Summary
Present cross-sectional clinical study was aimed at the evaluation the prevalence
of cardiovascular risk factors in Type 2-diabetics suffering from different clinical
manifestations of diabetic foot lesions due to peripheral vascular disease and/or
diabetic neuropathy.
1025 non-insulin-dependent (Type 2) diabetics (NIDDM) of both sexes were investigated.
Patients were classified in Type II diabetes without peripheral vascular disease and
foot lesions (group 0, controls), with macroangiopathic related foot lesions (group
2), with neuropathic foot lesions (group 3), and with mixed neuropathic-ischemic foot
lesions (group 4).
Apart from urinary albumin excretion rate (UAE), the following micro- and macroangiopathic
risk factors and diseases were taken into account: Hypertension, degree of metabolic
control (HbA1c), lipid concentrations, duration of diabetes, retinopathy, clinical nephropathy.
Results: In the total population the UAE was significantly (p < 0.01) correlated with
duration of diabetes, serum creatinine, hypertension, age, lipid concentrations, HbA1c and insulin requirement. In comparison to Type II diabetic patients without peripheral
vascular disease (group 0) and with neuropathic foot lesions (group 3), subjects with
ischemic (group 2) and mixed neuropathic-ischemic foot lesions demonstrated an increased
prevalence of pathological UAE, which was associated with a higher frequency of clinical
nephropathy, retinopathy, an older age and longer duration of diabetes. It is concluded
that microalbuminuria in Type 2 diabetes reflects both the existence of diabetic nephropathy
and peripheral vascular disease which is often associated with the insulin resistance
syndrom.
Key words
Type 2-diabetes - age at diabetes onset - ischemic foot lesions - neuropathic ulceration
- urinary albumin excretion - diabetic nephropathy - retinopathy