Abstract
Diabetes mellitus, the metabolic syndrome, and the underlying insulin resistance are increasingly associated with diastolic dysfunction and reduced stress tolerance. The poor prognosis associated with heart failure in patients with diabetes after myocardial infarction is likely attributable to many factors, important among which is the metabolic impact from insulin resistance and hyperglycemia on the regulation of microvascular perfusion and energy generation in the cardiac myocyte. This review summarizes epidemiologic, pathophysiologic, diagnostic, and therapeutic data related to diabetes and heart failure in acute myocardial infarction and discusses novel perceptions and strategies that hold promise for the future and deserve further investigation.
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Introduction
The striking increase in the worldwide prevalence of the metabolic syndrome parallels the epidemics of obesity and diabetes [1]. Type 2 diabetes mellitus and insulin resistance are established risk factors for heart failure (HF) [2, 3]. Many patients with diabetes have diastolic dysfunction [4] that is the antecedent in the increasing prevalence of HF with preserved ejection fraction [5••]. Similarly, systolic HF and coronary artery disease (CAD), including myocardial infarction (MI), are interlinked in a reciprocal relationship. Diabetes has been a consistently powerful risk factor for development of post-MI HF, accounting for 66% of mortality during the first year [6]. The combination of diabetes and HF after MI requires preventive action because it is usually not associated with the characteristic left ventricular (LV) remodeling [7]. If LV remodeling does develop, it requires appropriate treatment [8] that includes revascularization and metabolically and hemodynamically effective treatment strategies that limit infarct size, cardiac dysfunction, and LV remodeling. This review summarizes epidemiologic, pathophysiologic, diagnostic, and therapeutic data related to diabetes/metabolic syndrome and HF and LV remodeling post-MI.
Pathophysiological Impact of Diabetes on Heart Failure and Remodeling
Several mechanisms promote metabolic consequences that lead to cardiac dysfunction and HF in diabetes. The primary etiology of the metabolic syndrome in type 2 diabetes is chronic overnutrition resulting in insulin resistance, abdominal obesity, hyperinsulinemia, and lipotoxicity. Another important mechanism deduced mainly from experimental work is myocardial energy demand/supply mismatch from 1) increased oxygen demand in the diabetic myocardium related to increased vascular stiffness; and 2) decreased energy supply from myocardial underperfusion, endothelial dysfunction, and reduced myocellular energy production. This energy mismatch is associated with increased stress in the infarct-related segments and neurohormonal upregulation in the remote zones.
Increased Myocardial Energy Demand
Increased myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) has been observed in human studies and in experimental diabetes models [9, 10]. Similarly, increased myocardial energy demand assessed by increased rate pressure product has been demonstrated at rest and during stress in patients with type 1 [11] and type 2 diabetes [12, 13]. This observation has been ascribed to increased arterial wall stiffness as an important determinant for increases in systolic blood pressure and pulse pressure [14, 15].
Decreased Myocardial Energy Supply
Microvascular Perfusion Abnormalities
In patients with diabetes, the increased incidence of HF post-MI is mainly due to a diminished microvascular perfusion after reperfusion therapy [16], and a reduced coronary flow reserve is consistently observed at cardiac catheterization. The modulation of myocardial blood flow at the level of microcirculation is achieved from blood volume changes from the recruitment or derecruitment of capillaries. The only diagnostic method that provides insight into this aspect of perfusion, dedicated to metabolic substrate exchange, is myocardial contrast echocardiography. The microbubbles residing strictly within the lumen of the capillaries enable assessment of myocardial capillary volume index, flow velocity, and myocardial blood flow index [17, 18]. A consistent observation in patients with diabetes without CAD is a decreased capillary volume at stress by a diminished stress-induced increase (17% vs 50% in control patients) [11–13]. Factors contributing to this limited response are hyperglycemia, hyperlipemia, oxidative stress, and endothelial dysfunction present in any postprandial phase [19, 20]. After a physiologic mixed meal (400 kcal), a 50% reduction in capillary blood volume was demonstrated in patients with diet-treated type 2 diabetes, but not in control patients [21]. Translating this effect into the setting of acute MI in coronary care units highlights the additional risk of undetected myocardial hypoperfusion in each postprandial phase for diabetic patients. The regulation of capillary recruitment is dynamic and improves with glycemic control in the fasting and postprandial states as well as with cardiovascular preventive medication, as demonstrated in small human studies [13, 22, 23]. These data indicate that capillary volume modulation plays an important but little acknowledged role in the regulation of human myocardial perfusion requiring prospective investigations.
