Study Associates Chronic Dysglycemia (HbA1c ≥ 5.8%) with Inflammation, Endothelial Dysfunction, and Higher Cardiovascular Event Rates post STEMI

Continuing Medical Education

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Many prevention specialists believe that we are not diagnosing diabetes early enough if we wait for hemoglobin A1c(HbA1c) levels to reach ≥ 6.5%.  Filepe Moura and colleagues sought to find out if there was a relationship between HbA1c  levels in non-diabetic ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients and recurrent cardiac events.  Data, from a prospective cohort of 326 patients, reviewed by the investigators included plasma glucose, HbA1c, nitrate/nitrite (NOx), and C-reactive protein (CRP).  At 30 days post-STEMI, flow-mediated dilation (FMD) was also measured.  Incidence of progression to diabetes (HbA1c levels  ≥ 6.5%) and major adverse cardiac events (MACE) defined as angina requiring hospitalization, fatal and non-fatal myocardial infarction, and sudden cardiac death was recorded during the follow-up period.  A  ROC-analysis revealed that a HbA1c  of 5.8% best predicted MACE.  Patients were divided into two groups based on HbA1c levels : those with ≥ 5.8% as high HbA1c and those with levels <5.8% as low HbA1c.  Patients who fell into the high group also had significantly higher CRP and NOx levels and a 33% lower FMD.  The authors found markers of increased inflammation and endothelial dysfunction in these patients who had HbA1c  ≥ 5.8% and concluded that this group of non-diabetic STEMI patients also had a higher long-term risk of MACE.

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