Disputation & avhandling - Diabetes Meillitus
Augusti 1997
Kerstin Jensen-Urstad
Heart Rate Variability and Vascular Function in Healthy Subjects and in
Patients with Type 1 Diabetes mellitus
Fakultetsopponent: Professor peter Sleight, Oxford, England
Aulan Södersjukhuset, Stockholm fredagen den 22/8 kl 09.oo
ABSTRACT
The incidense of atherosclerosis parallels the decreasing function of the
autonmic nervous system. Both atherosclerosis and autonomic dysfunction are
common in patients with diabetes. Is there a link between the two?
Vascular dysfunction (early signs of atherosclerosis) was studied by
ultrasound methods and autonomic function by analyse of heart rate
variability (HRV). Patients with IDDM, at a high risk of atherosclerosis,
and healthy 35-year-old subjects randomly selected from a population
register were studied. The diabetic patients were from the SDIS (Stockholm
Diabetes Intervention Study). These patients were randomised to intensified
conventional insulin treatment (ICT) or standard treatment (ST)
approximately 12 years before the present studies were made. The ICT had
better glucose control as refleced in a lower mean HbA1c value in the
10-year study.
In patients with IDDM, signs of early atherosclerosis, such as arterial
wall stiffness and endothelial function, were correlated with the mean of
the 10-year HbA1c levels and, the patients with better glucose control has
less stiff arteries and better endothelial function. The ST group had
stiffer arteries than the ICT gruoup. The findings show that
atherosclerosis develops more slowly in patients with better blood glucose
control.
Patients with IDDM and better glucose control had a higher HRV. The ICT
group had better values in tests measuring parasympathetic function such as
the expiration/inspiration ratio. Subclinical autonomic neuropathy thus
develops more slowly in patients with better blood glucose control. As the
prognosis in patients with IDDM and autonomic dysfunction is poor, the
results probably mean that patients with better blood glucose control have
a better prognosis in the long run.
There were correlations between vasodilator capacity and smoking in
apparently healthy 35-year-old men and women. In women, vasodilator
capacity also correlated with conventional risk factors for cardiovascular
disease. Women with higher fasting blood glucose levels had higher resting
blood flows suggesting that blood glucose levels also within normal ranges
affects vascular function.
There was a correlation in healthy 35-year-old women, but not in men,
between autonomic function assessed as heart rate variability and
conventional risk factors for ischemic heart disease. In men, there was a
correlation between leucocyte count, an indicator of inflammation, which
has been described as an independent risk factor for ischaemic heart
disease, and heart rate variability.
In the diabetic patients, HRV was negatively correlated with the carotid
arterial wall stiffness. Arterial stiffness could be a factor affecting
baroreceptor function. If HRV is largely a measure of baroreceptor
function, a stiff arterial wall could lead to attenuated baroreceptor
function and a decrease in HRV. Low HRV could thus partly be a sign of more
advanced atherosclerotic disease or be due to dysfunction of the autonomic
nervous system, which affects blood flow and blood-pressure regulation,
which, in turn, could affect arterial stiffness. In the patients with IDDM
there was a correlation between early atherosclerosis and peripheral
autonomic neuropathy. The function for the autonomic nervous system could
be an important link between diabetes and vascular disease.
ISBN 91-628-6204-2.
Vid disputationen ...
Opponenten beskrev avhandlingen med orden
- quite outstanding work
- very good series of work
- a fantastic idea, a tremendous foresight to develop the thesis
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