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Prevalence of microalbuminuria, arterial hypertension, retinopathy and neuropathy in patients with insulin dependent diabetes

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TLDR
A high prevalence is found of microalbuminuria, which is predictive of the later development of diabetic nephropathy, and urinary excretion of albumin should be monitored routinely in patients with insulin dependent diabetes.
Abstract
Diabetic nephropathy is the main cause of the increased morbidity and mortality in patients with insulin dependent diabetes. The prevalence of microalbuminuria was determined in adults with insulin dependent diabetes of five or more years9 duration that had started before the age of 41. All eligible patients (n=982) attending a diabetes clinic were asked to collect a 24 hour urine sample for analysis of albumin excretion by radio-immunoassay; 957 patients complied. Normoalbuminuria was defined as urinary albumin excretion of ≤30 mg/24 h (n=562), microalbuminuria as 31-299 mg/24 h (n=215), and macroalbuminuria as ≥300 mg/24 h (n=180). The prevalence of microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria was significantly higher in patients whose diabetes had developed before rather than after the age of 20. The prevalence of arterial hypertension increased with increased albuminuria, being 19%, 30%, and 65% in patients with normoalbuminuria, microalbuminuria, and macroalbuminuria respectively. The prevalence of proliferative retinopathy and blindness rose with increasing albuminuria, being 12% and 1·4%, respectively, in patients with normoalbuminuria, 28% and 5·6% in those with microalbuminuria and 58% and 10·6% in those with macroalbuminuria. An abnormal vibratory perception threshold was more common in patients with microalbuminuria (31%) and macroalbuminuria (50%) than in those with normoalbuminuria (21%). This study found a high prevalence (22%) of microalbuminuria, which is predictive of the later development of diabetic nephropathy. Microalbuminuria is also characterised by an increased prevalence of arterial hypertension, proliferative retinopathy, blindness, and peripheral neuropathy. Thus, urinary excretion of albumin should be monitored routinely in patients with insulin dependent diabetes.

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References
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Statistical Aspects of the Analysis of Data From Retrospective Studies of Disease

TL;DR: In this paper, the role and limitations of retrospective investigations of factors possibly associated with the occurrence of a disease are discussed and their relationship to forward-type studies emphasized, and examples of situations in which misleading associations could arise through the use of inappropriate control groups are presented.
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Microalbuminuria Predicts Clinical Proteinuria and Early Mortality in Maturity-Onset Diabetes

TL;DR: It is concluded that microalbuminuria in patients with Type II diabetes is predictive of clinical proteinuria and increased mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microalbuminuria as a predictor of clinical nephropathy in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: Elevated levels of microalbuminuria strongly predict the development of clinical diabetic nephropathy, and these levels of AER are potentially reversible, and their detection and treatment may prevent diabetic renal disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting Diabetic Nephropathy in Insulin-Dependent Patients

TL;DR: It is concluded that microalbuminuria predicts the development of diabetic nephropathy and that elevated glomerular filtration rates and increased blood pressure may also contribute to this progression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diabetic nephropathy in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes: An epidemiological study

TL;DR: It was concluded that diabetic nephropathy is the major life threatening complication in Type I diabetes of juvenile onset and had a much poorer survival than those without proteinuria; 40 years after onset of diabetes, only 10% of patients who developed nephrophropathy were alive, whereas >70% of Patients who did not develop nephropy survived.
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