Heliyon (May 2024)
Bibliometric and visual analysis of ACE2/Ang 1–7/MasR axis in diabetes and its microvascular complications from 2000 to 2023
Abstract
Background: The pathogenesis of diabetes and its microvascular complications are intimately associated with renin angiotensin system dysregulation. Evidence suggests the angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2)/angiotensin 1-7 (Ang 1–7)/Mas receptor (MasR) axis regulates metabolic imbalances, inflammatory responses, reduces oxidative stress, and sustains microvascular integrity, thereby strengthening defences against diabetic conditions. This study aims to conduct a comprehensive analysis of the ACE2/Ang 1–7/MasR axis in diabetes and its microvascular complications over the past two decades, focusing on key contributors, research hotspots, and thematic trends. Methods: This cross-sectional bibliometric analysis of 349 English-language publications was performed using HistCite, VOSviewer, CiteSpace, and Bibliometrix R for visualization and metric analysis. Primary analytical metrics included publication count and keyword trend dynamics. Results: The United States, contributing 105 articles, emerged as the most productive country, with the University of Florida leading institutions with 18 publications. Benter IF was the most prolific author with 14 publications, and Clinical Science was the leading journal with 13 articles. A total of 151 of the 527 author's keywords with two or more occurrences clustered into four major clusters: diabetic microvascular pathogenesis, metabolic systems, type 2 diabetes, and coronavirus infections. Keywords such as “SARS”, “ACE2”, “coronavirus”, “receptor” and “infection” displayed the strongest citation bursts. The thematic evolution in this field expanded from focusing on the renin angiotensin system (2002–2009) to incorporating ACE2 and diabetes metabolism (2010–2016). The latter period (2017–2023) witnessed a significant surge in diabetes research, reflecting the impact of COVID-19 and associated conditions such as diabetic retinopathy and cardiomyopathy. Conclusions: This scientometric study offers a detailed analysis of the ACE2/Ang 1–7/MasR axis in diabetes and its microvascular complications, providing valuable insights for future research directions.