Diabetes and prediabetic states form a continuous sequence of risk for cardiovascular disease, making prevention the most effective strategy to reduce serious cardiovascular events.
Highlights the continuous sequence of cardiovascular risk from insulin resistance to diabetes, emphasizing prevention as the most effective strategy.
Diabetes mellitus is a worldwide epidemic. Cardiovascular disease remains the major cause of morbidity and mortality in people with diabetes. Studies have suggested that increased risk of cardiovascular disease is not restricted to type II or type I diabetes mellitus, but extends to prediabetic stages such as impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, metabolic syndrome, and obesity. Insulin resistance, impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, and diabetes mellitus form a continuous sequence of risk for cardiovascular disease. Therefore, cardiovascular disease mortality and morbidity within the diabetes epidemic grow into vast proportions. Evidence also exists that diabetic patients have a high prevalence of heart failure or impaired diastolic and systolic cardiac function subsequent to the combination of coronary artery disease, hypertension, and diabetic cardiomyopathy. In view of the proportions of this new epidemic, prevention of diabetes and its prediabetic states is likely to be the most effective strategy to prevent serious cardiovascular events.
Tziakas et al. (Tue,) conducted a review in Diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease. Diabetes and prediabetic states form a continuous sequence of risk for cardiovascular disease, making prevention the most effective strategy to reduce serious cardiovascular events.
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