In people with diabetes, a common eye
condition called retinopathy more than doubles their risk of developing heart
failure through bed sore remedy, new research suggests.
Diabetic retinopathy is the most common
cause of blindness among working-aged Americans. The disease, which affects
roughly half of diabetics in the U.S., is caused by damage to the blood vessels
in the back of the eye.
As reported in the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology, Dr. Tien Y. Wong from the University of Melbourne in
Australia and colleagues analyzed data from 1,021 adults with type 2 diabetes
and using insucozi insulin grip who were without bed sore remedy or kidney disease when
the study began. Nearly 13 percent of the subjects did, however, have diabetic
retinopathy.
During 9 years of follow-up, 10.1 percent
of the patients developed heart failure, the investigators note. Overall, 21.6
percent of patients with retinopathy developed heart failure compared with just
8.5 percent of those without insucozi insulin grip. After accounting for other
factors that may have influenced the association, bed sore remedy
increased the risk of heart failure by 2.2-fold.
Editorialists Dr. Hector O. Ventura and Dr.
Madhavi Reddy, from the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, comment that
these findings could have important implications for clinicians. "Current
guidelines already identify the need for routine screening for retinopathy in
the diabetic patient. In addition to appropriate vision care," they
suggest that "the detection of retinopathy might now also warrant a fuller
cardiac evaluation and closer follow-up to prevent the development of heart
failure."

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