Background Cardiovascular disease causes severe morbidity andmortality in type 1 diabetes, although the specific risk factorsand whether chronic hyperglycemia has a role are unknown. Weexamined the progression of carotid intimamedia thickness,a measure of atherosclerosis, in a population with type 1 diabetes.
Methods As part of the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventionsand Complications (EDIC) study, the long-term follow-up of theDiabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT), 1229 patientswith type 1 diabetes underwent B-mode ultrasonography of theinternal and common carotid arteries in 19941996 andagain in 19982000. We assessed the intimamediathickness in 611 subjects who had been randomly assigned toreceive conventional diabetes treatment during the DCCT andin 618 who had been assigned to receive intensive diabetes treatment.
Results At year 1 of the EDIC study, the carotid intimamediathickness was similar to that in an age- and sex-matched nondiabeticpopulation. After six years, the intimamedia thicknesswas significantly greater in the diabetic patients than in thecontrols. The mean progression of the intimamedia thicknesswas significantly less in the group that had received intensivetherapy during the DCCT than in the group that had receivedconventional therapy (progression of the intimamediathickness of the common carotid artery, 0.032 vs. 0.046 mm;P=0.01; and progression of the combined intimamedia thicknessof the common and internal carotid arteries, 0.155 vs.0.007; P=0.02) after adjustment for other risk factors. Progressionof carotid intimamedia thickness was associated withage, and the EDIC base-line systolic blood pressure, smoking,the ratio of low-density lipoprotein to high-density lipoproteincholesterol, and urinary albumin excretion rate and with themean glycosylated hemoglobin value during the mean duration(6.5 years) of the DCCT.
Conclusions Intensive therapy during the DCCT resulted in decreasedprogression of intimamedia thickness six years afterthe end of the trial.
Diabetes mellitus is accompanied by a substantial increase inthe risk of cardiovascular disease.1,2,3,4,5 Most epidemiologicand clinical-trial data have derived from the study of type2 diabetes, in which cardiovascular disease accounts for 70percent of all deaths.1,2,3 Much less is known about cardiovasculardisease in type 1 diabetes. Although the absolute risk of cardiovasculardisease is lower in patients with type 1 diabetes than in thosewith type 2 diabetes, owing in part to their younger age, therelative risk, as compared with that of nondiabetic personsof similar age, may be increased by a factor of 10.4,5 Muchof the risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with type1 diabetes has been attributed to the development of renal disease.6In addition to renal disease, autonomic neuropathy, dyslipidemia,and microvascular cardiac disease have been suggested as cardiovascularrisk factors.7 Interestingly, glycemia has not been documentedto be a risk factor for heart disease in patients with type1 diabetes.
During the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT),patients with type 1 diabetes were randomly assigned eitherto receive intensive diabetes therapy, subsequently maintaininga mean glycosylated hemoglobin value of 7.2 percent during themean follow-up of 6.5 years, or to receive standard therapy,subsequently maintaining a mean glycosylated hemoglobin valueof 9 percent.8 Although intensive therapy reduced the risk ofdevelopment and progression of microvascular and neuropathiccomplications by 35 to 76 percent, the incidence of cardiovasculardisease events was not significantly different between the twotreatment groups.9 After completion of the DCCT, long-term follow-upof the DCCT cohort, called the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventionsand Complications (EDIC) study,10 included B-mode ultrasonographyto measure the thickness of the intimamedia wall of thecarotid artery on two occasions. Carotid intimamediathickness is a well-established index of atherosclerosis thatcorrelates with prevalent and incident coronary heart disease11,12,13,14and stroke.12,14,15 We analyzed the changes in the intimamediathickness over time and associated risk factors, according tothe original intention-to-treat assignment during the DCCT.
Methods
Patients
The 1441 patients enrolled in the DCCT between 1983 and 1989were 13 to 39 years old, had had type 1 diabetes for 1 to 15years, and were in generally good health at base line.8 Aftera mean of 6.5 years of follow-up, 1375 of the 1425 survivingmembers volunteered to participate in the EDIC study, an observationalfollow-up of the DCCT cohort.10 During the EDIC study, all therapywas provided by the patients' own physicians and intensive therapywas recommended for all patients. A detailed description ofthe study procedures and base-line characteristics has beenpublished.10 Carotid ultrasonography was performed between June1994 and April 1996 (1 to 2 years after the initiation of theEDIC study and approximately 8 years after the beginning ofthe DCCT; range, 4 to 11). It was repeated between October 1998and November 2000 in 1229 participants, who are the subjectsof this study (Table 1).
Table 1. Clinical Characteristics of the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC) Participants, According to Sex and Treatment Assignment in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT).
Control Subjects
Healthy age- and sex-matched subjects without diabetes wererecruited from each of the 28 EDIC centers to serve as contemporaneouscontrols to determine carotid intimamedia thickening.One group of eight controls from each center was selected in19941996,16 and a second group of eight was selectedin 19982000. In 19982000, 222 healthy volunteerswith a mean (±SD) age of 39±11 years were studied.Fifty percent were female. Mean systolic and diastolic bloodpressures were 117±11 and 75±9 mm Hg, respectively,similar to those of the DCCT cohort. The prevalence of smoking,however, was much lower: 5.9 percent, as compared with 16.8percent in the DCCT cohort (P<0.001). The mean glycosylatedhemoglobin value was 5.0±0.35 percent.
