Abstract
The fibrinolytic system was studied in 43 type I diabetic patients with long duration of the disease, with or without evidence of microangiopathy, and in 26 control subjects. There were positive and independent correlations between tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) activity after venous occlusion and HbA1c, and between triglycerides and plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) and tPA antigen concentrations before and after venous occlusion. The tPA activities both at rest and after venous occlusion were higher in the patients. There were no differences with regard to sex, hypertension or nephropathy for the levels of fibrinolytic variables in these patients. Subjects with retinopathy did not differ from those without retinopathy. Diabetes duration showed a significant negative assocation with tPA activity in multivariate regression analysis. Tobacco-smoking diabetics, as compared to non-smoking, had an increased tPA antigen release at venous occlusion, but also higher PAI-1 levels and reduced specific activity of the tPA protein. When assessed with the new specific assays now available, the fibrinolytic parameters appear to be specific indicators of enothelial dysfunction related to smoking and to degree of glycaemic control in type I diabetic subjects.