Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The case of a female patient with fasting hypoglycaemia before the development of Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus is reported. She presented with primary hypothyroidism, partial hypopituitarism, adrenal insufficiency and glucagon deficiency. Thyroid microsomal and gastric parietal cell antibodies were detected as well as HLA-B8, whereas islet cell antibodies were not demonstrable, even 2 years after the onset of diabetes. Plasma chromatography revealed true pancreatic glucagon (IRG3500) close to undetectable in basal samples with a questionable increase from 3 to 18 pg/ml during insulin-induced hypoglycaemia. After an overnight fast, moderate hyperaminoacidaemia was found with elevations of alanine, glycine, serine, arginine and ornithine as seen in pancreatectomized patients. It is suggested that the deficient glucagon secretion in this patient might, at least in part, have been the cause of fasting hypoglycaemia and the failure of glucose recovery following insulin-induced hypoglycaemia. Possible, the A cell deficiency was part of the polyglandular failure syndrome in this patient.
...
PMID:Glucagon deficiency associated with hypoglycaemia and the absence of islet cell antibodies in the polyglandular failure syndrome before the onset of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: a case report. 635 16

Autoantibodies to the adrenal cortex (AA) were sought by indirect immunofluorescence using unfixed human adrenal tissue in 1675 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes (IDD), 2032 relatives of patients with IDD, and 2543 normal subjects. The frequencies of AA were significantly greater in patients with IDD (1.8%) and their relatives (1.4%) than in normal subjects (0.6%; P less than 0.013). Women more frequently had AA than men (P less than 0.011). There were no differences in the frequencies of AA between caucasoid and black individuals in all three patient groups. Patients with AA had higher frequencies of thyroid microsomal and gastric parietal cell autoantibodies than age-, sex-, and race-matched normal subjects (P less than 0.01). Adrenal function was studied in 30 asymptomatic patients (13 with AA, including 5 with IDD, and 17 subjects with no AA, including 8 with IDD). The mean plasma levels of ACTH at 0600 and 2000 h were significantly higher in those with AA than in matched subjects with no AA (P less than 0.01). The mean PRA levels (both recumbent and upright) were also significantly higher in those with AA than in subjects without AA (P less than 0.01). However, serum cortisol and aldosterone concentrations or 24-h urinary cortisol and aldosterone excretion were no different between the groups. These patients, therefore, appear to have compensated adrenal hypofunction, with the compensation maintained by increased ACTH and renin secretion. Whether these patients will remain in this compensated state of adrenal dysfunction or whether they will develop overt adrenal insufficiency requires longer follow-up.
...
PMID:Adrenal dysfunction in asymptomatic patients with adrenocortical autoantibodies. 672 13

Authors describe one case of Cushing's disease in a old eight-year boy, with growth deficiency, pubic hair and obesity. He had hypercortisolism unresponsive to dexamethasone suppression (1 mg). The more interesting fact for localization of the lesion was the more than 50% suppression with 8 mg of dexamethasone, while tomographic studies of sella turcicaland CAT were normal. A 3 mm microadenoma was removed at transsphenoidal surgery. After surgery the patient had diabetes insipida and adrenal insufficiency. One year later all endocrinologic studies were normal. This fact underlines the importance that transsphenoidal surgery can have in the treatment of Cushing's disease.
...
PMID:[Cushing's disease in childhood: apropos of a case cured after trans-sphenoidal adenomectomy]. 673 65

Two patients had IgA deficiency, giardiasis, and the HLA-B8 antigen. The family of patient 1 included members with juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus, adrenal insufficiency, pernicious anemia, and hypothyroidism, a combination of unusual diseases that has been reported previously to occur as a syndrome with IgA deficiency and the HLA-B8 antigen. This coincidence makes it likely that these two patients and the one family previously described have a common pathogenic base, the inheritance of an abnormal immune-response gene that is acquired with the HLA-B8 antigen as a result of genetic dysequilibrium.
...
PMID:Selective IgA deficiency and the HLA-B8 antigen. Report of two cases with familial data. 721 94

Patients are often referred to diabetologists on account of a flat curve of oral glucose tolerance test. This abnormality, however, is virtually never associated with a serious metabolic disorder and in any case, it never points to a disease that cannot be diagnosed by questioning or by straightforward clinical examination, nor confirmed by a more specific laboratory test. The curve may be flat for technical reasons (e.g. rejection of the glucose administered, timing of blood withdrawals and assays), for physiological reasons (differences between venous and arteriolo-capillary blood), or for pathological reasons (interaction with drugs, pituitary, thyroid or adrenal insufficiency, digestive malabsorption) but it never implies organic hypoglycaemia nor diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:[Flat curves of oral glucose tolerance tests (author's transl)]. 738 51

