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 effect of strict metabolic control for 5 years on renal function and retinal morphology was estimated in 24 insulin-dependent diabetic individuals (age 29 +/- 8 years,
diabetes
duration 10 +/- 6 years) with albustix negative urine and minimal or no
background retinopathy
before the study. They were randomized to conventional insulin treatment (CIT) or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) with a portable pump. During CSII treatment the metabolic status was significantly improved. HbA1c fell from 8.9 +/- 2.0 to 7.4 +/- 1.3% (p less than 0.01) whereas HbA1c was unchanged during CIT treatment. The mean value of urinary albumin excretion (UAE) was not statistically significantly changed (from 12 +/- 10 mg/24 h to 13 +/- 5 mg/24 h in CSII patients and from 14 +/- 12 to 11 +/- 6 mg/24 h in CIT patients (p greater than 0.1). On the other hand, the elevated GFR values were significantly reduced in both CSII and CIT patients, 129 +/- 17 to 120 +/- 9 and 129 +/- 18 to 119 +/- 12 ml/min.1,73m2, respectively (p less than 0.05). Both the number of microaneurysms, haemorrhages and exudates tended to increase mor in CIT patients than in CSII patients during the 5 year study period, but the differences did not reach statistically significance (p greater than 0.1). Pump treatment did not induce proliferations or "cotton wool" exudates. We conclude that no statistically significantly differences between GFR values, UAE rates, and progression of
background retinopathy
was observed between normoalbuminuric IDDM patients treated for 5 years with CIT and CSII, respectively. However, due to the size of the material a type II error must be taken into consideration.
Diabetes
Res 1990 Dec
PMID:Effect of near normoglycemia for 5 years on progression of early diabetic retinopathy and renal involvement. 213 7
Non-mydriatic retinal photography was offered as a screening service to 37 general practitioners providing
diabetes
care in their practices. Of 84 patients photographed, 22 had appearances of diabetic retinopathy and these were compared with 25 of the remainder without retinopathy. In only seven of 11 patients with maculopathy or proliferative retinopathy had this been detected by their GP and, likewise, only six of 11 cases of probable
background retinopathy
had been detected. The mean annual examination rate in general practice was 33 (95% Cl 18-47)%. Of the 18 cases in whom action in response to recommendations for follow-up or referral could be ascertained, 15 (83%) had had the recommendations implemented. Thus, despite the potential risks of false-negative screening using non-mydriatic retinal photography, the technique may improve the comprehensiveness of screening in patients under the care of their GPs.
...
PMID:Non-mydriatic retinal photography as a screening service for general practitioners. 213 59
Serum levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) were measured in 53 patients with type II (non-insulin-dependent)
diabetes
(25 without ophthalmologic complications, 20 with
background retinopathy
, and eight with proliferative retinopathy) and in 33 healthy nondiabetic subjects. Diabetic subjects were excluded if they had hypertension, ischemic heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, or an elevated urine albumin level. After an overnight fast, blood was taken for determination of ACE, blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1), and C peptide levels. Data were analyzed according to the nonpaired Student's t test and linear regression analysis. Levels of ACE were significantly elevated in the whole diabetic group as compared with control subjects (334.0 U/L +/- 97.0 vs 250.5 U/L +/- 85.5, P less than .001). This elevation was more marked in those diabetics with
background retinopathy
(344.6 U/L +/- 96.8, P less than .001) and proliferative retinopathy (357.3 U/L +/- 93.2, P less than .01); no significant difference was found between ACE levels of diabetics without complications and those of control subjects. No correlation was found between ACE levels and HbA1, blood glucose, or C peptide values. We conclude that ACE levels are elevated in type II
diabetes
, chiefly in patients with retinopathy. This finding may reflect microvascular damage caused by secretion of ACE by the vascular endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Elevated serum levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme in patients with diabetic retinopathy. 215 94
Vitreous fluorophotometry was performed in 56 juvenile insulin-dependent diabetic patients aged 9-23 years (median: 16 years),
diabetes
duration 1-20 years (median: 8 years). Fundus photography showed mild
background retinopathy
in 5 patients, while 51 patients had no signs of retinopathy. Abnormal leakage into the posterior vitreous body was found in 4/5 patients with
background retinopathy
and in 24/51 with normal fundi. We found a significantly positive correlation between abnormal leakage and duration of
diabetes
and HbA1 with Kendall rank-order correlation coefficients T = 0.21 (P = 0.01) and 0.19 (P = 0.02) resp. No significant correlation was found between leakage and age, actual blood glucose level or insulin antibodies expressed as insulin binding capacity of IgG, but a significantly negative correlation between abnormal leakage and low levels of fasting c-peptide/s T = 0.437 P less than 0.001. Kendall partial rank-order correlation analysis showed that c-peptide/s significantly explained the leakage when HbA1 or duration was kept constant. Duration could only explain leakage when HbA1 was fixed but not when c-peptide/s was kept constant. HbA1 could also explain leakage when duration or c-peptide was fixed.
