[Hypertension, insulin resistance and chronic kidney disease in type 2 diabetes patients from South Kivu, DR Congo]

Autor: Philippe, Katchunga, Michel P, Hermans, Baudouin, Manwa, François, Lepira, Zacharie, Kashongwe, Jean-René, M'Buyamba-Kabangu
Jazyk: francouzština
Rok vydání: 2010
Předmět:
Zdroj: Nephrologietherapeutique. 6(6)
ISSN: 1872-9177
Popis: To assess the frequency and determinants of high blood pressure (HBP) in a group of type 2 black diabetics living in the east of Democratic Republic of Congo.The medical records of 98 diabetic patients followed at the General Reference Hospital in Bukavu between 2005 and 2007 were collected and analyzed. Hypertension was defined as blood pressure≥140/90mmHg. Insulin sensitivity (HOMA S; %) was determined with the HOMA model, with insulin resistance (IR) representing HOMA S(-1) and defined from HOMA S values50%). Patients were phenotyped regarding their cardiometabolic profile using metabolic syndrome criteria (minus that for HBP). The probability of hypertension was assessed by multiple logistic regression.There was an overall high prevalence of HBP (59.6%) and of chronic kidney disease (66%) contrasting with a low frequency of insulin resistance (5.2%) and obesity (18.6%). In addition, hypertension was not associated with insulin resistance [regression of SBP by % S: regression coefficient, 0.007 (-0.090-0.104) mmHg; correlation coefficient, 0.00; p = 0.89], [regression of DBP by % S: -0.004 (-0.053-0.045) mmHg; 0.00; 0.87]. There was no significant difference in prevalence of metabolic syndrome changed between hypertensive and normotensive patients [38.6% versus 33.3%, p = 0.60]. In multivariate analysis, overweight [OR adjusted = 3.20 (95%: 1.19-8.61), p = 0.02] and CKD [2.49 (0,98-6.34; 0.05] were found as major determinants of hypertension.The metabolic syndrome is poorly predictive of an absolute decrease in insulin sensitivity in a type 2 diabetes population, in which the prevalence of hypertension was high, and that of insulin resistance low. Overweight independently of insulin resistance and chronic kidney disease common in type 2 diabetes in Sub-Saharan Africa in which the disease is poorly controlled may play a major role in the determinism of hypertension.
Databáze: OpenAIRE