Background: Systemic insulin resistance is generally postulated as an independent risk factor of cardiovascular events in type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, the role of myocardial insulin resistance (mIR) remains to be clarified.

Methods: Two F-FDG PET/CT scans were performed on forty-three T2D patients at baseline and after hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp (HEC). Myocardial insulin sensitivity (mIS) was determined by measuring the increment in myocardial F-FDG uptake after HEC. Coronary artery calcium scoring (CACs) and myocardial radiodensity (mRD) were assessed by CT.

Results: After HEC, seventeen patients exhibited a strikingly enhancement of myocardial F-FDG uptake and twenty-six a marginal increase, thus revealing mIS and mIR, respectively. Patients with mIR showed higher mRD (HU: 38.95 [33.81-44.06] vs. 30.82 [21.48-38.02]; = 0.03) and CACs > 400 (AU: 52% vs. 29%; = 0.002) than patients with mIS. In addition, HOMA-IR and mIS only showed a correlation in those patients with mIR.

Conclusions: F-FDG PET combined with HEC is a reliable method for identifying patients with mIR. This subgroup of patients was found to be specifically at high risk of developing cardiovascular events and showed myocardial structural changes. Moreover, the gold-standard HOMA-IR index was only associated with mIR in this subgroup of patients. Our results open up a new avenue for stratifying patients with cardiovascular risk in T2D.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8778238PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm12010030DOI Listing

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