44 research outputs found
Vitamin D Levels, Microvascular Complications, and Mortality in Type 1 Diabetes
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate vitamin D as a predictor of all-cause mortality, progression from normoalbuminuria to micro- or macroalbuminuria, and the development of background or proliferative retinopathy in patients with type 1 diabetes.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
A prospective observational follow-up study in which an inception cohort of type 1 diabetic patients was followed from onset of diabetes diagnosed between 1979 and 1984. Plasma vitamin D [25(OH)D3] levels were determined by high performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry in 227 patients before the patients developed microalbuminuria. Values equal to or below the 10% percentile (15.5 nmol/L) were considered severe vitamin D deficiency.
RESULTS
Median (range) vitamin D was 44.6 (1.7–161.7) nmol/L. Vitamin D level was not associated with age, sex, urinary albumin excretion rate (UAER), or blood pressure. During follow-up, 44 (18%) patients died. In a Cox proportional hazards model, the hazard ratio for mortality in subjects with severe vitamin D deficiency was 2.7 (1.1–6.7), P = 0.03, after adjustment for UAER, HbA1c, and conventional cardiovascular risk factors (age, sex, blood pressure, cholesterol, smoking). Of the 220 patients, 81 (37%) developed microalbuminuria and 27 (12%) of these progressed to macroalbuminuria. Furthermore, 192 (87%) patients developed background retinopathy, whereas 34 (15%) progressed to proliferative retinopathy. Severe vitamin D deficiency at baseline did not predict the development of these microvascular complications.
CONCLUSIONS
In patients with type 1 diabetes, severe vitamin D deficiency independently predicts all-cause mortality but not development of microvascular complications in the eye and kidney. Whether vitamin D substitution in type 1 diabetic patients can improve the prognosis remains to be investigated.
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Severe Metformin Poisoning Successfully Treated with Simultaneous Venovenous Hemofiltration and Prolonged Intermittent Hemodialysis
Metformin poisoning is a life-threatening condition with a high mortality rate. We present a patient case of metformin poisoning following intake of 80 g metformin resulting in severe lactate acidosis with a nadir pH of 6.73 and circulatory collapse, successfully treated with addition of prolonged intermittent hemodialysis (HD) to continuous venovenous hemofiltration (CVVH). The patient’s pH became normal 48 hours after metformin ingestion during simultaneous CVVH and addition of 22 hours of intermittent HD in the ICU. The highest metformin level was found to be 991 μmol/L (therapeutic range 3.9–23.2 μmol/L). We conclude that in cases of severe metformin poisoning with circulatory shock and extreme lactic acidosis, the usual CVVH modality might not efficiently clear metformin. Therefore, additional prolonged HD should be considered even in the state of cardiovascular collapse with vasopressor requirement