Background: Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) is a rheumatic disease characterized by a significant association with metabolic alterations, such as an impaired lipidic profile.
Methods: One-hundred-thirty consecutive patients and 40 normal subjects were studied. The patients were affected by type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus, impaired glucose tolerance and obesity. The diagnosis of DISH was performed by clinical examination and X-ray study of the thoracolumbar spine. The determination of total cholesterol, triglycerides, HLD-cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol was realized by routine biochemical methods; an oral glucose tolerance test was performed in order to determine the levels of C-peptide and blood glucose.
Results: We demonstrate a high incidence of the disease in a cohort of patients affected by overt and non-overt diabetes mellitus (T1DM and T2DM) as well as in obese subjects and a correlation between this disorder and hypertryglyceridemia (T1DM, obese-T2DM and obese patients), hypo-HDL-cholesterolemia (obese-T2DM, non-obese-T2DM and obese patients) and hyper-LDL-cholesterolemia (obese patients). In obese-T2DM patients, as well as in obese patients, we observed 40% of DISH, in non obese-T2DM patients the presence of DISH was 30%, while in T1DM patients and impaired glucose tolerance 26.6% and 22.2, respectively. However, a correlation between DISH and the relative hyperinsulinemia in obese patients during an oral glucose tolerance test is not documented.
Conclusions: Our study confirms the prevalence of DISH in diabetes mellitus and obesity, the association with an impaired lipidic profile and the low percentage of symptomatic patients.