...
PMID:Vitreous fluorophotometry in juvenile diabetics with and without retinopathy in relation to metabolic control: insulin antibodies and c-peptide levels. 222 Mar 57
In 27 normal subjects and 64 insulin-dependent diabetic patients, we evaluated the pattern electroretinogram, which may reflect the neural activity of the spatially sensitive retinal ganglion cells. The amplitude of the pattern electroretinogram was reduced in diabetic patients who had no observable retinal changes. The amplitude was further reduced with increasing retinopathy. The pattern electroretinogram amplitude change was a more sensitive indicator of retinal change among the diabetic subpopulations than the statistically significant changes in latency. A significant correlation between pattern electroretinogram amplitude and the duration of
diabetes
were found in diabetic patients with either no observable retinopathy or minimal
background retinopathy
. The pattern electroretinogram may be useful as a quantitative, dependent variable to establish and monitor short-term metabolic and physiologic changes in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:The pattern electroretinogram in diabetes. 230 58
Two hundred and fifty six consecutively ambulant diabetic patients attending a Nigerian diabetic clinic for the presence of cheiroarthropathy were examined using standard criteria. Forty eight (19%) had limited joint mobility of the hand, a prevalence higher than the 4% (2/56) observed in a non-diabetic population matched for age and sex. Limited joint mobility was twice as prevalent in the insulin treated (16/50, 32%) than in the non-insulin dependent (32/206, 16%) diabetics. Indices such as age, duration of
diabetes
, and glycaemic control (as assessed by integrated blood glucose concentration over the previous 12 months and glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c concentrations) were the same in the diabetics with and without limited joint mobility. The prevalence of cataracts (18/48, 38%) and
background retinopathy
(8/48, 17%) was higher in diabetics with limited joint mobility than in those without (respectively 6-9% and 5-6%); hypertension, peripheral neuropathy, and foot ulcers, however, were about equally common in the two groups of diabetics (with and without limited joint mobility). Nephropathy appeared commoner in diabetic subjects without limited joint mobility. Our results confirm previous observations in Caucasians of an increased prevalence of limited joint mobility in
diabetes
, especially those receiving insulin treatment, and also showed that limited joint mobility could predict the presence of retinopathy and cataracts in those diabetics. Neuropathy and hypertension were not commoner in our diabetics with limited joint mobility (unlike in the Caucasian population), suggesting that racial factors may underlie the predictive value of limited joint mobility in diabetic microangiopathy.
...
