OBJECTIVE To determinewhether pulmonary microvascular disease is detectable in subjects with diabetes and associated with diminished exercise capacity using a novel echocardiographicmarker quantifying the pulmonary transit of agitated contrast bubbles (PTAC). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Sixty participants (40 with diabetes and 20 control subjects) performed cardiopulmonary (maximal oxygen consumption [VO2peak]) and semisupine bicycle echocardiography exercise tests within a 1-week period. Pulmonary microvascular disease was assessed using PTAC (the number of bubbles traversing the pulmonary circulation to reach the left ventricle, categorized as low PTAC or high PTAC). Echocardiographic measures of cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressures, and biventricular function were obtained during exercise. RESULTS Subjects with diabetes and control subjects were of similar age (44 ± 13 vs. 43 ± 13 years, P = 0.87) and sex composition (70% vs. 65%male, P = 0.7). At peak exercise, low PTAC was present inmore participants with diabetes than control subjects (41% vs. 12.5%, x2 P = 0.041) and, in particular, in more subjects with diabetes with microvascular complications compared with both those without complications and control subjects (55% vs. 26% vs. 13%, x2 P = 0.02). When compared with high PTAC, low PTAC was associatedwith a 24%lower VO2peak (P = 0.006), reduced right ventricular function (P = 0.015), and greater pulmonary artery pressures during exercise (P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS PTAC is reduced in diabetes, particularly in the presence of microvascular pathology in other vascular beds, suggesting that itmay be ameaningful indicator of pulmonary microvascular disease with important consequences for cardiovascular function and exercise capacity.
CITATION STYLE
Roberts, T. J., Burns, A. T., MacIsaac, R. J., MacIsaac, A. I., Prior, D. L., & Gerche, A. L. (2018). Diagnosis and significance of pulmonary microvascular disease in diabetes. Diabetes Care, 41(4), 854–861. https://doi.org/10.2337/DC17-1904
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