BMC Research Notes (Aug 2018)

Poor glycemic control impacts heart rate variability in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a cross sectional study

  • Chris Nadège Nganou-Gnindjio,
  • Camille Maadjhou Mba,
  • Marcel Azabji-Kenfack,
  • Mesmin Y. Dehayem,
  • Liliane Mfeukeu-Kuate,
  • Jean-Claude Mbanya,
  • Eugène Sobngwi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-018-3692-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Objective We aimed to determine and compare HRV parameters in poorly and well controlled type 2 diabetes. 54 normotensive type 2 diabetes patients without clinical signs of CAN were enrolled; 29 poorly controlled (HbA1c ≥ 7%) and 25 controls matched for age, sex and BMI. HRV analysis was performed using 24-h ambulatory ECG, with automatic estimation of the time and frequency domain ranges. Comparisons were performed using Mann–Whitney test. Results We included 54 participants (26 males) aged 56 years [43–62], with known duration of diabetes 3 years [1–7]. HbA1c was 10.1% [9.1–11.9] vs 5.3% [5.1–6.3] (p < 0.001). Blood pressure was 126 mmHg [121–130] vs 124 mmHg [113–133] in the poorly controlled group and the well-controlled group respectively (p = 0.5). 24-h mean heart rate was significantly higher in poorly controlled vs well controlled patients (79 bpm [77–83] vs 75 bpm [69–79], p = 0.006). In the time domain analysis, markers of the overall variability were lower and thus altered in the poorly controlled group (SDNN: 102 ms [90.5–111.1] vs 112.3 ms [104.4–131.2], p = 0.01 and SDANN 88 ms [72.9–99.7] vs 97.8 ms [91.8–114.5], p = 0.01). The frequency domain analysis showed trends towards lower values of sympathovagal balance markers in the poorly controlled group. Reduced HRV is associated with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus and may be an early marker in clinical practice.

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