AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of chronic complications in type II diabetes patients at a Karachi tertiary care unit over a period from September 1996 to December 2001.
  • It analyzed medical records of 2,199 subjects, revealing high rates of hyperglycemia (88%), obesity (66%), and hypertension (50%), with certain complications being more pronounced in females or males based on age and diabetes duration.
  • The findings indicate an increase in complication rates compared to previous research, highlighting significant relationships between complications, gender, and age.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the frequency of chronic complications of type II diabetes in subjects attending a tertiary care unit in Karachi, Pakistan.

Design: A cross-sectional analytical study.

Place And Duration Of Study: First visit of all type II diabetic subjects attending the outpatient department of Baqai Institute of Diabetology and Endocrinology from September 1996 to December 2001.

Subjects And Methods: Computerized clinical records of 2199 type II diabetic subjects were analyzed for this study. The clinical and laboratory variables were statistically evaluated with significance at p.

Results: Means of glycosylated hemoglobin HbA1c, fasting and random plasma glucose levels, systolic blood pressure, triglycerides and high density lipoproteins (HDL) were higher than the risk indicator value for both genders (p <0.005). Mean body mass index and total blood cholesterol was higher for females only. Hyperglycemia was present in 88%, high HbA1c in 81%, low HDL in 81%, obesity in 66% and hypertriglyceridemia in 54%, neuropathy in 36%, proteinuria in 28% and hypertension in 50% of the subjects. Frequency of obesity, low HDL and hypertension was higher among females (p < 0.001 in each case). Retinopathy (p<0.05), nephropathy (p<0.005), neuropathy (p<0.005) and foot ulcers (p<0.001) were higher among males. Frequency of obesity was significantly higher among those with shorter duration and in younger group while frequency of other complications was higher among those with longer duration and in the older groups.

Conclusion: Higher rates of complications were observed compared to previous studies. Certain variables showed significant association with gender and age as described above.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

frequency chronic
8
chronic complications
8
complications type
8
type diabetes
8
subjects attending
8
type diabetic
8
diabetic subjects
8
type
4
diabetes objective
4
objective assess
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!