PMID:Cheiroarthropathy and long term diabetic complications in Nigerians. 231 Feb 24
Several components of the electroretinogram were studied in 31 juvenile diabetics and 15 age-matched normal controls. The diabetic group consisted of 18 patients without retinopathy and 13 with mild
background retinopathy
. Oscillatory potentials were measured at low-stimulation energies. Significantly reduced amplitudes and component-specific delayed peak implicit times were found in both diabetic groups compared with the data from the controls. Similar results were obtained in the photopic and scotopic electroretinogram. From these findings, we suggest that retinal dysfunction is already present in juvenile diabetics without photographic evidence of retinopathy after a mean duration of
diabetes
of 7 years.
...
PMID:Electrophysiological changes in juvenile diabetics without retinopathy. 231 Mar 37
Over 11 years from 1977 a large study of diabetic retinopathy has been conducted in Newcastle and in 1988, 5519 diabetic subjects had been assessed. Where possible, all had retinal photography. Prevalence rates for any retinopathy, proliferative retinopathy and maculopathy were assessed in relation to the known duration of
diabetes
for subjects diagnosed before or after age 30 years. These data indicate a peak of retinopathy prevalence in the second or third decade of
diabetes
with slightly lower rates in longer survivors. Treatment with insulin was associated with a higher retinopathy prevalence. Incidence rates for the new development of
background retinopathy
in previously unaffected subjects show a peak late in the first decade of
diabetes
in young-onset cases, while in the older-onset group, the peak occurs in the second decade of
diabetes
. Over all, 8% of diabetics without retinopathy developed it per year. The implications of this data for the routine management of diabetic patients is discussed and the current recommendations for retinal screening by the Australian
Diabetes
Society are outlined.
...
PMID:Update and implications from the Newcastle diabetic retinopathy study. 235 53
Using specular microscopy and computer-assisted morphometry, the morphologic features of the corneal endothelium were evaluated in three groups of patients with type II diabetes mellitus: 20 patients without diabetic retinopathy, 24 with
background retinopathy
, and 26 with proliferative retinopathy. When compared to age-matched nondiabetic controls (30 patients), all diabetic groups had similar endothelial cell densities but demonstrated significant increases in cell size and shape variability (pleomorphism). However, there was no significant difference in the degree of these endothelial changes among the three diabetic groups. Moreover, none of the endothelial morphologic parameters was found to correlate with the duration of
diabetes
or glycemic control, as estimated from glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1) concentrations.
...
PMID:Relationship of corneal endothelial morphology to diabetic retinopathy, duration of diabetes and glycemic control. 236 74
The prevalence of and interrelationships among all four major complications of insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) and their risk factors are being examined in a large epidemiologic study of IDDM subjects diagnosed in childhood. This article focuses on the baseline prevalence of complications in the 657 subjects diagnosed between 1950 and 1980 and currently aged 8-48 yr, with a mean duration of 20 yr. In addition to
background retinopathy
being virtually universal after 20 yr of
diabetes
, proliferative retinopathy affects 70% of IDDM subjects after 30 yr duration. As with overt nephropathy, prevalence of proliferative retinopathy is marginally higher in females than in males at short durations; the previously reported male excess is limited to the subjects with IDDM of longer duration (greater than or equal to 25 yr). Somewhat different patterns of microalbuminuria are also seen by sex. Males show a threefold increase in prevalence from 10 to 25 yr duration, whereas females show a more constant prevalence across these durations. A further rise in microalbuminuria is seen in males but not females at greater than or equal to 30 yr duration, giving a combined prevalence of microalbuminuria and overt nephropathy at greater than or equal to 30 yr duration of 84% (males) and 59% (females). Distal symmetrical polyneuropathy shows a constant rise with duration and is only marginally higher in men. Prevalence of cardiovascular (coronary and cerebral) disease shows no sex difference, whereas peripheral vascular disease is particularly common in women after 30 yr duration (greater than 30%) compared with men (11%) when determined by ankle/arm blood pressure ratio less than 0.8 at rest or after exercise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes
1990 Sep
PMID:Prevalence of complications in IDDM by sex and duration. Pittsburgh Epidemiology of Diabetes Complications Study II. 238 91
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>