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The Prevalence of Autonomic and Peripheral Neuropathy in Insulin‐treated Diabetic Sbjects

36

Citations

23

References

1995

Year

Abstract

The prevalence of autonomic and peripheral neuropathy was examined in 506 diabetic subjects treated with insulin, mean age 43 years, diabetes duration 15 (range 1-54) years. Autonomic neuropathy was present if two or more (of four) cardiovascular autonomic function tests were abnormal using age-related ranges derived from 310 normal control subjects. Peripheral neuropathy was defined as a vibration threshold > 95th centile for age combined with absent/impaired ankle reflexes. Eighty-four (16.6%) of diabetic subjects had abnormal autonomic function and 119 (23.5%) peripheral neuropathy, concordant in 44/506 (8.7%). Of the diabetic subjects with autonomic neuropathy 40/84 (47.6%) did not have peripheral neuropathy and only 44/119 (37.0%) with peripheral neuropathy had abnormal autonomic function (p < 0.001). The prevalence of both neuropathies increased in relation to diabetes duration (both p < 0.001). Autonomic neuropathy was more common in subjects diagnosed < 20 years of age (18.2%) vs age > 40 years (11.1%) (p < 0.05). In contrast peripheral neuropathy was more common with older age at diagnosis (< 20 years 13.5% vs 36.8% > 40 years, p < 0.001). The age-related prevalence of autonomic neuropathy peaked at age 40-49 years while peripheral neuropathy increased progressively with age (p < 0.001). The prevalence of peripheral exceeded autonomic neuropathy 20 years after diagnosis (40.2% vs 30.7%, p < 0.001).

References

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