Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 23, Issue 3 , Pages 347-360, June 2009

Diabetic cardiomyopathy – a distinct disease?

  • Kaivan Khavandi, MRes (Hon. Research Fellow, Cardiovascular Medicine)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
  • ,
  • Ali Khavandi, MBChB, MRCP (Specialist Registrar, Cardiology)

      Affiliations

    • Department of Cardiology, Bristol Royal Infirmary, Marlborough Street, Bristol, UK
  • ,
  • Omar Asghar, MBChB, MRCP (Specialist Registrar, Cardiovascular Medicine)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
  • ,
  • Adam Greenstein, MBChB, BSc (Hons), MRCP (Clinical Lecturer, Cardiovascular Medicine)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
  • ,
  • Sarah Withers, BSc (Hons), PhD (Research Associate)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
  • ,
  • Anthony M. Heagerty, MBBS, MD, FRCP, FAHA, FMedSci (Professor of Medicine and Hon. Consultant Physician)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
  • ,
  • Rayaz A. Malik, MBChB, BSc (Hons), MSc, PhD, FRCP (Professor of Medicine and Hon. Consultant Physician)

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Research Group, Division of Cardiovascular and Endocrine Sciences, Core Technology Facility (3rd floor), 46 Grafton Street, University of Manchester, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +44 161 275 1196; Fax: +44 161 275 1183.

Diabetic individuals have a significantly increased likelihood of developing cardiovascular disease. Whilst part of this association is explained by the presence of concomitant risk factors, large epidemiological studies have consistently reported diabetes as a strong risk factor for the development of heart failure after adjusting for such covariates. This has resulted in the notion that there is a distinct cardiomyopathy specific to diabetes, termed ‘diabetic cardiomyopathy’. The natural history is characterized by a latent subclinical period, during which there is evidence of diastolic dysfunction and left ventricular hypertrophy, before overt clinical deterioration and systolic failure ensue. These clinical findings have been supported by a growing body of experimental data which support the notion that diabetes inflicts a direct insult to the myocardium, with cellular, structural and functional changes manifest as the diabetic myocardial phenotype. Several of these mechanisms appear to work in unison, forming complicated reciprocal pathways of disease. Reactive oxygen species and alterations in intracellular calcium homeostasis appear to play significant roles in many of these mechanisms. Determining the hierarchy of this cascade of disease will allow identification of the pathological trigger most responsible for disease. Translational research in this field is currently hindered by a lack of clinical studies and intervention trials specifically in patients with diabetic cardiomyopathy. Future clinical and experimental studies of accurate models of diabetic cardiomyopathy should help to define the true aetiology and lead to the development of specific pharmacotherapies for this condition, ultimately reducing the increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in diabetic patients.

Keywords: diabetes, cardiomyopathy, cardiomyocyte, heart failure

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PII: S1521-690X(08)00146-2

doi:10.1016/j.beem.2008.10.016

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 23, Issue 3 , Pages 347-360, June 2009