IMR Press / RCM / Volume 10 / Issue 4 / DOI: 10.3909/ricm0474

Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine (RCM) is published by IMR Press from Volume 19 Issue 1 (2018). Previous articles were published by another publisher in Open Access under a CC-BY (or CC-BY-NC-ND) licence, and they are hosted by IMR Press on imrpress.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with MedReviews, LLC.

Open Access Review
Dysglycemia/Prediabetes and Cardiovascular Risk Factors
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1 Departments of Internal Medicine
7 Harry S. Truman VA Medical Center, Columbia, MO
2020 Child Health, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine, Columbia, MO
2021 Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine, Columbia, MO
Rev. Cardiovasc. Med. 2009, 10(4), 202–208; https://doi.org/10.3909/ricm0474
Published: 30 December 2009
Abstract
Obesity and diabetes are becoming a pandemic in developing and industrialized countries. Based on the current criteria, 24.1 million Americans have diabetes, and another 57 million have prediabetes. The term prediabetes refers to people who have impaired fasting glucose (100-125 mg/dL), impaired glucose tolerance (2-hour postglucose load of 140-199 mg/dL), or both. Many persons with prediabetes already have microvascular disease consequences (eg, blindness, amputations, kidney failure) similar to those seen in patients with a diagnosis of diabetes. However, it is not established whether prediabetes should be considered a coronary heart disease risk equivalent. Whether dysglycemia is a surrogate for a more complex metabolic condition and/or directly increases cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk remains unclear. However, many studies have shown that hyperglycemia, through various mechanisms, can lead to premature atherosclerosis. In this regard, several diabetes prevention trials have shown that strategies that reduce the rate of conversion to diabetes can also modify CVD risk factors.
Keywords
Prediabetes
Cardiovascular risk
Impaired fasting glucose
Impaired glucose tolerance
Dysglycemia
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