Abstract
Although acute hyperglycemia and insulin resistance (IR) are risk factors for atherosclerosis development through oxidative stress and sympathetic activation in diabetes mellitus, the association of these factors with coronary microvascular function in the early diabetic stage remains controversial.Methods and Results: Using transthoracic echocardiography, coronary flow velocity (CFV) and its reserve (CFVR) as parameters of coronary microvascular function were measured before and 1 h after an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in 40 patients (aged 59±12 years) without diagnosed diabetes mellitus or coronary artery disease. Plasma glucose, insulin and thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS; an oxidative stress marker) were measured during the OGTT. IR was evaluated as homeostasis model assessment of IR (HOMA-R). Sympathetic activity was evaluated by using plasma catecholamines after OGTT. CFVR decreased after an OGTT (P<0.0001) mainly because of an increased baseline CFV (P<0.0001). Although the change in CFVR was not associated with the change in TBARS and catecholamines, it was independently associated with HOMA-R on the multivariate regression analysis (β=-0.40, P=0.01). Another multivariate regression analysis revealed that change in baseline CFV was independently associated with HOMA-R (β=0.35, P=0.03). IR, rather than oxidative stress and sympathetic activity, was associated with an increase in baseline CFV and a decline in CFVR during acute hyperglycemia. IR might play an important role in increased myocardial oxygen demand and coronary microvascular dysfunction.
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