Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors set up the task to study the changes in blood sugar, immunoreactive insulin and triglycerides in patients with manifested coronary disease during an oral glucoso-tolerance test in the course of three hours. They examined 32 patients with coronary disease and 19 control subjects, similar in age and body weight, divided into three subgroups: with normal glucose tolerance (NGT), suspiciously-pathological glucose tolerance (SPGT) and pathological glucose tolerance (PGT). They are led by age conformed criteria in the assessment of the blood sugar curves obtained. For a better idea about the insulin response volume, provoked by glucose loading, they compare the sums of the insulinemic values and "insulinogenic index", among the control subjects and the patients examined. The study of the carbohydrate tolerance of the patients examined, show that manifested or suspiciously pathological deviations in carbohydrate metabolism were found in almost 60% of them. Insulinemia during the glucose loading was found to be higher than that of the control subjects, maximal point appearing later and restoration to initial values delayed. The highest absolute insulin values and increased volume of insulin secretion were established in the patients with NGT and the lowest--in patients with PGT. The highest insulinogenic index is in NGT patients and is with about 50% higher than that of the control subjects while in patients with PGT it is quite the reverse, i. e.--glucose tolerance deteriorated parallelly with the reducing of insulin response to glucose stimulus or, in other words--normal glucose tolerance in patients maintained by the increased insulin production. The correlation of blood sugar and insulinemic curves with those of triglyceridemia reveals that with blood sugar elevation and insulinemia during glucose loading--triglyceride level rapidly elevates--i.e. a positive correlation was found among blood sugar, insulinemia and triglyceridemia where triglyceridemia correlates with hyperinsulinemia more intimately than with glycemia. Basing on the data obtained and the general theoretical conditons--the problem of pathogenetic commonness (at least in certain relations) between
atherosclerosis
, obesity and
diabetes mellitus
is discussed. A practical conclusion is drawn that the establishment of increased serum triglycerides and hyperinsulinism in pathological and even in still normal carbohydrate tolerance in one subject may play the role of an important diagnostic test, speaking of the possible development or for the presence of already manifested
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:[Carbohydrate tolerance, serum insulin and triglycerides in coronary disease]. 122 16
The present study, concerning 145 insulin-dependent diabetics showed positive relationships between the severity of retinal disease on the one hand, and body weight, blood pressure, and serum cholesterol level on the other. These relationships remain significant when the duration of the clinical
diabetes
and the age of the patient are taken into account. Two interpretations are suggested. They are not incompatible. In diabetic subjects, either the increase in blood pressure and serum cholesterol level causes an aggravation of diabetic retinopathy or there exists a common factor at the origin of retinal lesions and of an increase in risk of cardiovascular disease through
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Diabetic retinopathy, duration of diabetes and risk factors of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. 122 3
The effects of
diabetes
and hypertension on the early postoperative course of patients undergoing coronary revascularization were studied by reviewing the records of 177 patients operated upon in 1972. There were 121 nondiabetic, nonhypertensive; 32 hypertensive; ten diabetic; and 14 diabetic-hypertensive patients. The incidence of postoperative low cardiac output, renal insufficiency and arrhythmia was significantly higher in the hypertensive patient. Operative mortality ranged from 0 in diabetic patients, to 0.8 per cent in nondiabetic, nonhypertensives, to 7.1 per cent in diabetic-hypertensives and 12.5 per cent in hypertensive patients, suggesting an increased risk for the hypertensive patient. The one- to two-year follow-up results documented symptomatic improvement in 90.7 per cent of patients with little adverse effect apparent from
diabetes
or hypertension. Pre- and postoperative coronary angiography was carried out in 103 patients between 1968 and 1973 with a mean elapsed time between operation and postoperative angiogram of 9.3 months. The progression of
atherosclerosis
was graded on a 0-4 basis in both grafted and ungrafted coronary arteries. While hypertension appeared to contribute to disease progression, the incidence of vein graft and internal mammary artery bypass occlusion was not significantly affected by either
diabetes
or hypertension. This study has shown that while hypertension contributes to increased morbidity and mortality in the early postoperative period and an increased rate of progression of
atherosclerosis
, neither
diabetes
nor hypertension appeared to influence the one- to two-year results of coronary revascularization.
...
PMID:The influence of diabetes and hypertension on the results of coronary revascularization. 125 97
Atherosclerosis
and insufficiency of the coronary arteries and their sequelae are summarized in the term "coronary heart disease". For the evaluation of the coronary arteries the knowledge of malformations, variants and supply areas is of importance. Extension and severity of
atherosclerosis
of the coronary arteries and their insufficiency is being influenced by hyperlipidemia, hypertension and
diabetes mellitus
. The process of
atherosclerosis
as a cause of the proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells in complicated by ulceration, parietal and obliterative thrombosis as well by intramural hemorrhages. Relative ischemia leeds to disseminated cell necrosis; total ischemia causes large myocardial tissue necrosis, called infarction. Localization and extension of infarction and the later scars correspond to the caliber of the obliterated coronary artery and to the significance of the collaterals. Postmortem coronary angiography can detect cause and extension of the damaged cardiac area. Functional significance of chronic coronary heart disease is related to the "critical connective tissue content" of the heart. After surgical treatment qualitative and quantitative morphology may help to explain postoperative cardiac failure.
...
