CCATClinical Analysis Tool
‹ Knowledge base

Browse the corpus

Walk the evidence base by book and chapter — the raw source passages that ground Ask, Differential, and the rest.

1 passage

abstractpubmed· Abstract 2018· item PMID:29630532

Lower limb ischemia and microrheological alterations in patients with diabetic retinopathy. BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus is frequently associated with vascular pathologies and hemorheological disorders. METHODS: 105 patients with diabetic retinopathy (DRP) (mean age 64.64±9.01 years, 56 males, 49 females), 35 age-matched non-diabetic (mean age 61.65±7.6 years, 14 males and 21 females) and 42 young healthy volunteers (mean age 25.52±3.32 years, 22 males, 20 females) were recruited. Lower extremity artery disease (LEAD) and microcirculatory alterations were screened by hand-held Doppler, transcutaneous partial tissue oxygen tension (tcpO2), tuning fork test, 6-minute walk test, erythrocyte aggregation and deformability. RESULTS: High prevalence of LEAD was detected in diabetic population: 55.3% fulfilled the criteria of LEAD based on ankle-brachial index; severely impaired tcpO2 was measured in 18.6%. The results of non-invasive measurements of the diabetic patients were significantly worse than those of the control groups (p < 0.05). Hemorheological disturbances could be characterized by the significantly higher erythrocyte aggregation (p < 0.05) and lower erythrocyte deformability (p < 0.05) in the diabetic population. CONCLUSION: Macro- and microcirculatory lower limb disorders could be revealed at high prevalence in diabetic patients with retinopathy. Measurement of tcpO2 and hemorheological variables could be useful to discover patients at higher risk for diabetic foot complications.