Endothelial Dysfunction
Endothelial dysfunction is an early abnormality in CAD, obesity, and the metabolic syndrome with insulin resistance and an imbalance between the reduced bioactivity of nitric oxide and endothelin-1. Additional inducing factors are hyperglycemia, hypercholesterinemia, and hypertension. Augmentation has been observed after the intake of oleic acid (eg, olive oil), antioxidants (eg, vegetables, fruit, and vitamins C and E), and the phenolic compounds in red wine. Pharmaceutical improvement has been achieved with insulin, statin, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and angiotensin-1 blockers or with thiazolidinediones (TZDs). Abnormalities of flow-mediated vasodilation of the brachial artery [24] are considered to be markers of abnormal myocardial perfusion, but the mechanisms of regulation may differ in these vascular territories.
Reduced Myocardial Energy Production
Patients with diabetes have reduced regional function in the noninfarct zone despite a similar ejection fraction compared to control patients without diabetes, and have a two- to threefold greater incidence of HF after acute MI [7, 25]. Multiple studies have suggested that diabetes is associated with a cardiomyopathy characterized by diastolic abnormalities [26, 27••] and higher chamber stiffness, independent of hypertension and CAD [25, 28•]. Although increased chamber stiffness usually is thought to result from structural myocardial alterations such as hypertrophy, fibrosis, and modifications of the extracellular matrix, it is often due to myocardial relaxation abnormalities secondary to energy restraints from acute hypoxemia, ischemia, or metabolic stress [29].
In the normal heart, 70% of myocardial energy production is derived from free fatty acid (FFA) oxidation. During stress or hypoxia, this is shifted to more glucose oxidation that requires less oxygen for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. However, in insulin resistance, glucose uptake and oxidation are suppressed and myocytes remain almost completely dependent on the use of FFA oxidation. Additionally, increased FFA levels together with insulin resistance promote synthesis of uncoupling proteins, resulting in the production of heat instead of ATP, so that up to a 40% decrease in ATP production may result compared to glucose oxidation [30]. This inability to switch fuels also may lead to generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and unfavorable alterations in calcium metabolism. These adverse metabolic effects are induced by insulin resistance and effectively contribute to HF also in patients with diabetes by sustaining neurohormonal activation.
Lipotoxicity and Glucotoxicity
Lipotoxicity
Strongly related to insulin resistance, obesity is a known risk factor for HF [31]. Animal studies suggest that the underlying mechanisms are overstorage of lipids and lipotoxic injury to myocytes associated with high serum levels of FFA and triglycerides that involve increased FFA uptake, diminished mitochondrial oxidative capacity, generation of ROS, and increased apoptosis [32]. Of particular importance, insulin resistance alters the distribution pattern of postprandial energy storage after ingestion of a high-carbohydrate mixed meal away from glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscle cells to de novo hepatic production of triglycerides (lipogenesis). This increase in plasma triglycerides and decrease in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) concentration [33••] implies that carbohydrate restriction may improve serum lipid values. Compared to lean control patients, increasing intracardiac lipid storage was demonstrated in overweight individuals, individuals with additional impaired glucose tolerance, and individuals with overt type 2 diabetes in a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study [34]. Furthermore, in patients with diabetes, cardiac steatosis correlates with diastolic dysfunction [35].
Glucotoxicity
Lipotoxicity is an important mechanism in the metabolic syndrome. In patients with lipotoxicity, glucotoxicity plays an intermittent role only during significant hyperglycemia in the postprandial phase lasting for up to 2 h. However, in overt diabetes, postmeal hyperglycemia is prolonged to at least 4 h, so that glucotoxicity exacerbates the metabolic consequences of chronic overnutrition during most of the day.
Glucotoxic effects involve three additional mechanisms for dysfunction in the diabetic heart. These involve 1) ROS that amplify hyperglycemia induced activation of protein kinase C isoforms; 2) increased formation of glucose-derived advanced glycation end products; and 3) increased glucose flux through the aldose reductase pathways [32]. Admission glucose levels have a prognostic role in patients with acute MI and in patients with HF [36, 37].