Assessment of Carotid IntimaMedia Thickness
The measurement of intimamedia thickness has been describedin detail.16 A single longitudinal lateral view of the distal10 mm of the right and left common carotid arteries and threelongitudinal views in different imaging planes of each internalcarotid artery were obtained. The internal carotid artery wasdefined as including both the carotid bulb and the 10-mm segmentdistal to the tip of the flow divider that separates the internalfrom the external carotid artery. Studies were performed bycertified technicians at the clinical centers, recorded on videotapes,and read in a central unit (Tufts University, Boston) by a singlereader, who was unaware of the subjects' diagnostic groups,treatment assignments and the time of the studies (year 1 ascompared with year 6).
Quality-Control Procedures
Reproducibility analysis of 50 replicate measures of year 1and year 6 carotid studies resulted in absolute mean differencesof 0.03 and 0.02 mm for the year 1 common carotid artery andinternal carotid artery, respectively, and 0.03 and 0.04 mmfor the year 6 common carotid artery and internal carotid artery,respectively. The respective intraclass correlations betweenthe original and maximal wall thickness and the measurementobtained on rereading were 0.87 and 0.99 for year 1 common andinternal carotid arteries and 0.99 and 0.99 for year 6 commonand internal carotid arteries.
Other Procedures
Each subject in the EDIC study underwent an annual history-taking,physical examination, electrocardiography, and laboratory testing,including measurements of serum creatinine and glycosylatedhemoglobin, determined as they were in the DCCT.8,17 Lipid profilesand four-hour urine collections for the measurement of the albuminexcretion rate and creatinine clearance were obtained in alternateyears during the EDIC study.10
Measurements
Base-line covariates were obtained from the year 1 history andphysical examination and from the laboratory data (lipid levelsmeasured after an overnight fast and renal-function values)collected in either year 1 or year 2. The maximal intimamediathickness of the common carotid artery was defined as the meanof the maximal value for the near and far walls on both theright and left sides. The internal intimamedia thicknesswas defined as the mean of the maximal value for anterior, lateral,and posterior views on both sides. The combined intimamediathickness was defined as the sum of the standardized intimamediameasurements of the common and internal carotid arteries. Thestandardized intimamedia thickness was defined as (variable mean) ÷ SD.18 The change in the thickness wasdefined as the difference between results for year 6 and thosefor year 1.
Statistical Analysis
Group differences were compared with use of the Wilcoxon rank-sumtest for quantitative variables and the chi-square test forcategorical variables. A paired t-test was used to test thesignificance of the change over time. To compare the two treatmentgroups, we used analysis of covariance of the change in theintimamedia thickness (year 6 minus year 1) with theyear 1 thickness as an adjusting covariate. To obtain the least-squaresmeans of the change in intimamedia thickness, we fittedthe model using the change in the thickness as the outcome andadjusting for the year 1 value, age, sex, and the ultrasonographyequipment used (12 combinations of ultrasonography equipmentwere used at 28 clinical centers). A reciprocal transformationof the internal intimamedia thickness was used to yieldapproximately normal residuals.19 The association of each covariate(listed in Table 1) with each intimamedia measure wasassessed, with adjustment for the year 1 value, sex, attainedage, and the ultrasonography equipment used. To study the riskfactors, a multiple linear regression model was fitted withthe use of the year 6 intimamedia thickness as the outcomeand the year 1 thickness as a covariate. The most significantfactor for the multivariate association among similar variables(e.g., systolic and diastolic blood pressure) was selected.Only covariates known to be unaffected by the DCCT treatmentgroup were included. All two-way interaction terms were assessed,and those nominally significant at a P level of less than 0.10were retained.20 The final model included the ultrasonographyequipment used, attained age, sex, the year 1 intimamediathickness, smoking status, systolic blood pressure, treatmentgroup, and the interaction between attained age and treatmentgroup. The overall effect of the DCCT treatment group was assessedwith the use of a general linear test with 2 degrees of freedomfor both the main effect and the interaction.21,22
Results
The clinical characteristics of the EDIC study cohort at year1, according to sex and treatment assignment during the DCCT,are shown in Table 1. Mean blood pressure and lipid levels werenot significantly different between the group that had receivedintensive therapy during the DCCT and the group that had receivedconventional treatment. On the other hand, mean glycosylatedhemoglobin levels in the two groups remained significantly,albeit minimally, different during the first four years of theEDIC study; by year 5 they were no longer different (7.9 percentin the original intensive-treatment group and 8.0 percent inthe conventional-treatment group, P=0.075).23 Albumin excretionrates remained significantly lower in the intensive-treatmentgroup than in the conventional-treatment group during the sixyears of EDIC follow-up, reflecting the previously describedlong-lasting beneficial effects of intensive therapy on diabeticnephropathy.8,24 Body-mass index during the EDIC study remainedsignificantly higher in the group that had received intensivetreatment during DCCT, as it had been at the end of that study.
The intimamedia measurements in the age- and sex-matched19982000 nondiabetic population were similar to publisheddata in healthy nondiabetic subjects, with a mean intimamediathickness of 0.58±0.10 mm for the common carotid arteryand a mean of 0.63±0.18 mm for the internal carotid artery.15,24Although no significant differences in thickness were demonstrablebetween the diabetic cohort and nondiabetic controls at year1,16 by year 6, the intimamedia thickness for the commonand internal carotid arteries was significantly greater in thediabetic cohort than in the nondiabetic cohort for each sex,even after adjustment for smoking status (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Intima-Media Thickness of the Common and Internal Carotid Arteries at Year 6 in Diabetic Patients and Age-Matched Nondiabetic Control Subjects.
