Longitudinal relationship of asymptomatic hypoglycemia to cognitive function in IDDM
- PMID: 2702906
- DOI: 10.2337/diacare.12.2.89
Longitudinal relationship of asymptomatic hypoglycemia to cognitive function in IDDM
Abstract
Early-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is linked to subsequent learning deficits. To investigate the relationship of learning deficits to metabolic control, 23 children with IDDM (age at testing 71 +/- 21 mo, age at diagnosis 35 +/- 15 mo) diagnosed before 5 yr of age were followed for periods of 6-78 mo. Mean glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1), episodes of severe hypoglycemia, and frequency of self-monitoring blood glucose (SMBG) measurements less than 2.8 mM (50 mg/dl, asymptomatic hypoglycemia) were recorded every 3 mo. Six subjects entered the study 12.3 +/- 6.7 mo after diagnosis, and only severe hypoglycemia was present before entry. For the remaining 17 subjects, HbA1 and severe and asymptomatic hypoglycemia were present from the time of diagnosis of diabetes. Mean HbA1 level was 10.1 +/- 1.0%, and mean severe hypoglycemic episodes per patient was 2.9, but the frequency was highly skewed; one patient had 37 episodes, and 14 had none. The mean percentage of SMBG readings less than 2.8 mM was 2.4 +/- 2.1. On the revised Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale there was no correlation between any subscale and severe hypoglycemia. However, the relative frequency of asymptomatic hypoglycemia correlated with scores on the abstract/visual reasoning scale (r = -.39, P = .037). This relationship was primarily accounted for by the relationship of asymptomatic hypoglycemia to performance on the copying subscale (r = -.42, P = .022). Children with frequent asymptomatic hypoglycemic episodes had lower mean copying scores and abstract reasoning scores than those with infrequent episodes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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