1. A possible follow‐up method for diabetic heart failure patients
- Author
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Şahbender Koç
- Subjects
Heart Failure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Osmotic concentration ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Vacuole ,Diabetic heart ,Osmosis ,medicine.disease ,Transient receptor potential channel ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Internal medicine ,Lens (anatomy) ,Heart failure ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Humans ,sense organs ,business ,Sodium-Glucose Transporter 2 Inhibitors ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Plasma osmolarity is maintained through various mechanisms. The osmolarity of the aqueous humor around the crystalline lens is correlated with plasma osmolarity. A vacuole can be formed in the lens upon changes in osmolarity. The sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) are new in the treatment of heart failure. They can cause osmotic diuresis but do not affect plasma osmolarity. OBJECTIVE It is unclear if the presence or absence of lens vacuole changes can monitor diabetic heart failure and SGLT2i treatment efficacy. METHODS Web of Science, PubMed and Scopus databases were searched for relevant articles about osmolarity, diabetes, transient receptor potential vanilloid channel, diabetic heart failure, lens vacuoles up to May 2021. MAIN MESSAGE The effect of SGLT2i on osmosis underlies its benefit to heart failure, but this in turn affects many other mechanisms. Failure to experience osmolarity changes will reduce the negative changes in terms of heart failure affected by osmolarity. A practical observable method is needed. CONCLUSIONS There is a possibility of using lens vacuoles in the follow-up of diabetic heart failure patients.
- Published
- 2021
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