1. Cardiorespiratory arrest and diabetic autonomic neuropathy;MMcB, Page; PJ, Watkins;Lancet,1978
2. Cardiorespiratory arrest in diabetes. resulting from hypoxia may also stimulate the baroreflexes and thereby contribute to cardiac slowing. In addition, there is accumulating evidence2728 that the aortic chemoreceptors may cause tachycardia Lancet;Srinivasan, G.; Sanders, G.,1978
3. Sleep apnea in diabetic patients with autonomic neuropathy;Rees, P.J.; Cochrane, G.M.; Prior, J.G.; Clark, T.J.H.;J R Soc Med,1981
4. Abnormal rather than bradycardia. As a result, hypoxia leads to an increase in heart rate in conscious man that is linearly related to arterial oxygen saturation.'4 Although the heart rate response appears to be closely chemoreceptor response to hypoxia in patients with tabes dorsalis;Courtenay-Evans, R.J.; Benson, M.K.; Hughes, D.T.D.;Br Med J,1971
5. Chemosensitivity in patients with diabetic neuropathy. Clin Sci 1981; 61: 599-603. related to the ventilatory response to hypoxia, neither two previous studies'429 nor the present study have found any significant correlation between the two responses in normal, healthy subjects;Homma, I.; Kageyama, S.; Nagai, T.; Taniguchi, I.; Sakai, T.; Abe, M.