studies have indicated normalization of the collagen alteration by endurance training, begun relatively early in the disease process. General measures of management include the control of other cardiac risk factors and a reasonable program of physical activity. The high mortality during an initial acute myocardial infarction has been attributed to heart failure, which is managed as in nondiabetic patients. Recently, the early introduction of aspirin, thrombolysis, and beta‐adrenergic blockade has reduced mortality during the initial infarction. Chronic use of the latter agent over the subsequent years has also proven to be more beneficial in diabetic patients with acute myocardial infarction compared with nondiabetic patients.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of dietary myoinositol on myocardial vulnerability and norepinephrine release in a diabetic animal modelInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1993
- Myocardial inositol and sodium in diabetesInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1992
- Decreased myocardial 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine uptake is associated with disturbed left ventricular diastolic filling in diabetesAmerican Heart Journal, 1992
- Echocardiographic evidence for the existence of a distinct diabetic cardiomyopathy (The Framingham Heart Study)The American Journal of Cardiology, 1991
- Myocardial mechanics in young adult patients with diabetes mellitus: Effects altered load, inotropic state and dynamic exerciseJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1990
- Left ventricular filling determined by Doppler echocardiography in diabetes mellitusThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1988
- Hypertension, antihypertensive treatment, and sudden coronary death. The Framingham Study.Hypertension, 1988
- Physical Activity, All-Cause Mortality, and Longevity of College AlumniNew England Journal of Medicine, 1986
- Primary myocardial disease. Correlation with clinical findings, angiographic and biopsy diagnosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1980
- Influence of Amyl Nitrite Inhalation on the Systolic Time Intervals in Normal Subjects and in Patients with Ischemic Heart DiseaseCirculation, 1969