Many patients with type 2 diabetes are at high risk of CVD. This increased risk is often similar to that of non-diabetic patients who have experienced myocardial infarction.
A wealth of evidence indicates that hyperglycemia is a significant contributor—but not the sole contributor—to the increased CVD risk that comes with diabetes.
Intensive blood glucose control reduces microvascular complications but does not have a substantial effect on macrovascular disease in patients with type 2 diabetes.
The metabolic syndrome is very common in diabetic patients, and those with diabetes and the metabolic syndrome have the highest CHD rates.
Evidence is mounting that it is not the hyperglycemic state per se that has the biggest impact on CVD in type 2 diabetes but rather the clustering of abdominal obesity-related risk factors. These factors may be responsible for the high incidence of cardiovascular events in diabetes.
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