| Literature DB >> 21747831 |
Christina Voulgari1, Nicholas Tentolouris, Christodoulos Stefanadis.
Abstract
The importance of diabetes in the epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases cannot be overemphasized. About one third of acute myocardial infarction patients have diabetes, and its prevalence is steadily increasing. The decrease in cardiac mortality in people with diabetes is lagging behind that of the general population. Cardiovascular disease is a broad term which includes any condition causing pathological changes in blood vessels, cardiac muscle or valves, and cardiac rhythm. The ECG offers a quick, noninvasive clinical and research screen for the early detection of cardiovascular disease in diabetes. In this paper, the clinical and research value of the ECG is readdressed in diabetes and in the presence of cardiac autonomic neuropathy.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21747831 PMCID: PMC3124253 DOI: 10.1155/2011/687624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Diabetes Res ISSN: 1687-5214
Figure 1A 45-year-old man underwent routine blood tests that revealed a fasting blood glucose value of 125 mg/dL and hemoglobin A1c of 6.5%, resulting in the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes. Resting 12-lead ECG showed deep S-wave in Lead III and R-wave in Lead aVL, indicating early left ventricular hypertrophy. Cardiac autonomic functional testing diagnosed the presence of cardiac autonomic neuropathy. Stress ECG demonstrated a 2-mm depression of the ST segment. Transthoracic 2D Doppler echocardiography performed revealed presence of mild left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (LV wall mass index = 126 g/m2) and an abnormal relaxation pattern (E/A < 1) with preserved LV systolic function (LV ejection fraction >60%). The patient was given strict diet restrictions; oral antidiabetic medication, b-blocker, statin and aspirin therapy was initiated, together with lifestyle measures to control cardiovascular risk factors. Throughout a 6-year follow-up, his diabetes remains well controlled, and the ECG unchanged.
Figure 2Presence of silent myocardial ischemia in the resting ECG of a middle-aged (50 years), clinically asymptomatic female patient with type 2 diabetes. Mean duration of diabetes was 4 years and the patient was under oral antidiabetic medication with an HbA1c <7%. The patient was obese (BMI > 30 kg/m2), with central fat distribution (waist circumference > 88 cm), without a history of hypertension, or of coronary heart disease, but with dyslipidemia and presence of microalbuminuria. She smoked 25 packs of cigarettes/year. Cardiac autonomic functional testing revealed increased cardiac sympathetic activity and parasympathetic withdrawal.
Recent and major studies of the incidence of electrocardiographic abnormalities in diabetes and their endpoint clinical significance.
| Reference | Population | ECG marker | Clinical significance | Clinical points |
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| Left ventricular hypertrophy and atherosclerosis in diabetic cardiomyopathy | ||||
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| [ | 996 T2D patients | ↑ 1SD P-wave duration ≥40 msec | ↑ Pericardial fat | No association after adjustment with adiposity indexes and CVD risk factors |
| [ | 110 T2D patients, age 20–80 years | ↑ Cornell Voltage* | Left ventricular hypertrophy | Ongoing trial |
| [ | 9.193 T2D + hypertension | ↑ Cornell and Sokolow Lyon Voltage | Left ventricular Hypertrophy | Hyperuricemia as a CVD risk factor |
| [ | 276 T2D + hypertension | ↑ Cornell and Sokolow Lyon Voltage | Left ventricular Hypertrophy | ↓ in LVH prevalence with candesartan |
| [ | 9.000 hypertensive | ↑ Cornell Voltage | Left ventricular Hypertrophy | 38%↓ risk of new diabetes onset |
| [ | 886 T2D patients | ↑ Cornell and Sokolow-Lyon Voltage left ventricular strain | Left ventricular hypertrophy | Coexistence of hypertension |
| [ | 1.123 T2D patients | ↑ QTc, ↑ QRS, ↑ JT | Coronary artery calcification | men > women |
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| Silent myocardial ischemia and cardiovascular disease risk | ||||
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| [ | 3.224 with diabetes, 61.9% women, mean age 72 years | minor nonspecific ST-segment T-wave abnormalities | ↑ risk for coronary heart disease mortality | No association with incident nonfatal myocardial infarction |
| [ | 493 post-MI, T2D patients | ↑ T-wave alternans ≥47 microV | ↑ risk of sudden cardiac death | — |
| [ | 2.654 men, T2D patients | ↓ ST segment ≥1 mm for 0.08 sec | 16-y CVD and all-cause mortality | Independent of other CVD risk factors |
| [ | 994 T2D patients | ↓ ST segment ≥50 micro V QTc > 460 ms, PCA ratio ≥30% | ↑ CVD morbidity and mortality ↑ all-cause mortality | — |
| [ | 1.387 T2D patients | Q-wave | Clinically unrecognized MI | Coexistence of hypertension + nephropathy |
| [ | 1.123 T2D patients | Adenosine induced ST-depression | Silent myocardial ischemia | 4-fold ↑ 5-years risk |
| [ | 472 T2D patients | ↑ QT dispersion, QTc maximum | Prognostic marker CVD mortality | 57 months follow-up ↓ prognostic value in patients without CVD |
| [ | 216 T2D patients | ↑ QT dispersion | ↑ CVD | ↑ total and cerebrovascular mortality |
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| Type 1 diabetes and diabetic cardiomyopathy | ||||
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| [ | 22 T1D patients, mean age 30 years | ↓ QRS <120 mse, QTc ≥450 ms, ↑ QT dispersion >70 ms | ↓ parasympathetic to sympathetic tone ratio, tachycardia, shortening of the activation time | — |
| [ | 1.415 T1D patients | QTc >440 msec | ↑ 7-year CVD risk | ↑ risk in women, hypertension, hyperglycemia, CAN, ↓ risk in BMI, physical activity |
| [ | 3.250 T1D patients | QTc > 440 msec, QT dispersion | 3-fold ↑ risk of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy | Association with female sex, obesity, hypertension, physical inactivity |
| [ | 523 T1D and T2D patients | ↑ QTc, ↑ HR | 23-years total mortality | Increased Risk for T1D: QTc; for T2D: HR |
| [ | 21 T1D patients | ↑ QTc | Marker of spontaneous hypoglycemia | Modest increase in QTc and misleading results in investigations of spontaneous hypoglycemia |
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| Spatial vectorcardiography in diabetic cardiomyopathy | ||||
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| [ | 74 T2D patients | ↑ spatial QRS-T angle | Diabetic cardiomyopathy | Association with glycemic control, dyslipidemia |
| [ | 16 T1D patients | ↑ spatial QRS-T angle | Marker of hypoglycemia, arrhythmia vulnerability | Independent from catecholamine levels and heart rate variability |
SD: standard deviation; CVD: cardiovascular risk; LVH: left ventricular hypertrophy; MI: myocardial infarction, T2D: type 2 diabetes; T1D: type 1 diabetes; QTc: QT interval corrected for heart rate; PCA ratio: principal component analysis (PCA) of the ratio of the second to first eigenvalues of the T-wave, HR: heart rate.
