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Diabetes mellitus in Egypt: glycaemic control and microvascular and neuropathic complications

✍ Scribed by Herman, W.H.; Aubert, R.E.; Engelgau, M.M.; Thompson, T.J.; Ali, M.A.; Sous, E.S.; Hegazy, M.; Badran, A.; Kenny, S.J.; Gunter, E.W.; Malarcher, A.M.; Brechner, R.J.; Wetterhall, S.F.; DeStefano, F.; Smith, P.J.; Habib, M.; abd el Shakour, S.; Ibrahim, A.S.; el Behairy, el Moneim


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
82 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
0742-3071

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✦ Synopsis


We performed a cross-sectional, population-based survey of persons 20 years of age and older living in Cairo and surrounding rural villages. The purpose was to describe glycaemic control and the prevalence of microvascular and neuropathic complications among Egyptians with diagnosed diabetes, previously undiagnosed diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance, and normal glucose tolerance. A total of 6052 households were surveyed. The response rate was 76 % for the household survey and 72 % for the medical examination. Among people with previously diagnosed diabetes, mean haemoglobin A 1c was 9.0 %. Forty-two per cent had retinopathy, 21 % albuminuria, and 22 % neuropathy. Legal blindness was prevalent (5 %) but clinical nephropathy (7 %) and foot ulcers (1 %) were uncommon in persons with diagnosed diabetes. Among people with diagnosed diabetes, microvascular and neuropathic complications were associated with hyperglycaemia. Retinopathy was also associated with duration of diabetes; albuminuria with hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia; and neuropathy with age, female sex, and hypercholesterolaemia. Albuminuria was as common in people with previously undiagnosed diabetes (22 %) as those with diagnosed disease (21 %). Mean haemoglobin A 1c was lower (7.8 %) and retinopathy (16 %) and neuropathy (14 %) were less prevalent in people with previously undiagnosed disease. Ocular conditions, blindness, and neuropathy were prevalent in the non-diabetic population. The microvascular and neuropathic complications of diabetes are a major clinical and public health problem in Egypt.


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