Nerve Conduction Study of Newly Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetic Patients and Its Correlation with Glycosylated Hemoglobin (HbA1c)

Authors

  • Sanzida Akter Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Kazi Gias Uddin Ahmed Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Md. Arifuzzaman Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Md. Rafiqul Islam Department of Neurology, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University
  • Ahmed Hossain Chowdhury Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Kanol Saha Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Hashmi Sina Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Iffekher Alam Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Reaz Mahmud Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Humayun Kabir Sarker Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College
  • Mohammad Ullah Department of Neurology, Dhaka Medical College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3329/bjn.v36i1.87070

Keywords:

Diabetes mellitus, HbA1c, NCS

Abstract

Background: Peripheral neuropathy is one of the common complications of DM and may proceed by a long period of clinically silent impaired glucose tolerance, altering the nerve function by the time diabetes is diagnosed. Nerve conduction (NCS) remain
the most reliable, accurate and sensitive measure for diagnosis of peripheral neuropathy. 

Objectives: Evaluation of nerve conduction study of newly diagnosed type -2 diabetic patients and to find out its correlation with glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c). 

Method: This is a case control study. A total 50 newly diagnosed type-2 diabetic patients within 1 month of both sex and another 50 healthy controls were studied prospectively during January 2018 to December 2019 from outpatient department of Endocrinology and advised to attend the department of Neurology of Dhaka medical college hospital. Nerve conduction study of cross limbs was performed. Blood sugar and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1C) were determine.

Results: Motor nerve conduction parameters were more affected. Median nerve impairment in both motor and sensory nerve conduction study was statistically significant (p<0.05) between case and control group. Most abnormal parameter is CMAP of peroneal nerve 42% followed by DL of tibial (20%) and median(18%) in motor nerve conduction study whose majority of them HbA1C was >10%. Combination tibial and peroneal nerve involvements were more common 11 (22.0%), followed. In multivariate regression analysis, HbA1C significantly (p<0.05) associated with tibial F-Lat but others were not significantly associated. There were significant positive correlations with median DL (r=0.829; p=0.002), median F-Lat (r=0.814; p=0.001), Tibial DL (r=0.805; p=0.004), tibial F-Lat (r=0.832; p=0.001), median sensory DL (r=0.824; p=0.002)

Conclusion: Increased HbA1c level indicative of a state of hyperglycemia is a risk factor for polyneuropathy in diabetic patients. NCS parameters are valuable for identification, future prediction of diabetic neuropathy as well as quantitative measure of its severity

 

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Published

2026-01-12

How to Cite

Akter, S., Kazi Gias Uddin Ahmed, Md. Arifuzzaman, Md. Rafiqul Islam, Ahmed Hossain Chowdhury, Kanol Saha, … Mohammad Ullah. (2026). Nerve Conduction Study of Newly Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetic Patients and Its Correlation with Glycosylated Hemoglobin (HbA1c). Bangladesh Journal of Neuroscience, 36(1), 7–14. https://doi.org/10.3329/bjn.v36i1.87070

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