In adults with DM1, prevalence of depression and anxiety is higher in women. Midlife patients, in particular women, show a significantly higher prevalence of anxiety symptoms and comorbid depression and anxiety. The presence of secondary complications and sustained poor glycemic control should alert to the possibility of these mental disorders, especially in the most vulnerable age population; clinical, gender and age-related patterns could help to design more effective psychological assessment and support in adult patients with DM1.
To compare the effect of adding metformin to insulin therapy with a moderate increase in insulin dose alone in insulin-treated, poorly controlled Type 2 diabetic patients, 47 consecutive such patients (baseline daily dose >0.5 IU kg(-1) and HbA1c >8%) were openly randomized either to a combination of their previous insulin schedule plus metformin (2.55 g daily in three divided doses, n = 24) or to a moderate insulin dose increase (20% of baseline, n = 23). The patient status/biochemical profile was assessed at entry and at 4 months. Among those assigned to insulin + metformin, 18 took the drug. Upon an intention-to-treat basis, patients assigned to insulin dose increase had a statistically significant weight gain (1.16+/-1.9 vs 0.3+/-4.5 kg, p < 0.05). Patients assigned to the insulin + metformin regimen experienced a significantly greater fall in HbA1c (-1.87+/-2.16 vs 0.03+/-1.68%, p < 0.01), total cholesterol (-0.56+/-0.89 vs 0.14+/-0.72 mmol l(-1), p < 0.05) and LDL-cholesterol (-0.51+/-0.73 vs 0.19+/-0.6 mmol l(-1), p < 0.01). These data suggest that adding metformin to insulin in poorly controlled Type 2 DM patients offers an advantage in terms of glycaemic control and lipid plasma profile.
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