Box plots represent the second and third quartiles of the distribution, the center line the median, and the plus sign the mean. P values were calculated with use of the Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
There was less progression of the intimamedia thicknessof the common carotid artery from year 1 to year 6 among thepatients who had received intensive treatment during the DCCTthan among those who had received conventional treatment. Afteradjustment for sex, age, the ultrasonography equipment used,and the year 1 intimamedia thickness (Table 2), the meanprogression was 0.032 mm in the intensive-treatment group and0.046 mm in the conventional-treatment group, with a differenceof 0.013 mm (95 percent confidence interval for the difference,0.003 to 0.024). The progression of the intimamedia thicknessof the combined common and internal carotid arteries was alsoless in the intensive-treatment group, where regression occurred,than in the conventional-treatment group (0.155 vs. 0.007;a difference of 0.162; 95 percent confidence interval for thedifference, 0.031 to 0.293) (Table 2). The differences betweentreatment groups in the reciprocal values for the intimamediathickness of the internal carotid artery were not significant(P=0.07). There was no significant treatment effect accordingto sex. Finally, the potential effect of any differences inthe use of hypolipidemic or antihypertensive agents betweenthe two treatment groups was analyzed by including terms formedication use in the analyses in Table 2. The results wereunchanged.
Table 2. Least-Squares Mean Change in the IntimaMedia Thickness of the Common Carotid Artery and of the Combined Common and Internal Carotid Arteries from Year 1 to Year 6 of the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Study, According to the Treatment Assignment in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial.
The intimamedia thickness at year 6 of the EDIC studywas associated with smoking status, systolic (but not diastolic)blood pressure, the presence or absence of hypertension, totaland high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels (data not shown),the ratio of low-density lipoprotein to high-density lipoproteincholesterol, urinary albumin excretion rate, and the mean glycosylatedhemoglobin level during the DCCT (Table 3). All of the associationswere similar in magnitude and direction for the intimamediathickness of the common carotid artery and the internal carotidartery and the combined intimamedia thickness and whenthe change in thickness was substituted for the year 6 thickness.The association of the mean glycosylated hemoglobin value duringthe DCCT with the year 6 intimamedia thickness of thecommon carotid artery remained significant (P<0.001) afteradjustment for age, sex, year 1 intimamedia thicknessof the common carotid artery, and the ultrasonography equipmentused.
Table 3. Univariate Associations of Carotid IntimaMedia Thickness, with Risk Factors Adjusted for Age, Sex, Ultrasonography Equipment Used, and Year 1 IntimaMedia Thickness Measurement.
Since many of the univariate risk factors differed between groupsat year 1 of the EDIC study, reflecting the effects of treatmentduring the DCCT, multivariate regression modeling adjusted onlyfor the covariates not affected by treatment at year 1 of theEDIC study. These models revealed that, for each measure, thebenefits of intensive treatment increased with age (Table 4).Furthermore, the overall treatment effect with 2 degrees offreedom was significant for all these measures (P=0.004 forthe intimamedia thickness of the common carotid arteryand P=0.005 for the combined thickness), including the reciprocalinternal intimamedia thickness (P=0.049) (data not shown).The complete model explained approximately 40 percent of thevariation in the intimamedia thickness of the commoncarotid artery and 52 percent of the variation in the combinedthickness. Figure 2 shows the difference between the conventional-treatmentand intensive-treatment groups in the change in the intimamediathickness of the common carotid artery as a function of attainedage. The intensive therapy during 6.5 years of the DCCT resultedin a significantly slower rate of progression of intimamediathickness during the 6 years of the EDIC study (P=0.004).
Figure 2. Mean Treatment-Related Difference in the Relation between the Estimated Mean IntimaMedia Thickness and Age.
Dotted lines represent 95 percent confidence intervals. The overall difference (conventional treatment minus intensive treatment) was significant (P=0.004).
Discussion
We assessed the long-term effect of intensive treatment of type1 diabetes, presumably mediated through improved glycemic control,on the thickness of the carotid-artery wall over time. Usinga multivariate linear regression model incorporating importantcovariates that were not affected or confounded by treatment,as well as the interaction between age and treatment group,we found a significant effect of intensive therapy, as comparedwith conventional treatment, during the DCCT on the subsequentchange in the intimamedia thickness with age. The intensivelytreated group had a smaller increase in the thickness with agethan did the conventionally treated group. The differences inintimamedia thickness between these treatment groupscould be due to the less atherogenic lipid profile and decreasedlevel of microalbuminuria seen with intensive therapy duringthe DCCT. However, even after adjustment for these variablesin additional models, intensive therapy (and the lower meanglycosylated hemoglobin value during the DCCT) continued tobe associated with a decrease in the progression of the intimamediathickness. The differences in the glycosylated hemoglobin valueduring the DCCT explained 96 percent of the long-term differencesbetween groups (sum of squares) in the intimamedia thicknessof the common carotid artery at year 6.
Although the rate of cardiovascular disease is increased amongpatients with diabetes,1,5 the role of glycemia in this processremains uncertain.1,25 Intervention trials achieving variabledegrees of glycemic control in patients with type 1 and type2 diabetes have found either no statistically significant beneficialeffect on cardiovascular end points9,26,27 or a positive effectthat was not consistent in all groups and analyses.28,29,30A meta-regression analysis, including predominantly patientswith type 2 diabetes and subjects without diabetes, found aprogressive relation between initial fasting and postprandialglucose levels and the subsequent occurrence of cardiovascularevents over a 12-year period.31 The increased relative riskextended to subjects with glucose levels below the thresholdfor the diagnosis of diabetes. These studies have generallyfocused on cardiovascular disease events. However, several epidemiologicanalyses in patients with type 2 diabetes have shown associationsbetween intimamedia thickness as an early indicatorof atherosclerosis and glycemia.32,33
Our results demonstrate an association between glycemia andintimamedia thickness, a sensitive marker for coronaryand cerebral vascular disease, in patients with type 1 diabetes.The explanation for the apparently delayed effect of diabetesinterventions on intimamedia thickness at year1 of the EDIC study there was no effect of intensive therapyand no significant associations between carotid intimamediathickness and the mean glycosylated hemoglobin value duringthe DCCT16 may lie in the putative pathogenic mechanismof atherosclerosis and in the demographics of the DCCT cohort.The accelerated development of atherosclerotic lesions in patientswith diabetes may be the result of a gradual accumulation ofadvanced glycosylation end products.34,35 Thus, it may takeyears for atherosclerosis caused by various levels of hyperglycemiato develop, especially in a relatively young population, suchas the DCCT cohort.
