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Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
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Neuropathy Most Likely to Strike in Type 2 Diabetes Not in Type 1Posted: Saturday, July 07, 2007Painful neuropathy is more common in patients with type 2 diabetes than in those with type 1, due to metabolic syndrome, researchers suggest, because of a link with the metabolic syndrome.
In an observational study, painful diabetic polyneuropathy was three times more common among type 2 patients than type 1 patients (17.9% versus 5.8%), reported Ides M. Colin, M.D., Ph.D., of CHR-S. Joseph Medical Center in Mons, Belgium, and colleagues.
This type of neuropathy was independently associated with three components of the metabolic syndrome-obesity, low HDL cholesterol, and high triglyceride levels -- they said at the American Diabetes Association meeting. "The higher prevalence of diabetic polyneuropathy in type 2 diabetic patients could be due to the involvement of metabolic syndrome-associated disturbances," they wrote. Because the epidemiology of painful diabetic polyneuropathy had not been well characterized, the researchers conducted a cross-sectional study that included 1,111 patients at 40 Belgian diabetes clinics; 344 had type 1diabetes and 767 had type 2. The occurrence of diabetic polyneuropathy was significantly higher among type 2 diabetes patients than type 1 patients (50.8% versus 25.6%, P=0.0007). The prevalence of painful diabetic polyneuropathy showed the same significant difference (17.9% versus 5.6%). Factors associated with higher diabetic neuropathy in a multivariate analysis were male gender (P=0.02), increasing age (P<0.0001), type 2 diabetes (P=0.02), increasing duration of the disease (P=0.0006), and HDL cholesterol at or below 40 mg/dL for men or 50 mg/dL for women (P<0.0001). The strongest predictors of neuropathy in a bivariate analysis were foot problems (odds ratio 10.5, P<0.0001) and low HDL cholesterol (OR 2.14, P<0.0001). Independent predictors of painful diabetic neuropathy were:
"Diabetic neuropathy and painful neuropathy are often associated with other complications, as well as modifiable risk factors including some of those related to the metabolic syndrome," they wrote. Source: Diabetesn In Control: ADA Scientific Sessions, June 2007 |
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