Diabetes Care, Vol 11, Issue 10 840-845, Copyright © 1988 by American Diabetes Association
Etiology and prognostic significance of albuminuria in diabetes
G Viberti
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, UMDS, Guy's Hospital, London, UK.
Persistent clinical proteinuria (i.e., urinary protein excretion greater
than 0.5 g/24 h) is an ominous development in a person with diabetes. It
eventually leads to a decline in the glomerular filtration rate and
ultimately to end-stage renal failure or premature cardiovascular
mortality. Progression of renal disease appears to be related to arterial
blood pressure and protein intake and is primarily independent of the
metabolic state. More sensitive immunoassays for detecting low
concentrations of albumin in urine have led to recognition of subclinical
increases in albumin excretion rates in nonclinically proteinuric diabetic
patients, a phenomenon named microalbuminuria. Studies have shown that
patients with microalbuminuria have a significantly increased risk for
clinical proteinuria and cardiovascular mortality. Microalbuminuria is
rarely found during the first 5 yr of a patient's diabetes, suggesting that
it is a sign of early glomerular damage rather than a marker for
susceptibility to it. In patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus (NIDDM), an association has been found between microalbuminuria
and coronary heart disease, but this relationship needs further
investigation. In patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM),
this subclinical form of proteinuria is associated with poor metabolic
control and, more important, with marginal elevation of blood pressure.
Correction of hyperglycemia by intensified insulin treatment might arrest
progression to persistent clinical proteinuria; moreover, restricted
protein intake and lowering of blood pressure have been shown to reduce the
albumin excretion rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)