Abstract

Early detection of microangiopathic complications of diabetes mellitus (DM) is necessary to analyze the patient's condition and prevent disease progression. The study was aimed to investigate the relationship between the presence of retinopathy and decreased reactivity of the microcirculatory bed in patients with diabetes. The study involved 130 subjects: healthy volunteers (n=48), DM patients without retinopathy (n=53) and with retinopathy (n=29). Skin microvascular reactivity was assessed on the forearm using laser Doppler flowmetry with a local heating test combined with occlusion. The slope of local thermal hyperemia curve (Slope-120) and other parameters of microvascular reactivity showed difference in pairwise comparisons between the groups. Slope-120 had the highest sensitivity (0.759) and specificity (0.717) in detection of diabetic retinopathy. The decrease of Slope-120 was associated with retinopathy (odds ratio (OR) - 8.3 (2.9-24.1), p<0.001), even after adjusting for other factors (OR - 11.0 (1.6-77.2), p=0.016). Thus, assessment of skin microvascular reactivity may be a useful test for detecting signs of microangiopathic complications and for screening patients in risk group. Decreased microvascular reactivity has been shown to be prospective as an independent indicator of retinopathy in type 1 DM.

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