Abstract
The present study aimed to evaluate the frequency of silent cerebral small-vessel disease, especially lacunes and white matter hyperintensities, in patients with or without the impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and type-2 diabetes mellitus, and to characterize the diabetes-correlated factors related to silent cerebral small-vessel disease. This is a retrospective cross-sectional study. Totally 698 patients were included in this study, from January 2014 to December 2019, among which 270 patients were included in the diabetes mellitus group, 106 patients were included in the IGT group, and 322 patients were included in the Control group. All patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging to investigate the silent cerebral small-vessel disease: the lacunes and the white matter hyperintensities. All the baseline information and diabetes-related factors, such as glycated hemoglobin level, insulin usage, etc., were collected. Then correlation analysis and regression analysis were used to explore the correlation between diabetes with related risk factors and silent cerebral small-vessel disease. Lacunes and white matter hyperintensities were more common in the diabetes mellitus group than in the IGT group and the Control group, with an occurrence of lacunes of 83.3% vs. 70.8% vs. 70.4% (P=0.003), respectively, and an occurrence of white matter hyperintensities of 41.1% vs. 24.5% vs. 31.1% (P=0.003), respectively. The occurrence of lacunes was correlated with the duration of diabetes mellitus [odds ratio (OR) =1.483, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.082-2.031, P=0.009] and the age (OR =1.141, 95% CI: 1.102-1.180, P<0.001), while white matter hyperintensities were independently correlated only with the age (OR =1.124, 95% CI: 1.094-1.155, P<0.001). Lacunes and white matter hyperintensities, are more common in the diabetes mellitus patients than in the IGT patients or in the other patients. The occurrence of lacunes was correlated with the duration of diabetes mellitus and the age, while the occurrence of white matter hyperintensities was independently correlated with the age.
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