Drug may help slow diabetic eye disease

Published: July 6, 2009 at 6:13 PM

MINNEAPOLIS, July 6 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers found a drug used to treat high blood pressure helps slow diabetic eye disease.

The study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, found the progression of diabetic eye damage was slowed in more than 65 percent of the patients with type I diabetes who had participated.

The researchers called their findings unexpected but conclusive.

To determine whether high blood pressure medication could help slow kidney damage, two groups of patients had been administered one of two anti-hypertensive medications -- losartan or enalapril – and the last group, a placebo.

After five years of observation, the researchers found little help for the kidneys but the participants administered either enalapril or losartan did experience a significant slowing of the progression of diabetic eye injury.

"The secondary results of this study showed that people taking these anti-hypertensive medications experienced a substantially positive effect in slowing diabetic eye injury," study leader Dr. Michael Mauer of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis says in a statement.

"Although neither medication delayed early kidney tissue injury or early loss of kidney function, the advantage to a study with negative findings such as this one is that physicians now know that this treatment is ineffective for this purpose, and they can pursue other treatment options that may improve their patients' outcomes."

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
COL FB: Duke 104, Radford 67 (29 min)
COL BKB: Georgetown 63, Savannah St. 44 (46 min)
Giant pink snails dot Milan (48 min)
COL BKB: Kentucky 92, Rider 63
COL FB: Florida 62, Fla. International 3
COL FB: Iowa 12, Minnesota 0
COL FB: Ohio State 21, Michigan 10
fark
Fili-busted
Pittsburgh plans to tax college students, wants them to pay fair share
Genetics anti-bias law takes effect today, forcing insurance companies, employers to use outward...
It's a boy: Zoo tortoise reveals mistaken identity after 50 years, so the zoo renamed the tortoise...
Like some Farkers' dream girls, this suspect had nice melons and 800 pounds of pot. Unfortunately,...
When schools remove chocolate milk from the cafeteria they are simultanously bombarded with student...