医学
糖尿病
糖尿病性视网膜病变
内科学
心肌梗塞
视网膜病变
比例危险模型
相对风险
外科
内分泌学
置信区间
作者
Pingting Zhong,Shaopeng Yang,Riqian Liu,Ziyu Zhu,Yongjie Zhang,Weijing Cheng,Wei Wang
标识
DOI:10.1136/bjo-2023-324893
摘要
Purpose The purpose is to investigate the association between handgrip strength (HGS) and the risk of future diabetic complications in multicountry cohorts. Methods The association between HGS and diabetic complications was evaluated using cox models among 84 453 patients with pre-diabetes and diabetes from the UK Biobank with a 12-year follow-up. The association between HGS and longitudinal microcirculatory damage rates was assessed among 819 patients with diabetes from the Guangzhou Diabetic Eye Study (GDES) with a 3-year follow-up. Participants were divided into three age groups (<56, 56–65 and ≥65 years), and each group was further subdivided into three HGS tertiles. Results A 5 kg reduction in HGS was associated with increased risk for all-cause mortality (women, HR=1.10, 95% CI: 1.05 to 1.14; p<0.001; men, HR=1.13, 95% CI: 1.11 to 1.15; p<0.001). Women and men in the lowest HGS group exhibited 1.6-times and 1.3–1.5-times higher risk of myocardial infarction and stroke compared with the highest HGS group. In men, there was a higher risk of developing end-stage renal disease (HR=1.83, 95% CI: 1.30 to 2.57; p=0.001), while this was not observed in women. Both sexes in the lowest HGS group had a 1.3-times higher risk of diabetic retinopathy compared with the highest HGS group. In the GDES group, individuals with the lowest HGS showed accelerated microcirculatory damage in retina (all p<0.05). Conclusions Reduced HGS is significantly associated with a higher risk of diabetic complications and accelerated microvascular damage. HGS could serve as a practical indicator of vascular health in patients with pre-diabetes and diabetes.
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