Abstract

The correlation between diabetic retinopathy and blood pressure was analyzed in 742 type II diabetic patients. Systolic and pulse blood pressures were significantly higher in the patients with retinopathy than in those without (mean systolic pressure 142 vs. 139 mmHg, P less than .01; mean pulse pressure 60.5 vs. 56.4 mmHg, P less than .001). There was no difference in the diastolic blood pressure between these two groups. The correlation between blood pressure and the components of retinopathy (including microaneurysms, hemorrhages, and exudates) was also analyzed. Even when the patient with microaneurysms or dot hemorrhages, blot hemorrhages, or hard or soft exudates were separately evaluated, systolic and pulse blood pressures were higher in those with one of these diabetic changes than in patients without them. To avoid the influence of nephropathy, the patients were divided into nonproteinuric or proteinuric groups. In the nonproteinuric group, pulse blood pressure was higher in patients with retinopathy than in those without. In the proteinuric group, systolic blood pressure was also higher in patients with retinopathy than in those without. However, these observed differences in blood pressure were slight after the division of the patients. With respect to the components of retinopathy, systolic and pulse blood pressures were significantly higher in the patient with blot hemorrhages than in those without in both nonproteinuric and proteinuric groups (nonproteinuric: systolic pressure 142 vs. 137 mmHg, P less than .005, and pulse pressure 60.4 vs. 55.5 mmHg, P less than .001; proteinuric: systolic pressure 155 vs. 146 mmHg, P less than 0.01, and pulse pressure 69.0 vs. 63.5 mmHg, P less than .05).

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