AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the differences in chronic complications, metabolic control, and nutrition among type 1 diabetes patients in various European regions, involving a sample of 3,250 individuals.
  • Patients in eastern European centers showed higher levels of HbA1c, LDL-cholesterol, and triglycerides, as well as a greater frequency of acute and chronic complications compared to those in southern or north-western Europe.
  • Eastern European and German patients had high cholesterol and fat intake, indicating a need for better prevention and management of diabetes complications and cardiovascular risk factors across Europe, especially in the east.

Article Abstract

This study compares the prevalence of chronic complications, the quality of metabolic control and the nutritional intake in people with type 1 diabetes in different European regions. The EURODIAB Complications Study included a sample of 3250 European patients with type 1 diabetes stratified for gender, age and diabetes duration. All examinations were performed using standardised, validated methods. HBA1c, LDL-cholesterol and fasting triglycerides were higher in the eastern European centres than in the southern or north-western European centres. Acute (severe ketoacidosis, severe hypoglycaemia) and chronic diabetes complications (retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, cardiovascular disease) were all considerably more frequent in the eastern European centres. HbA1c was lower in the German centres than in the total EURODIAB cohort or in the north-western European centres, but severe hypoglycaemia and proliferative retinopathy were more common. Persons from the eastern European and the German centres consumed undesirably high amounts of cholesterol, total and saturated fat. Overall, improvements in the prevention, detection and management of diabetes complications in persons with type 1 diabetes are essential throughout Europe, particularly in eastern European regions. Since elevated LDL-cholesterol levels and hypertension were strikingly common in this relatively young cohort of European people with type 1 diabetes, generally more attention should be directed towards an adequate management of these cardiovascular risk factors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2007-978820DOI Listing

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