Diabetes and Vascular Disease Research, Volume 18, Issue 6 , 09/11/2021

Early detection of diabetic nephropathy in patient with type 2 diabetes mellitus: A review of the literature

Sopida Thipsawat

Abstract

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a pathology of heterogeneous etiology characterized by hyperglycemia resulting from lack of insulin action, insulin secretion, or both, and the population with diabetes mellitus is predicted to be about 439 million worldwide by 2030. Prolong diabetes has been related with microvascular complications especially diabetic nephropathy. DN is the most common complication of type 2 diabetes mellitus, and it is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease worldwide. It is crucial to diagnose patients who are more sensible to develop DN for better control of the process of disease. Several factors and mechanisms contribute to the development and outcome of diabetic nephropathy. Microalbuminuria is an early marker of DN and use it as a routine for screening, but the renal damages may be happening even without microalbuminuria. There are several significant kidney damage and disease biomarkers which helps in early detection of DN. An early biomarker may allow earlier diagnosis, treatment reduces DN prevalence and slows DN progression. Therefore, this review focuses on laboratory biomarkers that are earlier, more validation of an early and specific biomarker could potentially make it possible for early diagnosis, treatment, and retardation of progression of diabetic nephropathy.

Document Type

Review

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

biomarkerdiabetes kidney diseasediabetic nephropathyEarly detectionearly diagnosistype 2 diabetes mellitus

ASJC Subject Area

Medicine : Cardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineMedicine : Endocrinology, Diabetes and MetabolismMedicine : Internal Medicine

Funding Agency

Walailak University


Bibliography


& Thipsawat, S. (2021). Early detection of diabetic nephropathy in patient with type 2 diabetes mellitus: A review of the literature. Diabetes and Vascular Disease Research, 18(6) doi:10.1177/14791641211058856

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