Vascular Dysfunction Detected by a Simplified Venous Occlusion Test in NIDDM Patients
- Akira Mizuno, MD,
- Junichi Isobe, MD and
- Kenji Shima, MD
- Department of Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine, and the School of Medical Science, University of Tokushima Tokushima, Japan
- Address correspondence and reprints requests to Akira Mizuno, MD, Department of Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Tokushima, Tokushima, 770, Japan.
Abstract
Objective— To elucidate the relationship between angiopathies and vascular function evaluated by a simplified venous occlusion test in patients with NIDDM.
Research Design and Methods— The serum concentration of FDP was measured before and 5 min after venous occlusion in 23 NIDDM patients, 11 patients with cerebrovascular accident, and 10 age-matched healthy control subjects.
Results— The increment of serum FDP level after venous occlusion was significantly less in patients with NIDDM (60.6 ± 33.5 to 81.5 ± 49.6 ng/ml) and in those with cerebrovascular accident (101.4 ± 51.5 to 116.2 ± 47.2 ng/ml) than in control subjects (79.9 ± 41.0 to 148.8 ± 65.4 ng/ml). The increment of serum FDP after venous occlusion in NIDDM patients with macroangiopathy was significantly lower than that in those without macroangiopathy.
CONCLUSION— The responsiveness of fibrinolytic activity to venous occlusion was significantly less in NIDDM patients with macroangiopathy, as in patients with cerebrovascular accident, compared with that in healthy control subjects.
- Received September 23, 1992.
- Accepted March 18, 1993.
- Copyright © 1993 by the American Diabetes Association