We16 and others36,37,38 have found the conventional cardiovasculardisease risk factors of hypertension, dyslipidemia, and smokingto be related to intimamedia thickness in patients withtype 1 diabetes. Urinary albumin excretion was also associatedwith atherosclerosis, as suggested in other studies.39
The differences in intimamedia thickness that we observedat year 6 between the diabetic cohort and the age- and sex-matchednondiabetic controls confirm and extend the results of severalearlier, smaller studies. Increased carotid intimamediathickness has been reported in 105 Japanese patients with type1 diabetes, as compared with those in age- and sex-matched controls,40and in 60 Italian patients with type 1 diabetes.41 Studies ofpatients with type 2 diabetes have also demonstrated a differencein intimamedia thickness between diabetic patients andnondiabetic subjects32,42; however, the relevance of these findingsin the generally younger patients with type 1 diabetes who havea lower burden of cardiovascular disease and risk factors forcardiovascular disease is uncertain.
Our study has some limitations. The entire EDIC cohort did notparticipate in the carotid ultrasonographic measurements. However,the proportion of subjects who did not participate was small(10.6 percent), and the clinical characteristics of the nonparticipantsand participants were generally similar. The unequal prevalenceof smoking in the EDIC cohort and the age-matched nondiabeticcontrols could account for some of the differences in carotidintimamedia thickness between these two groups; however,analyses that controlled for smoking yielded similar results.Differential use between treatment groups of medications knownto ameliorate risk factors for cardiovascular disease and atherogenesismight explain, or confound, these results. However, here again,analyses that controlled for medication use and elevated bloodpressure or low-density lipoprotein level yielded the same results.In fact, the more frequent use of such medications by the conventional-treatmentgroup would be expected to decrease the differences in intimamediathickness that we found.
The results for intimamedia thickness in the DCCT cohort,which was carefully selected to exclude patients with severalother risk factors for atherosclerosis,9 might not extend toall patients with type 1 diabetes. However, as noted previously,43at base line there were few differences between the DCCT cohortand the unselected population-based cohort with type 1 diabetesin the Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy.Therefore, the current results can probably be applied to thegeneral population of patients with type 1 diabetes.
Finally, although cross-sectional intimamedia measurementshave been convincingly shown to correlate with the risk of cardiovasculardisease events, data to support an association between the progressionof intimamedia thickness and such events are scarce.44The clinical manifestations of atherosclerosis will increaseas the DCCT cohort ages,5,45 increasing the likelihood of detectinga difference in cardiovascular disease event rates between treatmentgroups, should one exist. Longer follow-up of this cohort willreveal whether the decrease in the progression of intimamediathickness with intensive diabetes therapy translates into aclinically meaningful reduction in cardiovascular disease events.
Supported by contracts with the Division of Diabetes, Endocrinologyand Metabolic Diseases of the National Institute of Diabetesand Digestive and Kidney Diseases and by the General ClinicalResearch Centers Program, National Center for Research Resources,and by Genentech through a Cooperative Research and DevelopmentAgreement with the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestiveand Kidney Diseases.
Dr. Orchard reports having received honorariums from Merck,Schering-Plough, and AstraZeneca and having equity in Bristol-MyersSquibb, and Dr. Brillon honorariums from Aventis and Novo-Nordiskand equity in Aventis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Lilly, and GlaxoSmithKline.
* A complete list of the persons and institutions participatingin the DCCT/EDIC Research Group appears in the Appendix.
Source Information
The writing group of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (DCCT/EDIC) Research Group (David M. Nathan, M.D., John Lachin, Sc.D., Patricia Cleary, M.S., Trevor Orchard, M.D., David J. Brillon, M.D., Jye-Yu Backlund, M.P.H., Daniel H. O'Leary, M.D., and Saul Genuth, M.D.) assumes responsibility for the contents of this article.
Address reprint requests to DCCT/EDIC Research Group at Box NDIC/DCCT, Bethesda, MD 20892, or at dnathan{at}partners.org.