Oxidative Stress (Reactive Oxygen Species)
ROS also play a role in the disturbed glucose and lipid metabolism in chronic overnutrition that may be generated by both the hyperlipidemia and hyperglycemia pathways. After a carbohydrate meal, ROS increases in overweight patients with diabetes but not in lean control individuals (von Bibra, unpublished data; [20]). In the context of diastolic dysfunction, it is striking that many mechanisms activated by an increased generation of ROS lead to reduced availability of energy. The direct effects of ROS on cardiomyocytes involve impaired mitochondrial energy production [38••] and reduced cardiac efficiency [32]. Further effects imply altered insulin signaling, reduced availability of nitric oxide, and mitochondrial damage that can lead to abnormal cardiac structural and functional remodeling [26, 39]. Indirect effects may involve downregulated perfusion by endothelial dysfunction [40].
Neurohormonal Alterations
Another primary mechanism linking HF, diabetes, and insulin resistance is upregulation of the sympathetic nervous system and the renin-angiotensin system during reduced cardiac output that may lead to a vicious cycle via increases in circulating FFA concentrations [41]. Different mechanisms, affecting heart rate regulation and exercise tolerance, are implicated in cardiac autonomic neuropathy. Additionally, in HF and in LV remodeling, inflammatory mediators are upregulated, the most prominent being tissue necrosis factor-α (TNF-α). Insulin resistance is associated with upregulation of the same inflammatory pathways that can be attenuated by insulin sensitization treatment. However, this has been largely unsuccessful in human clinical trials because only individual components of the inflammatory cascade have been targeted [38••].
Impact on Diagnostics
Because of the numerous interactive metabolic pathways and their metabolic, hemodynamic, and functional consequences, we will focus on causal mechanisms and insulin resistance rather than symptoms or consequences. Because insulin resistance is a nutritional disease, relevant diagnostic methods for assessing postmeal metabolism and severity of insulin resistance are discussed.
Insulin Resistance and Diabetes
Clinicians lack a grading system for type 2 diabetes. Occasionally, the type of therapy (diet vs oral antidiabetics vs insulin) has been used as a substitute. Type 2 diabetes is the result of two developments: 1) chronic overnutrition with resulting insulin resistance and 2) at least a relative failure of pancreatic ß-cells to release sufficient insulin to maintain glucose homeostasis. In this context, insulin resistance is the basic mechanism, but its diagnosis is not straightforward. Commonly, attempts are made using the homeostasis model of insulin resistance [42]. This measure may be misleading in the phase of failing ß-cell function and during insulin-based therapy. Intact proinsulin is a precursor molecule of insulin that is released into circulation, is associated with increasing insulin resistance, and has a similar adipogenetic activity to insulin but only 10% to 20% of the glucose-lowering effect. Recently, determination of proinsulin has been used as a diagnostic tool because an increasing proinsulin to insulin ratio predicts insulin resistance and deterioration of glucose tolerance [43]. Increasing intact proinsulin reflects increasing β-cell dysfunction. Thus, both measures are useful biomarkers for insulin resistance and β-cell dysfunction and for assessing the impact of therapeutic intervention on β-cell function in type 2 diabetes [44, 45]. Such a diagnostic tool would allow staging of patients with diabetes for appropriate antidiabetic therapy and establishing the risk of insulin resistance in obese patients [46••].
Finally, in the setting of acute MI and revascularization, blood glucose control in patients with diabetes should routinely involve fasting and postmeal glucose measurements (such as hyperglycemic peaks with the associated sequelae of hyperinsulinemia, ROS generation, and endothelial dysfunction) because only the latter reflects the amount and type of ingested carbohydrates [20, 21, 47].
