We assessed the relationship between erythrocyte Na
+/H
+ antiport activity and myocardial anatomical-functional parameters (by Doppler echocardiography) in normotensive IDDM patients,
with and without microalbuminuria. We studied 33 normotensive IDDM subjects and 14 matched healthy controls (group 4). Based
on urinary albumin excretion rate (UAER), 23 diabetics were normoalbuminuric, 10 microalbuminuric (group 3). Normoalbuminurics
were divided up for normal (group 1,
n = 13) or high (group 2,
n = 10) antiport activity. We evaluated fasting glycaemia and 24-h urine glucose output, HbA1c, plasma lipids, urea, creatinine
and electrolyte clearances, UAER, erythrocyte Na
+/H
+ countertransport, M-Mode and 2D echocardiograms with Doppler analysis. Antiport, which was higher in diabetics than controls,
was significantly overactive in groups 2 and 3 vs group 4, independently from UAER. Diabetics showed left ventricular volume,
cardiac mass and systolic function within the control range. In left ventricular diastolic filling, while peak E was similar
in diabetic and healthy people, the late peak transmitral flow velocity (peak A) was significantly higher in diabetics than
controls, and this was also true in groups 2 and 3 vs group 4. Antiport activity was positively related to peak A (
p<0.03). These observations suggest that (a) the Na
+/H
+ antiport may be overactive in diabetes, apart from microalbuminuria; (b) increased Na
+/H
+ antiport activity, in normotensive IDDM people, may be associated with preclinical diastolic myocardial dysfunction (``incipient
diabetic cardiomyopathy''?).
Key words Sodium-hydrogen antiporter - Echocardiography - type 1 diabetes mellitus
Received: 14 December 1996 / Accepted in revised form: 8 May 1997