News

Type 2 diabetics often harbor undiagnosed heart failure


 

AT EUROPREVENT 2013

ROME – Unrecognized heart failure is common among older patients with type 2 diabetes, on the basis of a study of 581 Dutch diabetes patients.

A comprehensive screening examination and assessment of Dutch patients with type 2 diabetes who were at least 60 years old and had no prior history of heart failure identified 161 patients (28%) with heart failure, Dr. Leandra J.M. Boonman-de Winter and her associates reported in a poster at the annual meeting of the European Association for Cardiovascular Prevention and Rehabilitation*.

The newly identified heart failure patients included 28 (5% of the total group screened) with reduced left ventricular function and 133 (23%) with preserved left ventricular function, said Dr. Boonman-de Winter, a researcher at University Medical Center in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and her associates.

To identify these heart failure cases, the researchers performed an extensive work-up on each patient with type 2 diabetes, including a medical history, physical examination, ECG, and echocardiography. A panel of expert cardiologists made the diagnosis of heart failure using criteria of the European Society for Cardiology (Eur. Heart J. 2012;33:1787-847).

The researchers also performed a multivariate analysis to identify demographic and clinical factors that significantly linked with the presence of heart failure in the patients with diabetes. Dyspnea or fatigue linked with a sixfold increased prevalence of heart failure; ankle edema or nocturia, a history of ischemic heart disease, and age greater than 75 years old each linked with a doubled heart-failure prevalence; and hypertension linked with a 70% increased prevalence of heart failure.

These five factors together could account for 80% of the heart failure cases found among the patients with type 2 diabetes, the researchers reported. They recommended using these five factors to identify older patients with diabetes to more thoroughly screen for heart failure.

Dr. Boonman-de Winter and her associates said that they had no disclosures.

mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

*Correction, 5/29/2013: An earlier version of this story misstated the meeting name.

Recommended Reading

Low HDL, high LDL cholesterol linked to cerebral amyloidosis
MDedge Family Medicine
For hypertension, pair CPAP with weight loss
MDedge Family Medicine
Metabolic monitoring of antipsychotics remains vital
MDedge Family Medicine
Study suggests statin use decreases breast cancer mortality
MDedge Family Medicine
Diabetes care has improved but still falls short
MDedge Family Medicine
Diabetes treatment algorithm sets goals, time limits
MDedge Family Medicine
One in five U.S. adults meets exercise guidelines
MDedge Family Medicine
In children with hypertension, weight plus race don't add up equally
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves ezetimibe-statin combination pill
MDedge Family Medicine
DEA scheduling brings weight-loss drug closer to market
MDedge Family Medicine