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Appendix
The following persons and institutions participated in the DCCT/EDICResearch Group: Albert Einstein College of Medicine S. Engel, H. Martinez, H. Shamoon, H. Engel; Case Western ReserveUniversity W. Dahms, L. Mayer, S. Pendegras, H. Zegarra,D. Miller, L. Singerman, S. Smith-Brewer, S. Genuth (past);Cornell University Medical Center D. Brillon, M. Lackaye,M. Heinemann, V. Reppuci, T. Lee; Henry Ford Health System F. Whitehouse, D. Kruger, A. Galpern, J.D. Carey; InternationalDiabetes Center R. Bergenstal, M. Johnson, D. Kendall,M. Spencer, D. Noller, K. Morgan, D. Etzwiler (past); JoslinDiabetes Center A. Jacobson, E. Golden, G. Sharuk, P.Arrigg, R. Baeser, O. Ganda, J. Rosenzweig, H. Wolpert, P. Economides,O. Handy, L. Rand (past); Massachusetts General Hospital D. Nathan, S. Fritz, J. Godine, C. McKitrick, P. Lou; Mayo Foundation F.J. Service, G. Ziegler, J. Pach, J. Lindsey; MedicalUniversity of South Carolina J. Colwell, D. Wood, R.Mayfield, K. Hermayer, M. Szpiech, T. Lyons, J. Parker, A. Farr,S. Elsing, T. Thompson, J. Selby, M. Bracey; Northwestern University M. Molitch, B. Schaefer, L. Jampol, D. Weinberg, A.Lyon, Z. Strugula, J. Shankle, P. Astlesford; University ofCalifornia, San Diego O. Kolterman, G. Lorenzi, M. Goldbaum;University of Iowa W. Sivitz, M. Bayless, R. Zeither(past), T. Weingeist, E. Stone, H. Culver Boidt, K. Gehres,S. Russell; University of Maryland School of Medicine D. Counts, A. Kowarski (past), D. Ostrowski, T. Donner, S. Steidl,B. Jones; University of Michigan W. Herman, D. Greene(past), C. Martin, M.J. Stevens, A.K. Vine, S. Elner; Universityof Minnesota J. Bantle, B. Rogness, T. Olsen, E. Steuer;University of Missouri D. Goldstein, S. Hitt, J. Giangiacomo,D. Hainsworth; University of New Mexico D. Schade, M.Burge, J. Canady, M. Schluter, A. Das, D. Hornbeck (past); Universityof Pennsylvania S. Schwartz, P.A. Bourne, B.J. Maschak-Carey(past), L. Baker (deceased), S. Braunstein, A. Brucker; Universityof Pittsburgh T. Orchard, N. Silvers, T. Songer, B.Doft, S. Olson, R.L. Bergren, L. Lobes, M. Fineman, A. Drash(past); University of South Florida J. Malone, J. Vaccaro-Kish,C. Berger, R. Gstalder, P.R. Pavan, A. Morrison; Universityof Tennessee S. Dagogo-Jack, S. Schussler, A. Kitabchi,H. Lambeth, M.B. Murphy, S. Moser, D. Meyer, A. Iannacone, M.Bryer-Ash (past); University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center P. Raskin, S. Strowig, A. Edwards, J. Alappatt (past),C. Wilson (past), S. Park (past), Y. He; University of Toronto B. Zinman, A. Barnie, S. MacLean, R. Devenyi, M. Mandelcorn,M. Brent; University of Washington J. Palmer, S. Catton,J. Kinyoun, L. Van Ottingham (past), J. Ginsberg (past); Universityof Western Ontario J. Dupre, J. Harth, C. Canny (past),D. Nicolle; Vanderbilt University M. May, R. Lorenz(past), J. Lipps, L. Survant, S. Feman (past), K. Tawansy, A.Agarwal, T. Adkins; Washington University, St. Louis N. White, J. Santiago (deceased), L. Levandoski, I. Boniuk,G. Grand, M. Thomas, D. Burgess, D. Joseph, K. Blinder, G. Shah;Yale University School of Medicine W. Tamborlane, P.Gatcomb, K. Stoessel, K. Taylor; Clinical Coordinating Center(Case Western Reserve University) B. Dahms, R. Trail,J. Quin; Data Coordinating Center (George Washington University,Biostatistics Center) J. Lachin, P. Cleary, D. Kenny,J. Backlund, L. Diminick, A. Determan, K. Klump, M. Hawkins;National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney DiseasesProgram Office C. Cowie, J. Fradkin, C. Siebert (past),R. Eastman (past); Central Fundus Photograph Reading Center(University of Wisconsin) M. Davis, L. Hubbard, P. Geithman,L. Kastorff, M. Neider, D. Badal, B. Esser, K. Miner, H. Wabers,K. Glander, J. Joyce, N. Robinson, C. Hurtenbach, C. Hannon;Central Biochemistry Laboratory (University of Minnesota) M. Steffes, J. Bucksa, B. Chavers; Central Carotid UltrasoundUnit (New England Medical Center) D. O'Leary, L. Funk,J. Polak; Central Electrocardiographic Reading Unit (Universityof Minnesota) R. Crow, C. O'Donnell (past), B. Gloeb,S. Thomas; Computed Tomography Reading Center (HarborUCLAResearch and Education Institute) R. Detrano, N. Wong,M. Fox, L. Kim, R. Oudiz; External Advisory Committee G. Weir (chair), C. Clark, R. D'Agostino, M. Espeland, B. Klein,T. Manolio, L. Rand, D. Singer, M. Stern; Molecular Risk FactorsProgram Project (Medical University of South Carolina) W.T. Garvey, T.J. Lyons, A. Jenkins, R. Klein, M. Lopes-Virella,G. Virella, A.A. Jaffa, D. Zheng, D. Lackland, D. McGee, R.K.Mayfield, M. Brabham; Genetic Studies Group (Hospital for SickChildren) A. Boright, A. Paterson, S. Scherer, B. Zinman;Lipoprotein Distribution/Obesity Group (University of Washington) J. Brunzell, J. Hokanson, S. Marcovina, J. Purnell,S. Sibley, S. Deeb, K. Edwards; Editor, EDIC Publications D. Nathan.
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van Duinkerken, E., Klein, M., Schoonenboom, N. S.M., Hoogma, R. P.L.M., Moll, A. C., Snoek, F. J., Stam, C. J., Diamant, M.
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Ceriello, A., Esposito, K., Ihnat, M., Thorpe, J., Giugliano, D.
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(2009). Cardiovascular Disease, Neuropathy, and Retinopathy. Diabetes Care
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Van Den Eeden, S. K., Sarma, A. V., Rutledge, B. N., Cleary, P. A., Kusek, J. W., Nyberg, L. M., McVary, K. T., Wessells, H., for the DCCT/EDIC Research Group,
(2009). Effect of Intensive Glycemic Control and Diabetes Complications on Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms in Men With Type 1 Diabetes: Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (DCCT/EDIC) study. Diabetes Care
32: 664-670
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Labinskyy, N., Mukhopadhyay, P., Toth, J., Szalai, G., Veres, M., Losonczy, G., Pinto, J. T., Pacher, P., Ballabh, P., Podlutsky, A., Austad, S. N., Csiszar, A., Ungvari, Z.
