SVU - International Journal of Medical Sciences (Jan 2024)
Role of Renal Resistive Index in early detection of Diabetic Nephropathy in Type II Diabetic Patients
Abstract
Background: Diabetic nephropathy (DN) burdens health services; renal resistive index (RI) indicates atherosclerotic changes. Objectives: Assessing renal artery RI for early detection of DN in type II diabetes (T2DM) patients. Patients and methods: A cross-sectional study analyzed 82 T2DM patients, divided into two subgroups 27 normoalbuminuric (10 males; 17 females), 55 hyper-albuminuric (26 males; 29 females)), and 18 age and sex-matched healthy volunteers. All participants were evaluated by clinical examination, gray-scale renal ultrasound, Doppler evaluation of renal RI, and laboratory evaluation of glycemic control and renal functions. Results: T2DM without DN had a mean age of 48.6±3.9 years, while T2DM with DN had a mean age of 52.9 ±6.3 years. T2DM with DN significantly increased BMI and higher HbA1c levels compared to T2DM without DN and normal groups. T2DM patients with DN have higher renal artery RI compared to the control group. RI values showed a positive correlation with albuminuria. Renal impairment and RI increase with disease duration over 5 years. T2DM patients with DN have significantly higher renal RI (0.71 ±0.015), compared with T2DM without DN (0.639 ±0.017), and compared to the control group (0.56 ±0.02) (p 0.68 had an AUC of 1.0, which can discriminate T2DM with DN from that without DN with 100% in all sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV, (P0.68 is a useful test for early diabetic nephropathy evaluation.
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