A Study of the Assessment of Serum Adropin Level as a Risk Factor of Ischaemic Heart Disease in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Cases
Khaled Mahmoud Makboul, Salah Hussein Elhalawany, Hany Khairy Mansour, Dina Ahmed Marwan, Baher Emil Ibrahim- General Medicine
Abstract
Background
Adropin is a peptide hormone which was discovered in 2008 and originally described as playing an important role in glucose and fatty acid homeostasis that acts on peripheral tissues. We investigate the correlation of adropin and ischaemic heart disease in diabetic patients.
Aim
Study of the assessment of serum adropin level as a risk factor for ischaemic heart disease in type 2 diabetes mellitus cases.
Method
This case control study was conducted on 90 subjects, divided into 3 groups: Group (I): 30 T2DM patients with ischaemic heart disease Group (II): 30 T2DM patients without ischaemic heart disease Group (III): 30 healthy subjects as control.
Fasting plasma glucose, 2 h post prandial plasma glucose, Carotid artery intimal thickness using ultrasound, HbA1c, Lipid profile (cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL-C, HDL), HOMA IR Serum creatinine, AST, ALT, and Serum Adropin were assessed.
Result
There was a statistical significant increase in serum Adropin hormone in diabetic patients without ischaemic heart disease than diabetic one with ischaemic heart disease (p value ˂0.001), (26.867 ± 10.037) ng/L vs (87.500 ± 40.509) ng/L respectively. Also Serum Adropin was negatively correlated with fasting insulin and CIMT.
Assessment of serum adropin level could be a risk marker for ischaemic heart disease development in type 2 diabetes mellitus patients.