Diastolic Cardiac Function
The traditional assessment of diastolic and systolic LV function by mitral inflow pattern and LV ejection fraction has been largely superseded by parameters derived from quantitative tissue Doppler imaging involving LV longitudinal function during diastole and systole [48, 49] and assessment of LV filling pressure [50, 51]. Assessment of regional and global LV function in acute MI and LV remodeling requires parameters that are feasible even in overweight individuals at the bedside, are sensitive to energy restraints, and, ideally, have prognostic value and the ability to monitor therapeutic interventions. Early diastolic function is more sensitive to changes in myocardial perfusion than systolic function as shown in human and animal studies with percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, a model with a precise onset and end of myocardial perfusion [52, 53]. Because the early diastolic filling period is short (approximately 100 ms), accurate measurement of early diastolic velocity/function requires high temporal resolution of the imaging technique (frame rate >100 frames/s), which is provided by pulsed tissue Doppler and in high-quality color Doppler systems, but not with MRI [27••]. Pulsed tissue Doppler imaging has the additional advantage of online velocity quantification based on fast Fourier transform analysis and, importantly, has good feasibility even in individuals who are difficult to image with 2-dimensional echocardiography [54, 55]. Furthermore, the influence of aging on diastolic function may be used to define diastolic dysfunction [12, 27••], which is critical for the diagnosis of diastolic HF and dysfunction [50, 51]. The advantages of tissue Doppler–based velocity measurements should not detract from advantages of other ultrasound techniques, such as myocardial strain and strain rate analysis using speckle tracking, which permits assessment of regional and global myocardial function.
Microvascular and Endothelial Function
Myocardial contrast echocardiography, as described above, is a technique yielding specific information on microvascular myocardial perfusion at the bedside in the setting of acute MI, after myocardial revascularization, and in endothelial dysregulation from insulin resistance. Although standardized by the American and European Societies of Echocardiography [56, 57], myocardial contrast echocardiography has not yet found acceptance into routine clinical practice. It needs the commitment of clinicians to learn how to use this imaging technology for diagnostic insight [18, 58••].
Myocardial metabolic remodeling as a consequence of utilizing different substrates may be assessed by specialized imaging techniques, such as single-photon emission computed tomography, positron emission tomography, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy [59]. Finally, endothelial dysfunction and respective treatment effects may be assessed by flow-mediated vasodilation [24].
Impact on Treatment Options
Nutrition
Adequate composition of food intake is the cornerstone of managing nutritional disease, such as insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. The official recommendations in Europe and the United States have consistently promoted food that contained little fat (approximately 25%) and a substantial amount of carbohydrates (45%–60%) [60, 61]. The result of low fat and high carbohydrate consumption in the United States is an increasingly obese population [62••]. The results of the INTERHEART study [63] raised increasing concerns about these recommendations and led to reconsideration of the physiologic principles of metabolism: carbohydrate restriction improves glycemic control and reduces insulin fluctuations, which both are primary targets that do not need weight loss [64••, 65•] but improve all features of the metabolic syndrome. Positive effects on insulin resistance, serum triglyceride and HDL levels, glucose control, and cardiovascular risk factors have been consistently demonstrated without any adverse effects, given the need to reduce antidiabetic medications stepwise (by 50% to 80%) to avoid hypoglycemia. The beneficial effects of low-carbohydrate diets have been confirmed in randomized long-term studies [66, 67]. Noteworthy, beneficial effects of carbohydrate restriction on postmeal endothelial dysfunction were demonstrated in individuals with abdominal obesity and in those with atherogenic dyslipidemia [68, 69].
Improved cardiac function by low-carbohydrate nutrition in type 2 diabetes was shown in a pilot study or indirectly via tight caloric restriction (400 kcal per day) in obese individuals with diabetes [70, 71]. In severe obesity, randomized long-term studies have confirmed improvement in cardiac function after weight loss due to a low glycemic index diet or bariatric surgery [72]. Large dietary studies based on reduced caloric intake by increased vegetable consumption have proven benefits for CAD risk [73].
Extending their traditional recommendations, the American Diabetes Association in 2008 stated that low–glycemic index foods (ie, between 40 and 130 g/day of low-glycemic carbohydrate or less than 26% of a nominal 2000 kcal diet) that are rich in fiber and other macronutrients may improve outcome [60].
There now is ample evidence that the nutritional therapy in type 2 diabetes with insulin resistance should be carbohydrate restriction. The available studies did not reveal any associated harm. If such a straightforward approach can alleviate a condition for which there is no known effective drug, its potential should be vigorously applied and explored.
Insulin Sensitizers
Because of the basic and adverse consequences of insulin resistance in patients with diabetes, this review focuses on insulin sensitizers such as biguanides, TZDs, and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1).
