Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Diabetes Care. 2005 Jan;28(1):95-100.

    A prognostic role of mean 24-h pulse pressure level for cardiovascular events in type 2 diabetic subjects under 60 years of age.

    Nakano S, Konishi K, Furuya K, Uehara K, Nishizawa M, Nakagawa A, Kigoshi T, Uchida K.

    Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Kanazawa Medical University, Uchinada, Ishikawa, Japan. nakano-s@kanazawa-med.ac.jp

    OBJECTIVE: To assess the prognostic role of ambulatory 24-h pulse pressure (PP) on various vascular events in relatively young type 2 diabetic subjects under 60 years of age. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: In this prospective study, 237 type 2 diabetic subjects without any history of vascular complications were analyzed. After excluding 9 dropout subjects, 228 subjects (mean age, 46 years; 69% men; mean follow-up period, 100 months) entered the study. RESULTS: Distribution of 24-h PP for all subjects showed left skewed data, indicating that there may be a diabetic subgroup that had a wide PP. Therefore, further analysis was performed by stratifying the diabetic subjects by quartile of 24-h PP. Outcomes for the widest quartile (n = 58; cut point = 53.3 mmHg) was then compared with those from the other narrower quartiles (n = 170). In the diabetic subjects with a wide PP, cardiovascular events occurred more frequently than those in the diabetic subjects with a narrow one (20.7 vs. 4.1%; P < 0.001), resulting in the significant difference in the cumulative incidence of cardiovascular events (P < 0.001, log-rank test), but not cerebrovascular events, between the two subgroups. The Cox model revealed that a wide 24-h PP at baseline independently predicted subsequent cardiovascular events but not cerebrovascular events. By contrast, only duration of diabetes was the risk factor for cerebrovascular events. CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that a wide 24-h PP is predictive for cardiovascular events in relatively young diabetic subjects.

    PMID: 15616240 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read