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ID 118556
Author
Masaki, Nobuyuki National Defense Medical College
Adachi, Takeshi National Defense Medical College
Tomiyama, Hirofumi Tokyo Medical University
Kohro, Takahide Jichi Medical University
Suzuki, Toru University of Leicester
Ishizu, Tomoko University of Tsukuba
Ueda, Shinichiro University of the Ryukyu
Yamazaki, Tsutomu The University of Tokyo
Furumoto, Tomoo Hokkaido University
Kario, Kazuomi Jichi Medical University
Inoue, Teruo Dokkyo Medical University|Nasu Red Cross Hospital
Koba, Shinji Showa University
Takemoto, Yasuhiko Osaka City University
Hano, Takuzo Wakayama Medical University
Ishibashi, Yutaka Shimane University
Node, Koichi Saga University
Maemura, Koji Nagasaki University
Ohya, Yusuke University of the Ryukyus
Furukawa, Taiji Teikyo University
Ito, Hiroshi Okayama University
Higashi, Yukihito Hiroshima University
Yamashina, Akira Tokyo Medical University
Takase, Bonpei National Defense Medical College
Keywords
clinical study
diabetes mellitus
endothelial function
hyperglycemia
reactive hyperemia
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a major cause of microvascular dysfunction. However, its effect on blood flow patterns during ischemic demand has not been adequately elucidated. In this study, we investigated the hypothesis that microvascular dysfunction in patients with T2DM manifests as brachial reactive hyperemia (BRH), defined as the ratio of peak blood flow velocities in a brachial artery before and after forearm cuff occlusion. The study enrolled 943 subjects (men, n = 152 [T2DM] and n = 371 [non-T2DM]; women, n = 107 [T2DM] and n = 313 [non-T2DM], respectively) with no history of cardiovascular disease. Semiautomatic measurements were obtained three times at 1.5-year intervals to confirm the reproducibility of factors involved in BRH for each sex. An age-adjusted mixed model demonstrated attenuated BRH in the presence of T2DM in both men (p = 0.022) and women (p = 0.031) throughout the study period. Post hoc analysis showed that the estimated BRH was significantly attenuated in patients with T2DM regardless of sex, except at baseline in women. In multivariate regression analysis, T2DM was a negative predictor of BRH at every measurement in men. For women, BRH was more strongly associated with alcohol consumption. Repeated measurements analysis revealed that T2DM was associated with attenuated postocclusion reactive hyperemia.
Journal Title
Physiological Reports
ISSN
2051817X
Publisher
Wiley|The Physiological Society|The American Physiological Society
Volume
11
Issue
16
Start Page
e15786
Published Date
2023-08-22
Rights
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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language
eng
TextVersion
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departments
Medical Sciences