Aims/hypothesis
Cardiac autonomic neuropathy is associated with increased morbidity and mortality rates in patients with type 1 diabetes.
The prevalence of early autonomic abnormalities is relatively high compared with the frequency of manifest clinical abnormalities.
Thus, early autonomic dysfunction could to some extent be functional and might lead to an organic disease in a subgroup of
patients only. If this is true, manoeuvres such as slow deep-breathing, which can improve baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) in
normal but not in denervated hearts, could also modify autonomic modulation in patients with type 1 diabetes, despite autonomic
dysfunction.
Methods
We compared 116 type 1 diabetic patients with 36 matched healthy control participants and 12 heart-transplanted participants
with surgically denervated hearts. Autonomic function tests and spectral analysis of heart rate and blood pressure variability
were performed. BRS was estimated by four methods during controlled (15 breaths per minute) and slow deep-breathing (six breaths
per minute), and in supine and standing positions.
Results
Conventional autonomic function tests were normal, but resting spectral variables and BRS were reduced during normal controlled
breathing in patients with type 1 diabetes. However, slow deep-breathing improved BRS in patients with type 1 diabetes, but
not in patients with surgically denervated hearts. Standing induced similar reductions in BRS in diabetic and control participants.
Conclusions/interpretation
Although we found signs of increased sympathetic activity in patients with type 1 diabetes, we also observed a near normalisation
of BRS with a simple functional test, indicating that early autonomic derangements are to a large extent functional and potentially
correctable by appropriate interventions.
Keywords Baroreflex sensitivity - Cardiac autonomic neuropathy - Diabetic neuropathy - Heart rate variability - Hypertension - Type 1 diabetes mellitus