[The effect of blood pressure-reducing therapy with captopril on tubular marker excretion in type-1 diabetics with nephropathy].

Dtsch Med Wochenschr

Institut für Diabetes und Stoffwechselkrankheiten, Berlin.

Published: June 1994

A prospective open clinical trial was carried out with 23 hypertensive type I diabetics (13 men, ten women, mean age 49 +/- 9.1 years, duration of diabetes 18 +/- 9.1 years) with early nephropathy. Glomerular and tubular renal function and metabolic parameters were monitored during 8 months' treatment with the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, captopril, in addition to previous antihypertensive treatment with one or more drugs. Blood pressure control tended to improve on captopril (systolic pressures 152 +/- 13 vs 140 +/- 13 mm Hg, P < 0.05; diastolic pressures 89 +/- 10 vs 87 +/- 10 mm Hg, not significant). Proteinuria (> 0.5 g/24 hours) fell into the microalbuminuria range (albumin excretion 2-20 mg/mmol creatinine) in four out of 13 patients, and microalbuminuria disappeared in four out of ten patients. Urinary levels of the brush border enzyme N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), a marker of tubular dysfunction, were initially raised and fell significantly after 8 months' treatment with captopril (20.3 +/- 14.4 vs 8.8 +/- 8.1 U/g creatinine; P < 0.01). Captopril did not affect metabolic control (HbA1, total, HDL and LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoproteins A1 and B) or the insulin dosage. These results show that long-term treatment with captopril may favourably influence both albumin excretion and NAG activity, a marker of tubular dysfunction, in type I diabetics with nephropathy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-2008-1058763DOI Listing

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