Association of retinal arteriolar dilatation with lower verbal memory::The Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes Study


Autoria(s): Ding, Jennifer; Strachan, Mark; Fowkes, Gerry; Wong, Tien Yin; Macgillivray, Thomas; Patton, Niall; Gardiner, Tom; Deary, Ian; Price, Jackie
Data(s)

01/04/2011

Resumo

Abstract<br/><br/><br/>AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: <br/><br/>Retinal vascular calibre changes may reflect early subclinical microvascular disease in diabetes. Because of the considerable homology between retinal and cerebral microcirculation, we examined whether retinal vascular calibre, as a proxy of cerebral microvascular disease, was associated with cognitive function in older people with type 2 diabetes.<br/><br/>METHODS: <br/><br/>A cross-sectional analysis of 954 people aged 60-75 years with type 2 diabetes from the population-based Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes Study was performed. Participants underwent standard seven-field binocular digital retinal photography and a battery of seven cognitive function tests. The Mill Hill Vocabulary Scale was used to estimate pre-morbid cognitive ability. Retinal vascular calibre was measured from an image field with the optic disc in the centre using a validated computer-based program.<br/><br/>RESULTS: <br/><br/>After age and sex adjustment, larger retinal arteriolar and venular calibres were significantly associated with lower scores for the Wechsler Logical Memory test, with standardised regression coefficients -0.119 and -0.084, respectively (p?<?0.01), but not with other cognitive tests. There was a significant interaction between sex and retinal vascular calibre for logical memory. In male participants, the association of increased retinal arteriolar calibre with logical memory persisted (p?<?0.05) when further adjusted for vocabulary, venular calibre, depression, cardiovascular risk factors and macrovascular disease. In female participants, this association was weaker and not significant.<br/><br/>CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: <br/><br/>Retinal arteriolar dilatation was associated with poorer memory, independent of estimated prior cognitive ability in older men with type 2 diabetes. The sex interaction with stronger findings in men requires confirmation. Nevertheless, these data suggest that impaired cerebral arteriolar autoregulation in smooth muscle cells, leading to arteriolar dilatation, may be a possible pathogenic mechanism in verbal declarative memory decrements in people with diabetes.<br/>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/association-of-retinal-arteriolar-dilatation-with-lower-verbal-memory(301bd985-6e3a-40eb-b760-91954c04e8ce).html

http://dx.doi.org/doi: 10.1007/s00125

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Ding , J , Strachan , M , Fowkes , G , Wong , T Y , Macgillivray , T , Patton , N , Gardiner , T , Deary , I & Price , J 2011 , ' Association of retinal arteriolar dilatation with lower verbal memory: : The Edinburgh Type 2 Diabetes Study ' Diabetologia , vol 54 , no. 7 , doi: 10.1007/s00125-011-2129-1 , pp. 1653-1662 . DOI: doi: 10.1007/s00125

Palavras-Chave #diabetes #retinal arterioles #/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2700 #Medicine(all)
Tipo

article