(2009). Longevity is associated with increased vascular resistance to high glucose-induced oxidative stress and inflammatory gene expression in Peromyscus leucopus. Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol.
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Nathan, D. M., Buse, J. B., Davidson, M. B., Ferrannini, E., Holman, R. R., Sherwin, R., Zinman, B.
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32: 193-203
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Bowes, A. J., Khan, M. I., Shi, Y., Robertson, L., Werstuck, G. H.
(2009). Valproate Attenuates Accelerated Atherosclerosis in Hyperglycemic ApoE-Deficient Mice: Evidence in Support of a Role for Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Glycogen Synthase Kinase-3 in Lesion Development and Hepatic Steatosis. Am. J. Pathol.
174: 330-342
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Koopman, R. J., Mainous, A. G. III, Everett, C. J., Carter, R. E.
(2008). Tool to Assess Likelihood of Fasting Glucose ImpairmenT (TAG-IT). Ann Fam Med
6: 555-561
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Holman, R. R., Paul, S. K., Bethel, M. A., Matthews, D. R., Neil, H. A. W.
(2008). 10-Year Follow-up of Intensive Glucose Control in Type 2 Diabetes. NEJM
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Lopes-Virella, M. F., Carter, R. E., Gilbert, G. E., Klein, R. L., Jaffa, M., Jenkins, A. J., Lyons, T. J., Garvey, W. T., Virella, G., and the DCCT/EDIC Cohort Study Group,
(2008). Risk Factors Related to Inflammation and Endothelial Dysfunction in the DCCT/EDIC Cohort and Their Relationship With Nephropathy and Macrovascular Complications. Diabetes Care
31: 2006-2012
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Mzhavia, N., Yu, S., Ikeda, S., Chu, T. T., Goldberg, I., Dansky, H. M.
(2008). Neuronatin: A New Inflammation Gene Expressed on the Aortic Endothelium of Diabetic Mice. Diabetes
57: 2774-2783
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Maile, L. A., Capps, B. E., Miller, E. C., Aday, A. W., Clemmons, D. R.
(2008). Integrin-Associated Protein Association With Src Homology 2 Domain Containing Tyrosine Phosphatase Substrate 1 Regulates IGF-I Signaling In Vivo. Diabetes
57: 2637-2643
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El-Osta, A., Brasacchio, D., Yao, D., Pocai, A., Jones, P. L., Roeder, R. G., Cooper, M. E., Brownlee, M.
(2008). Transient high glucose causes persistent epigenetic changes and altered gene expression during subsequent normoglycemia. JEM
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Fernhall, B., Agiovlasitis, S.
(2008). Arterial function in youth: window into cardiovascular risk. J. Appl. Physiol.
105: 325-333
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Dabir, P., Marinic, T. E., Krukovets, I., Stenina, O. I.
(2008). Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Is Activated by Glucose and Regulates the Thrombospondin-1 Gene Promoter in Endothelial Cells. Circ. Res.
102: 1558-1565
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Kitzmiller, J. L., Block, J. M., Brown, F. M., Catalano, P. M., Conway, D. L., Coustan, D. R., Gunderson, E. P., Herman, W. H., Hoffman, L. D., Inturrisi, M., Jovanovic, L. B., Kjos, S. I., Knopp, R. H., Montoro, M. N., Ogata, E. S., Paramsothy, P., Reader, D. M., Rosenn, B. M., Thomas, A. M., Kirkman, M. S.
(2008). Managing Preexisting Diabetes for Pregnancy: Summary of evidence and consensus recommendations for care. Diabetes Care
31: 1060-1079
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Jaffa, A. A., Usinger, W. R., McHenry, M. B., Jaffa, M. A., Lipstiz, S. R., Lackland, D., Lopes-Virella, M., Luttrell, L. M., Wilson, P. W. F., the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epide,
(2008). Connective Tissue Growth Factor and Susceptibility to Renal and Vascular Disease Risk in Type 1 Diabetes. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
93: 1893-1900
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Goh, S.-Y., Cooper, M. E.
(2008). The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products in Progression and Complications of Diabetes. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
93: 1143-1152
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Knerr, I., Dost, A., Lepler, R., Raile, K., Schober, E., Rascher, W., Holl, R. W., On behalf of the Diabetes Data Acquisition System,
(2008). Tracking and Prediction of Arterial Blood Pressure From Childhood to Young Adulthood in 868 Patients With Type 1 Diabetes: A multicenter longitudinal survey in Germany and Austria. Diabetes Care
31: 726-727
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Hirai, F. E., Moss, S. E., Klein, B. E.K., Klein, R.
(2008). Relationship of Glycemic Control, Exogenous Insulin, and C-Peptide Levels to Ischemic Heart Disease Mortality Over a 16-Year Period in People With Older-Onset Diabetes: The Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy (WESDR). Diabetes Care
31: 493-497
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Bhattacharyya, S., Marinic, T. E., Krukovets, I., Hoppe, G., Stenina, O. I.
(2008). Cell Type-specific Post-transcriptional Regulation of Production of the Potent Antiangiogenic and Proatherogenic Protein Thrombospondin-1 by High Glucose. J. Biol. Chem.
283: 5699-5707
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Bianchi, C., Miccoli, R., Penno, G., Del Prato, S.
