Multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging quantifies atherosclerosis and vascular dysfunction in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus

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Abstract

Vascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is emerging as a powerful research tool. We studied 18 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and 20 controls (all with coronary artery disease). MRI measured distensibility, pulse wave velocity (PWV) and atherosclerosis in the aorta, and brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD). Patients with diabetes showed lower aortic distensibility (2.1 × 10-3 vs. 3.5 × 10-3 mmHg-1, p<0.01), faster PWV (8.8 vs., 6.2 m/s, p<0.01) and impaired FMD (8.5% vs. 13.8%, p<0.05). Diabetes was an independent negative predictor of distensibility. Aortic atherosclerosis was similar in the two groups. There was a negative correlation between aortic distensibility and atherosclerosis in control subjects only, suggesting that other factors such as protein cross-linking may explain lower aortic distensibility in diabetes. MRI provides comprehensive vascular phenotyping in patients with type 2 diabetes and is likely to be useful in studies of disease progression and drug therapy.

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Lee, J. M. S., Shirodaria, C., Jackson, C. E., Robson, M. D., Antoniades, C., Francis, J. M., … Choudhury, R. P. (2007). Multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging quantifies atherosclerosis and vascular dysfunction in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Diabetes and Vascular Disease Research, 4(1), 44–48. https://doi.org/10.3132/dvdr.2007.005

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