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Relationship Between Blood Pressure and Urinary Albumin Excretion Rate in Young Danish Type 1 Diabetic Patients: Comparison to Non‐diabetic Children
Author(s) -
Mortensen H.B.,
Hougaard P.,
Ibsen K.K.,
Parving H.H.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
diabetic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.474
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 1464-5491
pISSN - 0742-3071
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-5491.1994.tb02012.x
Subject(s) - medicine , microalbuminuria , blood pressure , body mass index , diabetes mellitus , proteinuria , endocrinology , population , fructosamine , excretion , type 1 diabetes , percentile , diabetic nephropathy , kidney , statistics , mathematics , environmental health
In 1989 a nation‐wide investigation of blood pressure and urinary albumin excretion rate (AER) was carried out in 506 boys and 441 girls with Type 1 diabetes (approximately 80 % of total) treated at 22 paediatric departments. In addition a reference population from 1979 consisting of 663 healthy non‐diabetic children (334 boys, 329 girls) served as a control group with respect to blood pressure and body mass index. Microalbuminuria was defined as AER of 20–150 μg min ‐1 in at least two out of three timed overnight urine collections and was diagnosed in 30 adolescents (16 boys, 14 girls). Five patients (3 boys, 2 girls) had overt proteinuria (AER: > 150μg min ‐1 ). Age‐related percentile charts based on one blood pressure reading were provided for normoalbuminuric diabetic patients and the healthy control group. The study revealed an increase in arterial blood pressure during the period of the pubertal growth spurt for the diabetic and non‐diabetic group. The changes were most pronounced for systolic blood pressure. No statistically significant difference was observed in systolic and diastolic blood pressure between normoalbuminuric diabetic children and healthy control children. However, diabetic females aged 15–18 years had significantly higher diastolic blood pressure (75 ± 1 mmHg, n = 139, mean ± SE) than healthy control females (72± 1 mmHg, n = 155, p ± 0.01), and significantly ( p ± 0.001) higher body mass index (diabetic females: 22.3± 0.2 kg m ‐2 vs healthy females: 20.9± 0.2 kg m ‐2 , mean± SE). Boys aged from 15 to 18 years with Type 1 diabetes had significantly higher systolic blood pressure (123± 1 mmHg, n = 164) than girls (117± 1 mmHg, n = 139, p ± 0.0001), while girls aged from 15 to 18 years had significantly higher diastolic blood pressure (75± 1 mmHg, n = 139) than boys (72± 1 mmHg, n = 72, p ± 0.01). Among the 30 adolescents with persistent microalbuminuria, 18 (10 boys, 8 girls) had diastolic blood pressure above the upper quartile for normoalbuminuric patients, while 2 out of 5 with macroalbuminuria had diastolic blood pressure above this limit. By multiple logistic regression the only risk determinants for elevated urinary albumin levels were age and diastolic blood pressure. These findings suggest that elevated arterial blood pressure is related to the increased prevalance of microalbuminuria observed in adolescents with Type 1 diabetes.

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