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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 293: H3424-H3431, 2007. First published October 12, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00558.2007
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Microalbuminuria in Type 2 diabetes indicates impaired microvascular vasomotion and perfusion

Ole Schmiedel,1 Matthias L. Schroeter,2 and John N. Harvey1

1Diabetic Centre and Academic Unit, Maelor Hospital, University of Wales College of Medicine, Wrexham, United Kingdom; and 2Max-Plank-Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

Submitted 14 May 2007 ; accepted in final form 3 October 2007

Vascular oscillation (vasomotion) occurs in the microcirculation and is thought to be a significant contributor to tissue perfusion. Our aims were to assess the relationship of vasomotion to perfusion in the cutaneous microcirculation of diabetic patients, to determine the influence on it of endothelium-dependent and nonendothelium-dependent vasodilatory stimuli, and to assess the relationship to perfusion and vasomotion of various biochemical markers of vascular function (HbA1c, LDL- and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, insulin resistance, high sensitive C-reactive protein, L- and E-selectin, soluble ICAM, von Willebrand factor) and microalbuminuria. Perfusion and vasomotion (spectral density at low and very low frequencies) were measured by laser-Doppler flowmetry after local heat and iontophoresis of ACh and sodium nitroprusside. Perfusion responses to all stimuli were impaired in patients with Type 2 diabetes (heat: F = 28.0, P < 0.001; ACh: F = 7.11, P = 0.003; sodium nitroprusside: F = 4.0, P = 0.028). Responses to endothelium-dependent stimuli were further impaired in microalbuminuric patients (heat: P = 0.035; ACh: P = 0.034). Vasomotion responses at low frequencies after endothelium-dependent stimuli were impaired in diabetic patients compared with that shown in controls (heat: F = 5.62, P = 0.002; ACh: F = 4.32, P = 0.015). Multivariate modeling showed microalbuminuria to be the only consistent predictor of perfusion and vasomotion responses. The results suggest that microalbuminuria in Type 2 diabetes reflects a generalized disturbance of microvascular function related to endothelium-dependent mechanisms.

diabetes mellitus; laser-Doppler flowmetry; microcirculation; physiopathology



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: O. Schmiedel, Univ. of Wales College of Medicine, Gladstone Centre, Maelor Hospital, Wrexham LL13 7TD, UK (e-mail: SchmiedelO{at}cardiff.ac.uk)







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