Reduced reactive hyperemia of the brachial artery in diabetic patients assessed by repeated measurements: The FMD‐J B study

Author:

Masaki Nobuyuki1ORCID,Adachi Takeshi2ORCID,Tomiyama Hirofumi3,Kohro Takahide4,Suzuki Toru5,Ishizu Tomoko6,Ueda Shinichiro7,Yamazaki Tsutomu8,Furumoto Tomoo9,Kario Kazuomi10,Inoue Teruo11,Koba Shinji12,Takemoto Yasuhiko13,Hano Takuzo14,Sata Masataka15,Ishibashi Yutaka16,Node Koichi17,Maemura Koji18,Ohya Yusuke19,Furukawa Taiji20,Ito Hiroshi21,Higashi Yukihito22,Yamashina Akira3,Takase Bonpei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Intensive Care Medicine National Defense Medical College Tokorozawa Japan

2. Department of Cardiology National Defense Medical College Tokorozawa Japan

3. Department of Cardiology Tokyo Medical University Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Hospital Planning and Management, Medical Informatics Jichi Medical University School of Medicine Tochigi Japan

5. Cardiovascular Medicine University of Leicester Leicester UK

6. Cardiovascular Division Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tsukuba Ibaraki Japan

7. Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics University of the Ryukyu School of Medicine Okinawa Japan

8. Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Systems, Faculty of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

9. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine Sapporo Japan

10. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Jichi Medical University School of Medicine Tochigi Japan

11. Dokkyo Medical University; Nasu Red Cross Hospital Tochigi Japan

12. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology Showa University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

13. Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine Osaka Japan

14. Department of Medical Education and Population‐based Medicine, Postgraduate School of Medicine Wakayama Medical University Wakayama Japan

15. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Institute of Health Biosciences, The University of Tokushima Graduate School Tokushima Japan

16. Department of General Medicine Shimane University Faculty of Medicine Shimane Japan

17. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Saga University Saga Japan

18. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Course of Medical and Dental Sciences, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Nagasaki University Nagasaki Japan

19. The Third Department of Internal Medicine University of the Ryukyus Okinawa Japan

20. Department of Internal Medicine Teikyo University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

21. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences Okayama Japan

22. Department of Regenerative Medicine Research Institute for Radiation Biology and Medicine, Hiroshima University Hiroshima Japan

Abstract

AbstractType 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.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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