www.ijbcp.com International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology | April 2018 | Vol 7 | Issue 4 Page 738
IJBCP International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology
Print ISSN: 2319-2003 | Online ISSN: 2279-0780
Original Research Article
A comparative study for evaluation of cognitive function in type-II
diabetes mellitus patients and non-diabetics
Dulcie Celia A.*, Ezhil Ramya J., Sriviruthi B.
INTRODUCTION
Diabetes mellitus is a heterogeneous metabolic disorder
characterized by the common feature of chronic
hyperglycaemia with disturbance of carbohydrate, fat and
protein metabolism.
1
The increasing prevalence of
diabetes over the world has become an important public
health problem. As population is increasing, getting older,
more obese and sedentary, the number of individuals with
diabetes is also steeply rising.
As of 2010, there were approximately 285 million people
diagnosed with diabetes mellitus compared to around 30
million in 1985.
2,3
Developing countries like India and
China contribute much to the diabetic load of the world.
4
Of the two types, Type-II diabetes is more common (90-
95% of all cases) than type 1 and has increased markedly
since 1960 in parallel with obesity.
4
Type-II Diabetes
Mellitus is a non-autoimmune, polygenic disease
condition in which there is impaired insulin effectiveness
(insulin resistance) and abnormal glucose homeostasis.
This form generally manifests in mid-life or beyond with
a mean age of about 45 years.
1
Risk factors include age
over 45 years, a positive family history, physical
inactivity, low fibre diet, people with impaired glucose
ABSTRACT
Background: To evaluate the impact of type-II diabetes mellitus on cognitive
function and to assess the factors associated with impaired function.
Methods: This prospective study compared 100 type-II diabetic people attending
the diabetic clinic of Tirunelveli Medical College Hospital with another 100
membered control group. The study group was selected randomly between the
age group of 45-65 years. A neuro-cognitive assessment was done using
Standardized Mini Mental State Examination (SMMSE), which is a simple and
reliable screening test. This scale has 12 questions with time limits to assess
orientation, memory, calculation, language, attention and construction.
Magnitude and severity of cognitive decrement were analysed along with the
possible factors affecting it.
Results: Mean age of the study population was 54.6±7.24 years. Cognitive
impairment was noted among 62 of cases and 48 of the control group, which
means a 14% higher prevalence of cognitive impairment among the type 2
diabetics. The association of development of cognitive impairment and duration
of diabetes mellitus was significant statistically (p value = 0.025443; p<0.05).
Other demographic variables like gender, education and domicile were also seen
to affect the results.
Conclusions: Mild to moderate cognitive impairment was found significantly
higher among the type-II diabetics than the non-diabetics. The cognitive
impairment was found to be associated with the duration of diabetes. Hence the
routine screening of cognition by SMMSE should be done in all type-II diabetic
patients.
Keywords: Cognitive dysfunction, Standardized Mini Mental State Examination
(SMMSE), Type-II diabetes mellitus
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20181179
Department of Pharmacology,
Tirunelveli Medical College,
Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India
Received: 26 January 2018
Accepted: 06 March 2018
*Correspondence to:
Dr. Dulcie Celia A.,
Email: dulcie04@gmail.com
Copyright: © the author(s),
publisher and licensee Medip
Academy. This is an open-
access article distributed under
the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution Non-
Commercial License, which
permits unrestricted non-
commercial use, distribution,
and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original
work is properly cited.