Lower-Limb Vascularization in Diabetic Patients
Assessment by thallium-201 scanning coupled with exercise myocardial scintigraphy
- Emmanuel Cosson, MD1,
- Frédéric Paycha, MD2,
- Philippe Tellier, MD3,
- Régis Nessim Sachs, MD1,
- Arabi Ramadan, MD2,
- Jacques Paries, MD1,
- Jean-Raymond Attali, MD1 and
- Paul Valensi, MD1
- 1Department of Endocrinology-Diabetology-Nutrition, Paris-Nord University, Jean Verdier Hospital, Bondy
- 2Department of Nuclear Medicine, Louis Mourier Hospital, Colombes
- 3Department of Nuclear Medicine, Clinique Sainte Catherine les Arras, Sainte Catherine les Arras, France
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—To investigate, by thallium-201 scanning, circulation in the muscles of the lower limb (LL) in diabetic patients without clinical peripheral vascular disease but with a high cardiovascular risk profile.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—A total of 80 diabetic patients (76 patients with type 2 diabetes, mean age 57.3 years, duration of diabetes 13.0 ± 7.5 years) with more than one additional cardiovascular risk factor but no claudication were investigated. After stress testing, 1.5 MBq/kg thallium-201 was administered to perform myocardial single-photon emission computed tomography followed by LL scanning. Muscle blood flow was considered abnormal if the asymmetry in thallium-201 uptake between the two buttocks and/or thighs and/or calves was >10%.
RESULTS—Muscle perfusion defects were found in 42% of the patients, mainly in the calves. These defects correlated with retinopathy (P = 0.042) and the HbA1c level (P = 0.044). In patients with defects in the buttock and/or thigh, the prevalence of nephropathy and retinopathy was higher than in those with isolated defects in the calf (P = 0.032 and 0.023, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS—This study suggests that LL scanning coupled with myocardial scintigraphy is a convenient method of investigating peripheral muscle circulation. Proximal perfusion defects in patients without clinical arterial disease are associated with increased prevalence of retinopathy and nephropathy and, therefore, may be due to microvascular disease of LL muscle. Distal defects may indicate silent macrovascular disease of the LL.
- 201Tl, thallium-201
- ECG, electrocardiography
- LL, lower limb
- PVD, peripheral vascular disease
- SMI, silent myocardial ischemia, SPECT, single-photon emission computed tomography
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Emmanuel Cosson, MD, Department of Endocrinology-Diabetology-Nutrition, Hospital Jean Verdier, Avenue du 14 juillet, Paris Bondy Cedex 93143, France. E-mail: emmanuel.cosson{at}jvr.ap-hop-paris.fr.
Received for publication 15 August 2000 and accepted in revised form 16 January 2001.
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