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Vitreous fluorophotometry in juvenile diabetics with and without retinopathy in relation to metabolic control: Insulin antibodies and c‐peptide levels
Author(s) -
Kernell A.,
Ludvigsson J.,
Finnström K.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
acta ophthalmologica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.534
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1755-3768
pISSN - 1755-375X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1755-3768.1990.tb01669.x
Subject(s) - medicine , retinopathy , diabetic retinopathy , diabetes mellitus , c peptide , endocrinology , metabolic control analysis , insulin , ophthalmology , fundus photography , visual acuity , fluorescein angiography
. Vitreous fluorophotometry was performed in 56 juvenile insulin‐dependent diabetic patients aged 9–23 years (median: 16 years), diabetes duration 1–20 years (median: 8 years). Fundus photography showed mild background retinopathy in 5 patients, while 51 patients had no signs of retinopathy. Abnormal leakage into the posterior vitreous body was found in 4/5 patients with background retinopathy and in 24/51 with normal fundi. We found a significantly positive correlation between abnormal leakage and duration of diabetes and HbA 1 with Kendall rank‐order correlation coefficients T = 0.21 ( P =0.01) and 0.19 (P=0.02) resp. No significant correlation was found between leakage and age, actual blood glucose level or insulin antibodies expressed as insulin binding capacity of IgG, but a significantly negative correlation between abnormal leakage and low levels of fasting c‐peptide/s T = 0.437 P < 0.001. Kendall partial rank‐order correlation analysis showed that c‐peptide/s significantly explained the leakage when HbA 1 or duration was kept constant. Duration could only explain leakage when HbA 1 was fixed but not when c‐peptide/s was kept constant. HbA 1 could also explain leakage when duration or c‐peptide was fixed.