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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Diabetes Health 

Test Reveals Early Evidence of Heart Disease in Persons With Diabetes

Test can detect calcium deposits in arteries 

People with diabetes face an increased risk of heart disease. But a new study finds a simple screening test can detect evidence of cardiovascular disease long before any symptoms are apparent.Picture of a physician during a consultation with a patient

In a recent issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, researchers using results from electron-beam tomography (EBT) scans found that people with diabetes were 70 percent more likely to have significant calcium deposits in their arteries. They also found that, in general, young persons with diabetes already have calcium build-up similar to that of older people without diabetes.

EBT provides x-ray images similar to, but more detailed than, those obtained from CT scanning. It is particularly useful for detecting calcium deposits in the arteries, which are associated with the development of heart disease.

"[This test] could be helpful in treatment and in compliance, as well as in seeing what [diabetes] is doing to the heart," says study author Julie Anne Hoff, an assistant research professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Hoff says people with diabetes are notoriously non-compliant when it comes to making lifestyle changes. So, she says, if someone has this test and learns they are already developing calcium build-up in their arteries, it might motivate them to change.

For this study, Hoff and her colleagues reviewed data from more than 30,000 people who had chosen to have EBT to check on their heart health. Their ages ranged from 30 to 90 years old, but on average, the study participants were in their 50s. None had symptoms of heart disease.

Prior to the screening test, each person filled out a questionnaire about their diabetes status and other cardiovascular disease risk factors, such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol. One thousand seventy five individuals reported having diabetes. No distinction was made between type 1 and type 2 diabetes.

According to Hoff, 39 percent of the men with diabetes had the highest calcium deposit scores, compared to 24 percent of the men without diabetes. In women, those numbers were 45 percent and 23 percent, respectively. Overall, someone with diabetes was 70 percent more likely to score in the highest calcium deposit category than someone without the disease.

There were two groups, however, that did not show significant differences in coronary artery calcium scores between people with diabetes and those without the disease. They were women between the ages of 40 and 44, and both men and women over age 70.

In all age groups, men—whether they had diabetes or not—had higher coronary artery calcium scores than women did.

Younger people with diabetes had coronary artery calcium scores comparable to older people without diabetes, according to the study. For example, men with diabetes between the ages of 40 and 44 had roughly the same calcium score as men between 50 and 54 without diabetes.

Since the scans were done on a group of "worried well" people who are actively concerned about their health and usually taking extra steps to stay healthy, Hoff says these results are probably an underestimation of the problem.

Dr. John Reilly, a cardiologist at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation Hospital in New Orleans, says he is not surprised by the findings.

"This study corroborates what we already know. Diabetics are at risk for coronary artery disease," Reilly says. In fact, the risk is so much higher, people with diabetes should be treated as aggressively as someone who has already been diagnosed with heart disease, he says.

Reilly doubts the $400 EBT scan will become a commonplace screening tool. He notes that while some people might be encouraged to adopt a healthier lifestyle because of high calcium scores, the opposite may also be true. People who score low on the test may feel they do not need to monitor their blood sugar as carefully.

Always consult your physician for more information.


The Link Between Diabetes and Heart Disease

Heart and vascular disease often go hand-in-hand with diabetes. Persons with diabetes are at a much greater risk for heart attacks, strokes, and high blood pressure. Other vascular problems due to diabetes include poor circulation to the legs and feet. Unfortunately, many of the cardiovascular problems can go undetected and can start early in life.

Causes of Heart Disease in Persons With Diabetes

Persons with diabetes often experience changes in the blood vessels that can lead to cardiovascular disease. In persons with diabetes, the linings of the blood vessels may become thicker, making it more difficult for blood to flow through the vessels. When blood flow is impaired, heart problems or stroke can occur. Blood vessels can also suffer damage elsewhere in the body due to diabetes, leading to eye problems, kidney problems, and poor circulation to the legs and feet.

Prevention and Treatment of Heart Disease in Persons With Diabetes

Even when taking proper care of yourself, heart disease may still occur. When risk factors are eliminated (or reduced) in a person with diabetes, the risk for heart disease may be reduced. Taking care of yourself and controlling your blood sugar can often slow down or prevent the onset of complications. Other preventive treatment measures may include:

  • See a physician regularly.

  • Have annual electrocardiograms, or EKGs (a test that records the electrical activity of the heart, shows abnormal rhythms, and detects heart muscle damage), cholesterol and blood pressure check-ups, and pulse measurement in legs and feet.

