Deep breathing improves blunted baroreflex sensitivity even after 30 years of type 1 diabetes
Autor: | M. Mäntysaari, Carol Forsblom, G. Debarbieri, C G af Björkesten, J. Holmqvist, Milla Rosengård-Bärlund, P.-H. Groop, Luciano Bernardi |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Diabetic neuropathy Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Diaphragmatic breathing Blood Pressure Baroreflex Autonomic Nervous System Diabetic Neuropathies Heart Rate Internal medicine Diabetes mellitus Heart rate Internal Medicine Medicine Heart rate variability Humans Type 1 diabetes business.industry Respiration fungi medicine.disease Endocrinology Diabetes Mellitus Type 1 Breathing Cardiology Female business |
Zdroj: | Diabetologia. 54(7) |
ISSN: | 1432-0428 |
Popis: | Cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy is associated with increased morbidity in patients with type 1 diabetes. Although it is conventionally considered to be an organic, irreversible disorder, we previously demonstrated in patients with short-duration type 1 diabetes that reduced baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) could be corrected by slow, deep breathing, indicating a functional component to the disorder. We have now tested whether autonomic abnormalities in long-term diabetes progress to a stage that cannot be modified by functional manoeuvres, indicating a switch towards predominantly organic dysfunction. We studied 117 patients with a short duration (8.9 ± 0.1 years) and 37 patients with a long duration (33.7 ± 0.5 years) of type 1 diabetes, 73 healthy controls and 12 heart-transplanted participants (surgical heart denervation). An autonomic score was calculated from autonomic function tests. Spectral analysis of heart rate and blood pressure variability, and BRS, were obtained from recordings during normal (15 breaths per min) and slow, deep (six breaths per min) controlled breathing. BRS was reduced in all patients, but more in patients with a long duration of diabetes or with increasing autonomic involvement, although the effect of duration disappeared after adjustment for age. Slow breathing increased the BRS to the level of the control participants at a normal rate of breathing (15 per min) in all patients except those with an abnormal autonomic score. Patients with type 1 diabetes have a blunted BRS that in the majority of patients can be restored by slow breathing, irrespective of disease duration. Even after a long duration of diabetes, the abnormal BRS is at least in part of functional origin. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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