Literature DB >> 27089510

Relations between Cardiac and Visual Phenotypes in Diabetes: A Multivariate Approach.

Bárbara Oliveiros1,2, Mafalda Sanches3, Bruno Quendera3, Bruno Graça4, Daniela Guelho5, Leonor Gomes5, Francisco Carrilho5, Filipe Caseiro-Alves4, Miguel Castelo-Branco1,3,2.   

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease and diabetes represent a major public health concern. The former is the most frequent cause of death and disability in patients with type 2 diabetes, where left ventricular dysfunction is highly prevalent. Moreover, diabetic retinopathy is becoming a dominant cause of visual impairment and blindness. The complex relation between cardiovascular disease and diabetic retinopathy as a function of ageing, obesity and hypertension remains to be clarified. Here, we investigated such relations in patients with diabetes type 2, in subjects with neither overt heart disease nor advanced proliferative diabetic retinopathy. We studied 47 patients and 50 controls, aged between 45 and 65 years, equally distributed according to gender. From the 36 measures regarding visual structure and function, and the 11 measures concerning left ventricle function, we performed data reduction to obtain eight new derived variables, seven of which related to the eye, adjusted for age, gender, body mass index and high blood pressure using both discriminant analysis (DA) and logistic regression (LR). We found moderate to strong correlation between left ventricle function and the eye constructs: minimum correlation was found for psychophysical motion thresholds (DA: 0.734; LR: 0.666), while the maximum correlation was achieved with structural volume density in the neural retina (DA: 0.786; LR: 0.788). Controlling the effect of pairwise correlated visual constructs, the parameters that were most correlated to left ventricle function were volume density in retina and thickness of the retinal nerve fiber layers (adjusted multiple R2 is 0.819 and 0.730 for DA and LR), with additional contribution of psychophysical loss in achromatic contrast discrimination. We conclude that visual structural and functional changes in type 2 diabetes are related to heart dysfunction, when the effects of clinical, demographic and associated risk factors are taken into account, revealing a genuine relation between cardiac and retinal diabetic phenotypes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27089510      PMCID: PMC4835099          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153772

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  18 in total

1.  Choice of analytic approach for eye-specific outcomes: one eye or two?

Authors:  Anna Karakosta; Maria Vassilaki; Sotiris Plainis; Nazik Hag Elfadl; Miltiadis Tsilimbaris; Joanna Moschandreas
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  2011-11-10       Impact factor: 5.258

2.  Use of optical coherence tomography to assess variations in macular retinal thickness in myopia.

Authors:  Marcus C C Lim; Sek-Tien Hoh; Paul J Foster; Tock-Han Lim; Sek-Jin Chew; Steve K L Seah; Tin Aung
Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 4.799

3.  Prevalence of diastolic dysfunction in normotensive, asymptomatic patients with well-controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  M Zabalgoitia; M F Ismaeil; L Anderson; F A Maklady
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2001-02-01       Impact factor: 2.778

4.  Diabetic retinopathy is associated with impaired left ventricular relaxation.

Authors:  Yasuharu Takeda; Yasushi Sakata; Toshiaki Mano; Tomohito Ohtani; Shunsuke Tamaki; Yosuke Omori; Yasumasa Tsukamoto; Yoshihiro Aizawa; Issei Komuro; Kazuhiro Yamamoto
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2011-04-22       Impact factor: 5.712

Review 5.  Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment.

Authors:  Barry A Borlaug; Walter J Paulus
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2010-12-07       Impact factor: 29.983

6.  Errors in retinal thickness measurements obtained by optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  Srinivas R Sadda; Ziqiang Wu; Alexander C Walsh; Len Richine; Jessica Dougall; Richard Cortez; Laurie D LaBree
Journal:  Ophthalmology       Date:  2006-01-10       Impact factor: 12.079

7.  Prevalence of ventricular diastolic dysfunction in asymptomatic, normotensive patients with diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  John K Boyer; Srihari Thanigaraj; Kenneth B Schechtman; Julio E Pérez
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2004-04-01       Impact factor: 2.778

8.  Diabetic retinopathy and risk of heart failure.

Authors:  Ning Cheung; Jie J Wang; Sophie L Rogers; Frederick Brancati; Ronald Klein; A Richey Sharrett; Tien Y Wong
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2008-04-22       Impact factor: 24.094

9.  Color vision defects in early diabetic retinopathy.

Authors:  M S Roy; R D Gunkel; M J Podgor
Journal:  Arch Ophthalmol       Date:  1986-02

10.  How to diagnose diastolic heart failure: a consensus statement on the diagnosis of heart failure with normal left ventricular ejection fraction by the Heart Failure and Echocardiography Associations of the European Society of Cardiology.

Authors:  Walter J Paulus; Carsten Tschöpe; John E Sanderson; Cesare Rusconi; Frank A Flachskampf; Frank E Rademakers; Paolo Marino; Otto A Smiseth; Gilles De Keulenaer; Adelino F Leite-Moreira; Attila Borbély; István Edes; Martin Louis Handoko; Stephane Heymans; Natalia Pezzali; Burkert Pieske; Kenneth Dickstein; Alan G Fraser; Dirk L Brutsaert
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2007-04-11       Impact factor: 29.983

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.