PMID:[Morphology of coronary heart disease (author's transl)]. 126 48
Asymptomatic hyperuricemia should be treated only if the plasma uric acid levels are around 10 mg/100 ml or more on several determinations. In addition, patients on a purine-free diet who excrete more than 600 mg uric acid per 24 h should be treated. In both cases, treatment is intended to be prophylactic against gouty nephropathy. At present there is no evidence that primary hyperuricemia alone is a risk factor for early
atherosclerosis
and especially coronary artery disease. However, more attention should be paid to the accompanying risk factors such as obesity, hyperlipoproteinemia,
diabetes mellitus
and hypertension.
...
PMID:[Which uric acid value is in need of treatment?]. 126 67
The association of cigarette smoking and atherosclerorosis was investigated in 1320 autopsied men, 25--64 years of age. Aortic and coronary lesions were evaluated visually in coded specimens and objectively by analysis of radiographs. Using schedules that had been tested on pairs of living persons, interviewers obtained estimates of cigarette smoking habits of the deceased men from surviving relatives. Data were analysed for black and white men in the total sample of cases and also in groups according to the presence (selected disease group) or absence (basal group) of diseases thought to be associated with smoking (emphysema, lung cancer, etc.) or with coronary heart disease (myocardial infarction, hypertension,
diabetes
, stroke, etc.). Atherosclerotic involvement of aorta and coronary arteries was greatest in heavy smokers and least in nonsmokers for both races in the total sample of cases, the basal group and the selected disease group.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Cigarette smoking and atherosclerosis in autopsied men. 126 63
To better evaluate the incidence of
atherosclerosis
in the internal mammary artery (IMA), 215 IMA segments from routine postmortem examinations were evaluated microscopically. Significant atherosclerotic narrowing was seen in 9 patients (4.2%). No patient had more than a 50% reduction in lumen diameter. The degree of incipient
atherosclerosis
correlated well with age, hypertension,
diabetes
, and peripheral vascular disease.
...
PMID:Atherosclerosis of the internal mammary artery. 127 3
The insulin response to an oral glucose load (100 gm.) in 127 patients with a previous myocardial infarction (MI) (six months to one year) and in 65 patients with surgically treated or arteriographically identified peripheral vascular disease (PVD) was compared with that of 89 controls after matching the three collectives for age, glucose tolerance, and per cent ideal body weight (% IBW). The insulin response was of greater magnitude in MI and PVD groups than in respective control groups also in the absence of hyperglycemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and obesity. This finding suggests that hyperinsulinism may represent an early metabolic alteration associated with the development of MI and PVD. The insulin secretion pattern was prevalently of the delayed type in association with impaired glucose tolerance and with hypertriglyceridemia but not with overweight. Correlations between serum insulin, triglyceride (TG) levels, and % IBW were also investigated. We found a strong correlation (p less than 0.001) between stimulated insulin levels and % IBW in MI patients and none in PVD patients; conversely, the correlation between serum insulin and TG levels was very high (p less than 0.001) in PVD patients and only weak (p less than 0.05) in MI patients. No correlation was found between cholesterol (CH) levels and any of the other parameters studied. According to these results, it seems likely that hyperinsulinism plays a major role as a closely associated factor to obesity in those subjects who develop an MI, whereas in PVD patients the raised insulin levels may favor lipid accumulation in the arterial intima and accelerate the progress of
atherosclerosis
.
Diabetes
1976 Jul
PMID:Insulin response to oral glucose in patients with a previous myocardial infarction and in patients with peripheral vascular disease. Hyperinsulinism and its relationships to hypertriglyceridemia and overweight. 127 7
Long term complications continue to be the major source of morbidity and mortality in patients with
diabetes
. Acarbose could potentially help to reduce diabetic complications if it improved glucose control, reduced lipid levels and hyperinsulinaemia. Acarbose has been shown to effectively reduce postprandial hyperglycaemia and haemoglobin A1c. This effect might be helpful in patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
, as insulin injections do not provide complete control of rises in postprandial glucose levels, and in patients with non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
, because it simplifies the treatment programme. If improved control is shown to reduce complications, acarbose may be helpful. Although acarbose does not reduce hyperinsulinaemia, it reduces lipid levels and thus could reduce the risk of
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Preventing long term complications. Implications for combination therapy with acarbose. 128 May 78
Insulin resistance is a frequent phenomenon and a marker of increased risk for non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) and
atherosclerosis
. According to recent estimations, not only individuals with obesity, NIDDM, and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) but also one fourth of the "healthy" glucose tolerant and the majority of the hypertensive population are insulin resistant. Insulin resistance describes a tissue- and pathway-specific defect of glucose metabolism that is compensated for by hyperinsulinemia, leading to a cluster of undesirable hypertensiogenic, diabetogenic, and atherogenic processes. The initial defect can be directly measured by glucose clamp and other sophisticated techniques; the clinical syndrome may be derived from a network of related variables known to be associated with reduced insulin action. Because neither clamps nor serum insulin screenings will be available on a widespread basis, early diagnosis based on clinical criteria is crucial. A new interpretation of the "thrifty" genotype hypothesis may explain why insulin resistance, which formerly apparently represented an advantage in the evolutionary selection process, is such a frequent phenomenon. Improvement of impaired insulin action as a therapeutic principle may play a future central role in an integrated lifestyle approach of primary prevention of noncommunicable diseases such as NIDDM, hypertension, and
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:What is the clinical significance of insulin resistance? 128 40
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>