Metformin has been associated with improved outcome in both the prospective United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study and in patients with diabetes and HF in an observational Canadian study [74, 75]. More recently, it was shown to improve LV diastolic function [76]. Unfortunately, the use of metformin is contraindicated because of a perceived increased risk of lactic acidosis in HF, although the supporting evidence is lacking both for lactic acidosis and for the policy of stopping metformin 48 h before and after procedures in cardiac patients [77]. A recent meta-analysis on the use of antidiabetic drugs in patients with HF concluded that metformin was not associated with any adverse events, but instead had a reduced mortality risk [78].
TZDs were designed to increase insulin sensitivity. However, prospective studies are scarce because of the warnings against the use of TZDs in patients with HF symptoms [79]. More recent data suggest that these risks are controllable and acceptable, being in the range of 5% to 15% for TZD-induced fluid retention that is part of the insulin-sensitizing action in the renal collecting ducts, but not necessarily a symptom of worsening myocardial function [80]. In patients with diabetes without cardiac disease, diastolic function was improved by pioglitazone in an MRI study [81]. In patients with HF (New York Heart Association class I–II), rosiglitazone improved glycemic control and did not adversely affect LV ejection fraction [82]. Observational data and a retrospective study reported some reduction in the risk of death despite a smaller increase in the risk of readmission for HF by the use of TZDs [83, 84]. Recently, concerns have been raised regarding the cardiovascular side effects of rosiglitazone, which now is available in the United States with additional restrictions but is not available any more in Europe.
First promising results were shown by GLP-1, which is secreted in the intestine in response to oral ingestion of glucose and stimulates insulin secretion, suppresses glucagon secretion, delays gastric emptying, and increases satiety. Because of its short half-life (1–2 min) due to cleavage by the ubiquitous dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), long-acting analogues of GLP-1 (exenatide, liraglutide) and inhibitors of DPP-4 (sitagliptin, vildagliptin, saxagliptin, linagliptin, and alogliptin) have been developed.
GLP-1 does not cause hypoglycemia and has promising effects on the cardiovascular system. Nitric oxide–dependent endothelial function is increased in healthy individuals and in patients with diabetes [85, 86]. Both GLP-1 and its analogue exenatide reduce ischemia/reperfusion injury in experimental studies. There are small human studies demonstrating beneficial effects of GLP-1 on LV ejection fraction in ST-elevation anterior MI with LV dysfunction after successful reperfusion [87]; in coronary artery bypass grafting [88]; and in HF [89]. Also, the use of DPP-4 inhibitors demonstrated beneficial effects on postprandial glycemia, lipidemia, and oxidative stress in patients with type 2 diabetes [90, 91] and, after a single morning dose, on postprandial endothelial function [92]. DPP-4 inhibitors administered before an oral load of glucose, 75 g, demonstrated improved LV performance and mitigated stunning during dobutamine stress in patients with CAD, but undefined as for coexisting diabetes [93]. Further studies are needed to determine whether synthetic GLP-1 mimetics and DPP-4 inhibitors are able to reproduce the beneficial effects of GLP-1. Some answers may be expected from ongoing studies on cardiovascular outcomes in patients with diabetes with GLP-1 analogues or DPP-4 inhibitors. These studies focus on diabetic metabolism (efficacy of lowering blood glucose in coronary care unit or of maintaining β-cell function), on the limitation of infarct size in acute coronary syndrome, or on global myocardial function in combination with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor and cardiovascular risk.
Glucose-lowering Antidiabetic Therapy
A large body of clinical studies intending to improve outcomes through tight glycemic control have produced controversial results and conflicting implications for optimal antidiabetic therapy in at-risk patients with CAD [94••]. Despite the evidence that glucose control matters in patients with diabetes, more cautious approaches are required to avoid the risks from increased hypoglycemic events in tight control and other complications associated with the intensity of pharmacological treatment with several antidiabetic drugs simultaneously. These concerns led to new official treatment recommendations in 2008 [95, 96] that suggested aggressive glucose control for patients in intensive care units with significant hyperglycemia (> 180 mg/dL, 10 mmol/L) to target glucose values between 90 and 140 mg/dL (5–7.8 mmol/L) and, for the other hospitalized patients, subcutaneous insulin for maintaining plasma glucose levels lower than 180 mg/d (10 mmol/L).
