Are skin blood flow and venoarteriolar response abnormal in young type 1 diabetic patients without neuropathy compared to healthy controls?
Laser Doppler flowmetry reveals that the venoarteriolar response is impaired in young type 1 diabetic patients regardless of microangiopathy or neuropathy.
The skin blood flow and venoarteriolar response (VAR) in the feet of the young type 1 diabetic patients were studied with laser Doppler flowmetery. The findings were correlated with diabetic microangiopathy in 24 young patients without neuropathy--14 with diabetic microangiopathy, 10 without--and 10 healthy controls. In type 1 diabetic patients and skin blood flow, after lowering of the leg, was significantly higher in the microangiopathic patients than in the healthy controls, 5.3 +/- 1.4 vs 3 +/- 1.5, (P < 0.01). The VAR index was significantly lower in both groups of diabetics as compared with controls. In conclusions laser Doppler flowmetry is an easy and reliable noninvasive technique to evaluate skin blood flow abnormalities in the the feet of young type 1 diabetic patients, including those without neuropathy. The VAR has been found abnormal in the feet of young diabetic patients with and without microangiopathy, regardless of the presence of peripheral neuropathy.
Yosipovitch et al. (Mon,) studied this question.