Nail Capillary Density During Postocclusive Reactive Hyperemia And Venous Congestion Is More Impaired In Diabetic Compared To Non-Diabetic Ckd Patients

NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION(2021)

引用 1|浏览13
暂无评分
摘要
Abstract Background and Aims Αlterations in endothelial function and capillary circulation have been associated with increased cardiovascular events and overall mortality. Both diabetes mellitus (DM) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) have been associated with microcirculatory damage. Nailfold video-capillaroscory can provide a thorough assessment of capillary density and microcirculation changes. This is the first study examining in comparison microcirculatory function parameters in diabetic and non-diabetic patients with CKD. Method We included 48 diabetic and 48 non-diabetic adult patients (>18 years) with CKD (eGFR: <90 and ≥15mL/min/1.73m2), matched in a 1:1 ratio for age, sex and eGFR within each CKD stage (2, 3a, 3b and 4). All participants underwent nailfold video-capillaroscopy, during which capillary density was measured at normal conditions (baseline), after a 4-minute arterial occlusion (postocclusive reactive hyperemia) and at the end of a 2-minute venous occlusion (congestion phase). Results Baseline demographic, anthropometric and laboratory characteristics were similar between patients with and without diabetes in total and in CKD stages. Overall, no significant differences at baseline capillary density were observed between groups; however diabetic patients presented significantly lower capillary density during reactive hyperemia (36.3±3.8 vs 38.3±4.3 capillaries/mm2, p=0.022) and at venous congestion (37.8±4.0 vs 39.8±4.2 capillaries/mm2, p=0.015). When stratified according to CKD stages, the between-group differences in parameters of interest were not significant in stages 2, 3a and 4. In stage 3b, capillary density was significantly lower in diabetic compared to non-diabetic subjects at baseline (31.1±2.8 vs 33.4±3.4 capillaries/mm2, p=0.044), during postocclusive hyperemia (36.8±2.7 vs 40.0±4.3 capillaries/mm2, p=0.037) and venous congestion (38.3±2.8 vs 41.5±3.5 capillaries/mm2, p=0.022). Conclusion Capillary density during postocclusive reactive hyperemia and after venous congestion is lower in diabetic compared to non-diabetic CKD patients, a finding indicative that diabetes is an additional factor contributing to microcirculatory functional impairment in CKD. These differences are more prominent in CKD stage 3b, and less prominent in earlier and later stages.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要