  • Pay attention to your symptoms and report them promptly to your physician.

  • Control your blood sugar levels.

  • Control blood pressure levels with lifestyle and diet changes, and/or medication.

  • Keep low-density lipoprotein (LDL) levels (the "bad" cholesterol) at less than 100 mg/dL.

  • Control your weight.

  • Exercise regularly.

  • Eat a healthy and balanced diet.

  • Do not smoke.

  • Limit consumption of alcoholic beverages.

Always consult your physician for more information.


Online Resources

(Our Organization is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)

American Diabetes Association

American Heart Association

Diabetes Care

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Nature Medicine

April 2003

Diabetes Test Can Detect Calcium Deposits in Arteries

The Link Between Diabetes and Heart Disease

Causes of Heart Disease in Persons With Diabetes

Prevention and Treatment of Heart Disease in Persons With Diabetes

Thiamine Derivative May Halt Diabetic Complications 

Online Resources 


In Other Diabetes Health News:

Thiamine Derivative May Halt Diabetic Complications

People with diabetes often suffer circulatory problems, vision loss, and heart attacks, to name just a few of the untoward effects that can result from a buildup of sugar in their tissues.

Now researchers report that a derivative of vitamin B1 halts much of that sugar buildup, which may lead to a vastly improved quality of life for many with the disease.

"It's a huge breakthrough," says Dr. Michael Brownlee, an endocrinologist at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City and one of the authors of the new report, which appears in the journal Nature Medicine.

Since 1968, four major pathways have been pinpointed for causing much of the damage of diabetes by helping glucose-derived compounds, known as triosephosphates, to accumulate in vascular and nerve cells, he explains.

Through his research, Brownlee realized that by activating the enzyme transketolase, triosephosphates could be turned into harmless chemicals.

Transketolase is a thiamine-dependent enzyme. "Thiamine [also known as vitamin B1] itself activates it about 20 percent," Brownlee says, but this isn't enough to stop the glucose-derived compounds from building up in healthy cells. "Serendipitously, I decided to give a lipid-soluble derivative so it would be better absorbed."

In research in the laboratory on cultured cells, the researchers found that benfotiamine increased levels of transketolase by 300 percent. "So that was kind of lucky," Brownlee notes.

Benfotiamine blocked three pathways completely. While its action has not been tested on a fourth pathway that controls nerve cells, it may work similarly there, he adds. At any rate, blocking three pathways is enough to prevent many diabetes-related complications.

When 20 rats that had suffered diabetes for nine months were given benfotiamine, diabetic retinopathy was averted, Brownlee adds. Not a single rat developed the retinopathy, which is a condition that occurs in many persons with diabetes when high blood sugar damages the retina of the eye, leading to visual problems and often blindness.

While several pharmaceutical companies are working on releasing drugs that will halt one of the pathways, "this is one compound that prevents all three of the pathways," Brownlee says.

There is every reason to think benfotiamine will work equally well in humans, he notes, since the mechanism in humans is the same as that of rats.

Brownlee plans to study the effect of this compound in surrogate human cells.

Those with diabetes should not run out to buy thiamine-rich foods or vitamins, he stresses. "Thiamine doesn't do the same thing" as benfotiamine, and the derivative is not sold in North America, he says.

However, there is good news, Brownlee adds. A small company in Germany has been producing and selling benfotiamine for some time, to treat various neuropathies. Therefore, the medication is already used in humans and is deemed safe, he notes.

How much benfotiamine would be the right amount to halt the harmful pathways in humans with diabetes is not known, Brownlee adds: "I know it's not harmful, but I don't know what the right dose is."

Dr. Richard Hellman, an endocrinologist at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine says he thinks this finding is "very promising." The researchers have shown a very particular effect on an enzyme that can possibly halt complications of diabetes, he notes. "I think it's a very good study."

However, "the question, when looking at a particular agent, always is: What else does it do? We need to know what it [benfotiamine] does over time" and ascertain that it doesn't cause damage in other areas of the body, he says.

"This is an important first step," Hellman says, but "there is so much more we need to know about this substance. I would strongly recommend that people not try to procure it" before more extensive tests have been done to ensure it is not harmful.

Brownlee agrees that double-blind, placebo-controlled trials are needed. Still, "it has the potential of being something that in quite the near future could be taken."

Always consult your physician for more information.



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