Given the major impact of postprandial hyperglycemia on metabolic complications, it is of concern that most therapeutic studies ignore this measurement. In addition, the different stages of insulin resistance should be taken into account for therapeutic strategies aimed at achieving an ideal glucose target. Finally, with respect to the nutritional induction of postprandial hyperglycemia (particularly in type 2 diabetes), carbohydrate restriction may circumvent the dangers of insulinemic and hyperglycemic peaks in insulin resistance without the risk of hypoglycemic events once antidiabetic therapy is adapted to the nutritional and metabolic changes, and without the risk of side effects from multiple glucose-lowering drugs. Applying such causal therapy, a fasting serum glucose level around 110 mg/dL and postprandial values around 140 mg/dL may be achieved.
In summary, patients with significant hyperglycemia benefit most from immediate insulin-based strategies aimed at improving glucose control, and those patients with stable glucose control should receive immediate carbohydrate restriction combined with meticulous adaptation of their individual antidiabetic regimen.
Remodeling and Reperfusion
The extent of LV remodeling corresponds to the infarct-related artery patency, infarct size, and ventricular loading conditions. Reverse LV remodeling postinfarction is typified by normalization of LV architecture, reduced LV size, and increased contractile function. Conventional pharmacotherapy for post-MI HF includes ACE inhibitors or angiotensin-receptor blockers, ß-blockers, aldosterone antagonists, and statins. By comparison, newer approaches, such as nitric oxide signaling pathway therapy, antioxidants, and antiinflammatory therapy, have yielded conflicting or neutral results.
Optimal therapy in acute MI is early revascularization of the infarct-related coronary artery territory. Early reperfusion is associated with several benefits, such as reduction of infarct size, preservation of myocardial function, and decreased mortality. However, clinical benefits of late reperfusion of an occluded infarct-related coronary artery beyond the period of myocyte salvage are controversial and also poorly defined [97, 98]. The most recent AMICI (Acute Myocardial Infarction Contrast Imaging) study [99] on reverse remodeling after ST-elevated MI in patients treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) demonstrated that reverse remodeling was an important predictor of favorable long-term outcome that can be achieved in 39% of the patients. Furthermore, preserved microvascular perfusion within the infarct zone was the major determinant of reverse remodeling as assessed by myocardial contrast echocardiography perfusion studies. This extends earlier reports based on myocardial contrast echocardiography that had demonstrated the relevance of intact microvascular perfusion for the salvage of myocardium at PCI and the unexpected high frequency of blocked microcirculation in spite of patency of the epicardial artery (25%–30%). This so-called no-reflow phenomenon is associated with poorer functional recovery and outcome. Two more recent studies confirmed the impact of diabetes on myocardial reperfusion and the no-reflow phenomenon [16, 100]. In the AMICI trial, the observed trend for a larger prevalence of diabetes in the patients with LV remodeling versus those with reverse remodeling is in accordance with the known abnormalities of coronary flow reserve, endothelial function, ischemic preconditioning, and prothrombotic state in these patients. Theoretically, an optimized metabolic milieu of the diabetic myocardium with normalization of insulin resistance and lipotoxic or glucotoxic effects is warranted before the revascularization procedure to improve outcome. Given the immediate dynamic response of metabolic regulations, such causal metabolic therapy should be started immediately upon hospital admission.
Conclusions
Insulin resistance and HF post-MI are strongly related and signify a poor clinical outcome, especially in patients with diabetes. The myocardial metabolic milieu acts at the vascular and functional levels to derange perfusion and function to a substantial but hitherto unrecognized extent. This is partially explained by a lack of crosstalk between the respective cardiovascular and endocrinologic specialists. The causal relationship of insulin resistance and reduced cardiac function renders normalization of insulin resistance essential. The impact of carbohydrate restriction and weight reduction in the setting of acute MI and revascularization need to be elucidated. Future work is needed to clarify the significance and utility of novel pharmaceutical therapies for diabetes and insulin resistance.
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von Bibra, H., St John Sutton, M. Impact of Diabetes on Postinfarction Heart Failure and Left Ventricular Remodeling. Curr Heart Fail Rep 8, 242–251 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11897-011-0070-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11897-011-0070-8