Abstract

Ten patients with adult-onset diabetes in whom diabetes antedated the appearance of hypertension were evaluated. These patients had evidence of diabetic autonomic neuropathy, including significant orthostatic hypotension (four patients), impotence (three patients), and evidence of diabetic peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy (nine patients) in clinical testing and nerve conduction study results. Baroreflex function was evaluated by multiple hemodynamic tests, including inhalation of amyl nitrite and intravenous administration of phenylephrine, before and after parasympathetic blockade with atropine, and the cold presser test; results were compared with results in normal control subjects, patients with essential hypertension, and two subgroups of uremie patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. Baroreflex function was significantly abnormal in the diabetic patients and was consistent with combined parasympathetic and sympathetic motor nerve (efferent) dysfunction in the baroreflex arc. There was a significant inverse correlation between the degree of orthostatic hypotension in the diabetic patients and their baroreflex responsc to phenylephrine (r = −0.680, p < 0.05). There was no significant correlation between supine hypertension in the patients with diabetes and any of the hemodynamic or biochemical parameters examined. The results suggest that orthostatic hypotension in these patients is related to baroreflex dysfunction. However, baroreflex dysfunction does not appear to be a factor in the development of hypertension in these patients, although more studies with normotensive diabetic patients are needed to confirm this point.

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