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Supplement 3: Diabetes in Hispanic Americans

Macrovascular Complications in Mexican Americans With Type II Diabetes

  1. Steven M Haffner, MD,
  2. Braxton D Mitchell, PhD,
  3. Michael P Stern, MD and
  4. Helen P Hazuda, PhD
  1. Division of Clinical Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio, Texas
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Steven M. Haffner, MD, Division of Clinical Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, San Antonio, TX 78284.
Diabetes Care 1991 Jul; 14(7): 665-671. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.14.7.665
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Abstract

Mexican Americans have a threefold greater prevalence of non-insulin-dependent (type II) diabetes mellitus than non-Hispanic whites in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes. In addition, Mexican-American diabetic subjects (n = 365) have greater fasting glycemia than non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (P < 0.001). Despite these findings, and despite a higher prevalence of microvascular complications among Mexican Americans, there does not appear to be a marked difference in prevalence of macrovascular complications between Mexican-American and non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects. Mexican-American diabetic subjects have only a moderate excess of peripheral vascular disease (as judged by ankle-arm blood pressure ratios) relative to non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (sex-adjusted Mantel-Haenszel odds ratio 1.84, 95% confidence interval 0.75–4.49). Mexican-American diabetic subjects actually reported fewer myocardial infarctions than non-Hispanic white diabetic subjects (sex-adjusted Mantel-Haenszel odds ratio 0.73, 95% confidence interval 0.31–1.71). Duration was not associated with either peripheral vascular disease or myocardial infarction. Severity of glycemia was only mildly associated with presence of peripheral vascular disease and negatively associated with self-reported myocardial infarction. This latter finding may represent a survival bias in that more severe diabetic subjects have already died and are not ascertained in a prevalence study. The absence of an ethnic difference in the prevalence of macrovascular disease contrasts with our previous reports from the San Antonio Heart Study, in which the prevalence of both retinopathy and proteinuria was observed to be higher in Mexican-American diabetic subjects. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

  • Copyright © 1991 by the American Diabetes Association
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Macrovascular Complications in Mexican Americans With Type II Diabetes
Steven M Haffner, Braxton D Mitchell, Michael P Stern, Helen P Hazuda
Diabetes Care Jul 1991, 14 (7) 665-671; DOI: 10.2337/diacare.14.7.665

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Macrovascular Complications in Mexican Americans With Type II Diabetes
Steven M Haffner, Braxton D Mitchell, Michael P Stern, Helen P Hazuda
Diabetes Care Jul 1991, 14 (7) 665-671; DOI: 10.2337/diacare.14.7.665
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  • Diabetes Mellitus in Mexico
  • Prevalence Rates for Diabetes Mellitus in Puerto Rico
  • Pathogenesis of NIDDM in Pima Indians
Show more Supplement 3: Diabetes in Hispanic Americans

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