(2008). Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in People With Dysglycemia. Diabetes Care
31: S208-S214
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Iqbal, N., Rubenstein, A. H.
(2008). Does Lowering of Blood Glucose Improve Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality?. CJASN
3: 163-167
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Nielson, C., Fleming, R. M.
(2007). Blood Glucose and Cerebrovascular Disease in Nondiabetic Patients. ANGIOLOGY
58: 625-629
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Song, P., Wu, Y., Xu, J., Xie, Z., Dong, Y., Zhang, M., Zou, M.-H.
(2007). Reactive Nitrogen Species Induced by Hyperglycemia Suppresses Akt Signaling and Triggers Apoptosis by Upregulating Phosphatase PTEN (Phosphatase and Tensin Homologue Deleted on Chromosome 10) in an LKB1-Dependent Manner. Circulation
116: 1585-1595
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Rodriguez, R. R., Gomez-Diaz, R. A., Haj, J. T., Garnica, F. J. A., Soriano, E. R., Meguro, E. N., Aguilar-Salinas, C. A., Wacher, N. H.
(2007). Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in Pediatric Type 1 Diabetic Patients. Diabetes Care
30: 2599-2602
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Shankar, A., Klein, R., Klein, B. E. K., Moss, S. E.
(2007). Association between Glycosylated Hemoglobin Level and Cardiovascular and All-Cause Mortality in Type 1 Diabetes. Am J Epidemiol
166: 393-402
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Rooke, T. W.
(2007). Controversies in vascular screening art versus science. Vasc Med
12: 235-242
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Jialal, I., Miguelino, E., Griffen, S. C., Devaraj, S.
(2007). Concomitant Reduction of Low-Density Lipoprotein-Cholesterol and Biomarkers of Inflammation with Low-Dose Simvastatin Therapy in Patients with Type 1 Diabetes. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.
92: 3136-3140
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Paterson, A. D., Rutledge, B. N., Cleary, P. A., Lachin, J. M., Crow, R. S., for the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/E,
(2007). The Effect of Intensive Diabetes Treatment on Resting Heart Rate in Type 1 Diabetes: The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Study. Diabetes Care
30: 2107-2112
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Raggi, P., Bellasi, A.
(2007). Review: Imaging to assess effect of medical therapy in patients with diabetes mellitus. British Journal of Diabetes & Vascular Disease
7: 157-164
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Umpierrez, G. E., Cantey, P., Smiley, D., Palacio, A., Temponi, D., Luster, K., Chapman, A.
(2007). Primary Aldosteronism in Diabetic Subjects With Resistant Hypertension. Diabetes Care
30: 1699-1703
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Margeirsdottir, H. D., Larsen, J. R., Brunborg, C., Sandvik, L., Dahl-Jorgensen, K., for the Norwegian Study Group for Childhood Diabet,
(2007). Strong Association Between Time Watching Television and Blood Glucose Control in Children and Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes. Diabetes Care
30: 1567-1570
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Kim, Y.-L.
(2007). CAN WE OVERCOME THE PREDESTINED POOR SURVIVAL OF DIABETIC PATIENTS? PERSPECTIVES FROM PRE- AND POST-DIALYSIS. pdi
27: S171-S175
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The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epide,
(2007). Long-Term Effect of Diabetes and Its Treatment on Cognitive Function. NEJM
356: 1842-1852
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Yanai, H., Yoshida, H., Tomono, Y., Tada, N.
(2007). Atherosclerosis imaging in statin intervention trials. QJM
100: 253-262
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Lewis, P., Stefanovic, N., Pete, J., Calkin, A. C., Giunti, S., Thallas-Bonke, V., Jandeleit-Dahm, K. A., Allen, T. J., Kola, I., Cooper, M. E., de Haan, J. B.
(2007). Lack of the Antioxidant Enzyme Glutathione Peroxidase-1 Accelerates Atherosclerosis in Diabetic Apolipoprotein E-Deficient Mice. Circulation
115: 2178-2187
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Kanter, J. E., Johansson, F., LeBoeuf, R. C., Bornfeldt, K. E.
(2007). Do Glucose and Lipids Exert Independent Effects on Atherosclerotic Lesion Initiation or Progression to Advanced Plaques?. Circ. Res.
100: 769-781
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Larsen, J. R, Tsunoda, T., Tuzcu, E M., Schoenhagen, P., Brekke, M., Arnesen, H., Hanssen, K. F, Nissen, S. E, Dahl-Jorgensen, K.
(2007). Intracoronary ultrasound examinations reveal significantly more advanced coronary atherosclerosis in people with type 1 diabetes than in age- and sex-matched non-diabetic controls. Diabetes and Vascular Disease Research
4: 62-65
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Eeg-Olofsson, K., Cederholm, J., Nilsson, P. M., Gudbjornsdottir, S., Eliasson, B., for the Steering Committee of the Swedish National,
(2007). Glycemic and Risk Factor Control in Type 1 Diabetes: Results from 13,612 patients in a national diabetes register. Diabetes Care
30: 496-502
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Raman, P., Krukovets, I., Marinic, T. E., Bornstein, P., Stenina, O. I.
(2007). Glycosylation Mediates Up-regulation of a Potent Antiangiogenic and Proatherogenic Protein, Thrombospondin-1, by Glucose in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells. J. Biol. Chem.
282: 5704-5714
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Petitti, D. B., Imperatore, G., Palla, S. L., Daniels, S. R., Dolan, L. M., Kershnar, A. K., Marcovina, S., Pettitt, D. J., Pihoker, C., for the SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth Study Group,
(2007). Serum Lipids and Glucose Control: The SEARCH for Diabetes in Youth Study. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med
161: 159-165
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Kim, W. Y., Astrup, A. S., Stuber, M., Tarnow, L., Falk, E., Botnar, R. M., Simonsen, C., Pietraszek, L., Hansen, P. R., Manning, W. J., Andersen, N. T., Parving, H.-H.
