Volume 1, Issue 3 , Pages 208-215, May 2007
Endothelial perturbation: a link between non-dipping and retinopathy in type 2 diabetes?
Abstract
Reduced diurnal blood pressure (BP) variation (“non-dipping”) is associated with both micro- and macrovascular complications in patients with type 2 diabetes. The relation between endothelial perturbation and diurnal BP variation in diabetic subjects has not previously been studied. Seventy-six subjects, stratified to 4 gender-, age-, and duration-matched groups of 19 subjects each, were studied (group A: non-diabetic subjects; group B to D, type 2 diabetic subjects; group B: no retinopathy; group C: minimal background retinopathy; group D: diabetic maculopathy). All subjects underwent a 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring. von Willebrand factor (vWF), fibrinogen, E-selectin, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 were measured in plasma. Systolic night/day BP ratio increased gradually in groups A to D: 85.2 ± 5%, 85.7 ± 7%, 88.5 ± 6%, and 90.5 ± 7%, respectively, P < .05. Among diabetic patients, non-dippers had significantly higher plasma levels of vWF and fibrinogen than dippers (median/interquartile range 1.7/1.4 to 2.1 vs. 1.2/0.9 to 1.5 U/mL, P < .01 and 3.6/3.6 to 3.7 vs. 2.9/2.5 to 3.6 g/L, P = .01). Non-dipping is associated with elevated plasma levels of proteins related to endothelial cell activation as well as with retinopathy in subjects with type 2 diabetes. This finding suggests a possible mechanism linking non-dipping with microvascular complications in these subjects.
Keywords: Ambulatory blood pressure, nephropathy, cell adhesion molecules, endothelial dysfunction
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Conflict of interest: none.This study was supported by The Sehested Hansen Foundation, Gårdejer af Stenløse Peder Laurits Petersens Legat, The Beckett Foundation, The Jochum Jensen Memorial Grant, The Velux Foundation, and The Danish Diabetes Association. The authors would like to thank Merete Møller and Kirsten Christiansen for their excellent technical assistance.
PII: S1933-1711(07)00060-5
doi:10.1016/j.jash.2007.02.006
© 2007 American Society of Hypertension. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 1, Issue 3 , Pages 208-215, May 2007