Castleman disease, or angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia, and POEMS (Polyneuropathy, Organomegaly, Endocrinopathy, Monoclonal gammopathy, and Skin changes), are associated and can lead to a clinical conundrum. The physician caring for a patient with Castleman disease should be alert to the development of multiple endocrine deficiencies, including primary hypogonadism, diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, and adrenal insufficiency. Avoidance of treating hypothyroidism alone when there is concomitant subclinical adrenal insufficiency is important, to avoid precipitating an adrenal crisis. A better outcome may result from earlier recognition of the endocrinopathies of this syndrome. This article describes a patient with Castleman disease in whom the features of POEMS unfolded over the ensuing years.
...
PMID:Case report: Castleman disease in association with POEMS. 814 Nov 36

The changes in normal endocrine physiology which accompany pregnancy result in changes in normal ranges of hormone levels and in specific changes in the course and management of endocrine diseases. This review presents information about the various endocrine diseases and their management in pregnant adolescents. Normal pituitary function during pregnancy is described as is the effect of pregnancy on pituitary tumors such as microadenomas and prolactinomas. The effects of bromocriptine therapy in cases where tumor enlargement occurs during pregnancy are tabulated. Methods of distinguishing placental growth hormone secretion and pituitary growth hormone secretion in patients with acromegaly are presented (with the note that acromegalic patients rarely become pregnant). TSH-secreting, gonadotropin, and nonsecreting tumors are rare in this age group, and there is no evidence that they enlarge during pregnancy. The discussion of the pituitary covers chronic hypopituitarism, Sheehan's Syndrome, lymphocytic hypophysitis, and diabetes insipidus. After reviewing normal changes in thyroid physiology during pregnancy, hyperthyroidism (usually due to Graves' disease), thyroid storm, and hypothyroidism are considered. The adrenal is the next subject, with a brief description of normal changes during pregnancy followed by comments on Cushing's Syndrome, adrenal insufficiency, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, and primary hyperaldosteronism. The symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment of pheochromocytomas, which are uncommon during pregnancy but are associated with high fetal and maternal mortality, are the next topics. After a review of changes in calcium metabolism during pregnancy and hypercalcemia, this report ends with a consideration of diabetes mellitus which includes alterations in maternal carbohydrate metabolism during pregnancy, effects of diabetes on the fetus, and management of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus during pregnancy (the most likely type to be present in adolescents).
...
PMID:Endocrine problems of adolescent pregnancy. 824 53

Acute adrenal insufficiency is a rare disorder associated with high morbidity and mortality if allowed to progress unrecognized. A constellation of nonspecific symptoms including weakness, easy fatigue, nausea, anorexia, and weight loss are typical features of adrenal insufficiency. The index of suspicion should be particularly high if the patient has hyperpigmentation; hyponatremia and/or hyperkalemia; a history of autoimmune disease (hypothyroidism, diabetes) or recent prior use of exogenous steroids or if the patient is on anticoagulant therapy. Any decline in clinical status (hypotension, fever, decreasing mental status), especially in the setting of an acute intercurrent illness, should be treated aggressively, even before laboratory confirmation of the diagnosis. Diagnostic testing is fairly straightforward and readily available. The development of purified synthetic corticosteroid preparations has provided a safe and effective means of replacement. Early awareness, recognition, and intervention remain significant steps in altering the course of acute adrenal insufficiency.
...
PMID:Acute adrenal insufficiency. 832 89

An 11-month-old male infant with recurrent supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) was treated with oral verapamil. Shortly thereafter he developed marked changes in behavior including lethargy, intensely increased thirst and urination, and irritability when denied fluids. "Primary" polydipsia was diagnosed following an evaluation which showed no evidence of adrenal insufficiency, diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, hypercalcemia, hyperosmolality, or renal disease. The symptoms resolved 1 week after verapamil was discontinued.
...
PMID:Verapamil-induced "primary" polydipsia. 852 7

POEMS syndrome is an uncommon association of polyneuropathy, organomegaly (liver, spleen, lymph nodes), endocrinopathy (hypogonadism primary hypothyroidism, diabetes mellitus, adrenal insufficiency), monoclonal gammopathy and skin changes; bone lesions (generally osteosclerotic, less frequently osteolytic or mixed) are nearly always present in this multisystem disease. We describe the first case of a female Italian patient with POEMS syndrome. Therapy with prednisone was of scant benefit and the patient died of cardiogenic shock some days after temporary pacemaker implantation, performed for recurrent episodes of bradycardia. From the beginning of steroid therapy she survived about fifteen months.
...
PMID:POEMS syndrome in a female Italian patient. A case report. 853 76


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>