(2007). Subclinical Coronary and Aortic Atherosclerosis Detected by Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Type 1 Diabetes With and Without Diabetic Nephropathy. Circulation
115: 228-235
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Buse, J. B., Ginsberg, H. N., Bakris, G. L., Clark, N. G., Costa, F., Eckel, R., Fonseca, V., Gerstein, H. C., Grundy, S., Nesto, R. W., Pignone, M. P., Plutzky, J., Porte, D., Redberg, R., Stitzel, K. F., Stone, N. J.
(2007). Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases in People With Diabetes Mellitus: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association and the American Diabetes Association. Circulation
115: 114-126
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Buse, J. B., Ginsberg, H. N., Bakris, G. L., Clark, N. G., Costa, F., Eckel, R., Fonseca, V., Gerstein, H. C., Grundy, S., Nesto, R. W., Pignone, M. P., Plutzky, J., Porte, D., Redberg, R., Stitzel, K. F., Stone, N. J.
(2007). Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases in People With Diabetes Mellitus: A scientific statement from the American Heart Association and the American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Care
30: 162-172
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Cleary, P. A., Orchard, T. J., Genuth, S., Wong, N. D., Detrano, R., Backlund, J.-Y. C., Zinman, B., Jacobson, A., Sun, W., Lachin, J. M., Nathan, D. M., for the DCCT/EDIC Research Group,
(2006). The Effect of Intensive Glycemic Treatment on Coronary Artery Calcification in Type 1 Diabetic Participants of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (DCCT/EDIC) Study. Diabetes
55: 3556-3565
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Barzilay, J. I., Davis, B. R., Cutler, J. A., Pressel, S. L., Whelton, P. K., Basile, J., Margolis, K. L., Ong, S. T., Sadler, L. S., Summerson, J., for the ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group,
(2006). Fasting Glucose Levels and Incident Diabetes Mellitus in Older Nondiabetic Adults Randomized to Receive 3 Different Classes of Antihypertensive Treatment: A Report From the Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT).. Arch Intern Med
166: 2191-2201
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Oram, J. F., Vaughan, A. M.
(2006). ATP-Binding Cassette Cholesterol Transporters and Cardiovascular Disease. Circ. Res.
99: 1031-1043
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Orchard, T. J., Costacou, T., Kretowski, A., Nesto, R. W.
(2006). Type 1 diabetes and coronary artery disease.. Diabetes Care
29: 2528-2538
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Celermajer, D S, Ayer, J. G J
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92: 1701-1706
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Wu, L., Vikramadithyan, R., Yu, S., Pau, C., Hu, Y., Goldberg, I. J., Dansky, H. M.
(2006). Addition of dietary fat to cholesterol in the diets of LDL receptor knockout mice: effects on plasma insulin, lipoproteins, and atherosclerosis. J. Lipid Res.
47: 2215-2222
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Cherrington, A. D.
(2006). 2005 presidential address: diabetes: past, present, and future.. Diabetes Care
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Rice, T. W., Lumsden, A. B.
(2006). Optimal Medical Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease. VASC ENDOVASCULAR SURG
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Crouse, J. R. III
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Nathan, D. M., Buse, J. B., Davidson, M. B., Heine, R. J., Holman, R. R., Sherwin, R., Zinman, B.
(2006). Management of Hyperglycemia in Type 2 Diabetes: A Consensus Algorithm for the Initiation and Adjustment of Therapy: A consensus statement from the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Diabetes Care
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Goldberg, I. J., Dansky, H. M.
(2006). Diabetic Vascular Disease: An Experimental Objective. Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Bio.
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Oomichi, T., Emoto, M., Tabata, T., Morioka, T., Tsujimoto, Y., Tahara, H., Shoji, T., Nishizawa, Y.
(2006). Impact of Glycemic Control on Survival of Diabetic Patients on Chronic Regular Hemodialysis: A 7-year observational study. Diabetes Care
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Bloomgarden, Z. T.
(2006). Cardiovascular Disease. Diabetes Care
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Anand, D. V., Lim, E., Lahiri, A., Bax, J. J.
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27: 905-912
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Srivastava, S., Ramana, K. V., Tammali, R., Srivastava, S. K., Bhatnagar, A.
(2006). Contribution of aldose reductase to diabetic hyperproliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells.. Diabetes
55: 901-910
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Hankey, G. J., Norman, P. E., Eikelboom, J. W.
(2006). Medical Treatment of Peripheral Arterial Disease. JAMA
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Schwab, K. O., Doerfer, J., Hecker, W., Grulich-Henn, J., Wiemann, D., Kordonouri, O., Beyer, P., Holl, R. W., on behalf of the DPV Initiative of the German Work,
(2006). Spectrum and Prevalence of Atherogenic Risk Factors in 27,358 Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults With Type 1 Diabetes: Cross-sectional data from the German diabetes documentation and quality management system (DPV). Diabetes Care
29: 218-225
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Nieuwdorp, M., van Haeften, T. W., Gouverneur, M. C.L.G., Mooij, H. L., van Lieshout, M. H.P., Levi, M., Meijers, J. C.M., Holleman, F., Hoekstra, J. B.L., Vink, H., Kastelein, J. J.P., Stroes, E. S.G.
(2006). Loss of Endothelial Glycocalyx During Acute Hyperglycemia Coincides With Endothelial Dysfunction and Coagulation Activation In Vivo. Diabetes
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Werstuck, G. H., Khan, M. I., Femia, G., Kim, A. J., Tedesco, V., Trigatti, B., Shi, Y.
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