农村高度贫困背景下的 1 型糖尿病:埃塞俄比亚西北部城市和农村病例在人口和人体测量特征方面的差异。

Frontiers in clinical diabetes and healthcare Pub Date : 2024-01-29 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fcdhc.2023.1298270
Shitaye A Balcha, David I Phillips, Elisabeth R Trimble
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摘要

背景:尽管有越来越多的证据表明,在一些中低收入国家,1 型糖尿病的临床表型发生了改变,但人们对城乡差异以及农村环境更加贫困可能如何改变疾病模式知之甚少:研究设计与方法:对埃塞俄比亚西北部一个地理位置明确的贫困地区 20 年间所有 1 型糖尿病患者(农村和城市)的独特病例登记进行分析。记录包括年龄、性别、居住地以及临床发病时的身高和体重:结果:共登记了 1682 例 1 型糖尿病新病例,平均发病年龄为 31.2(标准差 13.4)岁。临床发病年龄在 20 至 35 岁之间的病例中,男性明显占多数,与城市人口相比,这种情况在非常贫困的农村居民中更为明显。虽然大多数 1 型糖尿病患者的体重指数较低且身高降低,但发育迟缓主要影响农村男性:这些数据提出了一个假设,即早年贫困的社会经济条件之间复杂的相互作用会影响胰腺功能和自身免疫的发展,并为这个非常贫困的社区中 1 型糖尿病的异常表型提供了可能的解释。
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Type 1 diabetes mellitus in the context of high levels of rural deprivation: differences in demographic and anthropometric characteristics between urban and rural cases in NW Ethiopia.

Background: While there is increasing evidence for an altered clinical phenotype of Type 1 diabetes in several low-and middle-income countries, little is known about urban-rural differences and how the greater poverty of rural environments may alter the pattern of disease.

Objective: Investigation of urban-rural differences in demographic and anthropometric characteristics of type 1 diabetes in a resource-poor setting.

Research design and methods: Analysis of a unique case register, comprising all patients (rural and urban) presenting with Type 1 diabetes over a 20 yr. period in a poor, geographically defined area in northwest Ethiopia. The records included age, sex, place of residence, together with height and weight at the clinical onset.

Results: A total of 1682 new cases of Type 1 diabetes were registered with a mean age of onset of 31.2 (SD 13.4) yr. The patients were thin with 1/3 presenting with a body mass index (BMI) <17kg/m2. There was a striking male predominance of cases when clinical onset was between 20 and 35 yr., this was more marked in the very poor rural dwellers compared to the urban population. While most patients with Type 1 diabetes presented with low BMIs and reduced height, stunting preferentially affected rural men.

Conclusions: These data have led to the hypothesis that complex interactions among poor socioeconomic conditions in early life affect both pancreatic function and the development of autoimmunity and provide a possible explanation of the unusual phenotype of Type 1 diabetes in this very poor community.

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