Figure 3The resting vectorcardiogram of a 56-years old male subject with type 2 diabetes and cardiac autonomic neuropathy recorded with the help of a computer-based 12-lead ECG system and automatically analyzed by the Modular-ECG-Analysis program incorporated in the electrocardiograph. The amplitude of the mean spatial T-vector (red line vector) and the amplitude of the mean spatial QRS-vector (yellow line vector) form an angle of 52° (violet line between the two spatial vectors), which defines the patient's spatial QRS-T angle.
Recent and major studies of the incidence of electrocardiographic abnormalities in cardiac autonomic neuropathy.
| Reference | Population/Animals | ECG marker | Clinical significance | Clinical points |
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| Classical ECG markers in CAN and diabetes | ||||
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| [ | Zucker Diabetic Fatty rats | ↑ R wave amplitude, | Early diagnosis of CAN, Diabetic Cardiomyopathy | Beneficial effect of aerobic exercise in R wave amplitude |
| [ | 682 T2D + coronary heart disease | ↑ QTc | ↑ risk for sudden cardiac death | Idiopathic QT prolongation:5-fold ↑ risk of SCD |
| [ | 1.226 T1D patients | ↓ QTc | ↓ incidence of CAN with intensive diabetic treatment | 14 years follow-up endpoint |
| [ | 18 healthy subjects, 30–40 years | ↓ PR, ↑ QTc, ↓ T-wave amplitude, ↓ ST | Early diagnosis of CAN, Arrhythmia | severe arrhythmias and “dead-in-bed” syndrome in unrecognized hypoglycemia |
| [ | 1.720 T2D patients | QTc > 440 msec, | ↑ mortality | ↑ QT dispersion not significant predictor |
| [ | 100 T1D and T2D patients | ↑ QTc | CAN | Association with age, diabetes duration, severity of CAN |
| [ | 192 T2D patients | ↑ QTc, ↑ QT dispersion | 12-y CVD risk | Superior to ABI, CAN test for CVD risk |
| [ | 80 T1D patients | ↑ QTc | CAN | Absence of ventricular late potentials in QTc |
| [ | 8.185 healthy people | ↓ HRV and ↑ Heart Rate > 73 bpm | 60% ↑ risk of T2D | Independent of CVD disease, age, gender, life and style |
| [ | 105 T1D and T2D patients | ↑ QTc > 440 msec | ↑ CAN severity (Ewing score) | Association with age, obesity, hypertension, diabetes duration and control, diabetic treatment |
| [ | 26 males with diabetes | ↑ QTc | ↑ 3-year SCD risk in CAN | Independent of age, diabetes duration |
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| Vectorcardiography: the alternative proposition in CAN and diabetes | ||||
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| [ | 5.781, age ≥ 55 years, 12.7% with diabetes | Spatial QRS-T angle ≥ 75° | 4-fold ↑ risk of 4-year CVD and SCD | 3-fold ↑ risk of fatal and nonfatal CVD events |
| [ | 4.173, 14% with diabetes | Spatial QRS-T angle ≥ 45° | 50%↑ risk of 7-year incident CVD | 50%↑ risk of 7-year total mortality |
| [ | 6.134, 10% with diabetes | Spatial QRS-T angle ≥ 105° | 5-fold ↑ risk of CVD death | 2-fold ↑ risk of SCD and total mortality |
| [ | 142 women, 32% with diabetes | Spatial QRS-T angle ≥ 49° | 1.5-fold ↑ risk of CVD events | 3-year prospective study |
| [ | 232 T2D patients | ↑ spatial QRS-T angle | ↑ incidence of CAN | Association with HRV (↓parasympathetic tone and ↑ sympathetic tone or sympathovagal imbalance) |
CAN: cardiac autonomic neuropathy; T2D: type 2 diabetes; T1D: type 1 diabetes; HRV: heart rate variability; QTc: QT interval corrected for heart rate; SCD: sudden cardiac death; CVD: cardiovascular disease; ABI: ankle-brachialindex.
Figure 4Proposed Cardiovascular Examination for Patients with Diabetes and Cardiac Autonomic Neuropathy.