Nature and nurture in the expression of diabetes mellitus and its vascular manifestations
A. L. Rosenbloom
The prevailing concept of etiologic heterogeneity for the diabetes mellitus
syndrome is one of multiple genetic factors interacting with a variety of
environmental influences. Variation in expression of the disorder,
particularly the need for insulin, does not correlate with known etiologic
distinctions. There is much evidence for genetic heterogeneity, as well as
phenotypic variation when etiology can be presumed to be identical. The
vascular manifestations of diabetes include microangiopathy unique to
diabetes and larger vessel disease that differs from that of normal aging
only by its prematurity. There is as much evidence for heterogeneity of the
vascular expression as there is for glucose intolerance. Approximately 25%
of persons with insulin-dependent diabetes may never develop the
microvascular disease. The pathogenesis of vascular disease in diabetes may
involve a number of abnormalities of plasma, circulating cells, and
vascular tissue. Were absolute control of glycemia possible, some of the
contributing factors involved in vasculopathy would possibly be alleviated.
In the absence of automated physiologic insulin replacement the potential
deleterious effect of our current methods of treatment might be reduced by
specific inhibition of excess catecholamine, growth hormone and/or glucagon
responses.