Abstract

In patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) imaging studies have demonstrated an increased prevalence of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and increased left ventricular mass (LVM) unrelated to arterial hypertension and ischemic heart disease. The aim of our study was to identify potential predictors of early subclinical changes in cardiac chamber size and function in such patients. Sixty-one middle-aged asymptomatic normotensive patients with T1DM were included in the study. Conventional and tissue Doppler echocardiography was performed and fasting serum levels of glucose, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), lipids, and creatinine were measured. We found moderate bivariate correlations of body mass index (BMI) with left atrial volume (r = 0.47, p < 0.01), LVM (r = 0.42, p < 0.01), left ventricular relative wall thickness (r = 0.32, p = 0.01), and all observed parameters of diastolic function of both ventricles. The five-year average value of HbA1c weakly correlated with the Doppler index of left ventricular filling pressure E/e´sept (r = 0.27, p = 0.04). We found no significant association of diabetes duration, five-year trend of HbA1c, serum lipids, and glomerular filtration rate with cardiac structure and function. After adjusting for other parameters, BMI remained significantly associated with left atrial volume, LVM as well as with the transmitral Doppler ratio E/A. In our study, BMI was the only observed parameter significantly associated with subclinical structural and functional cardiac changes in the asymptomatic middle-aged patients with T1DM.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus has been increasingly recognized as an important risk factor for heart failure unrelated to arterial hypertension, ischemic, and valvular heart disease [1,2]

  • We showed that even asymptomatic middle-aged adults with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) have some structural and functional changes in both ventricles compared to the age- and gender-matched healthy controls [10]

  • Less myocardial hypertrophy in T1DM compared with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) might be at least partly explained by the reduced insulin secretion capacity in T1DM, since insulin stimulates growth and hypertrophy of myocardial cells [20]

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus has been increasingly recognized as an important risk factor for heart failure unrelated to arterial hypertension, ischemic, and valvular heart disease [1,2]. Only limited data exist on the contribution of diabetes

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