Diabetic nephropathy is a major cause of lower-limb amputation. We enrolled 250 type 2 diabetic patients without apparent occlusive peripheral arterial disease (ankle-brachial indices >0.9) and 40 age-matched nondiabetic subjects consecutively admitted to our hospital. Flow volume and resistive index (RI), an index of vascular resistance, at the popliteal artery were evaluated using gated two-dimensional cine-mode phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging. Brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) was measured as an index of arterial distensibility. Flow volume was negatively correlated with both baPWV (p=0.0009) and RI (p<0.0001) among the patients. When the patients were grouped into four subgroups with or without albuminuria and renal insufficiency according to the levels of urinary albumin excretion rate (>or=20 or <20microg/min) and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (<60 or >or=60ml/min/1.73m(2)), albuminuric patients with renal insufficiency (n=30) showed the lowest flow volume (p=0.0078) and the highest baPWV (p=0.0006) and RI (p=0.0274) among the groups. Simple linear regression analyses demonstrated that eGFR correlated positively with flow volume (p=0.0020) and negatively with baPWV (p=0.0258) and RI (p=0.0029) in patients with albuminuria (n=92), but not with normoalbuminuria (n=158). Impaired peripheral circulation in lower-leg arteries associates with nephropathy in diabetic patients even though they have normal ankle-brachial indices.