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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Our approach serves several purposes: To demonstrate the response of aortic cell nuclei to a changing environment (e.g. hypercholesterolemia, experimental
diabetes
, drug treatment), to apply the acridine orange (AO) ultracytochemical method, and to determine the euchromatin/heterochromatin (EU/HET) ratio by morphometric procedures as suitable criteria, and to emphasize the differential nuclear activity of adventitial cells. Hypercholesterolemia in rabbits results in an increase of AO positive nuclei in the adventitia. Additional treatment with tinofedrine, a new cerebral vasodilator drug, reveals an even higher number of AO positive nuclei in adventitial and also in endothelial and
plaque
cells. In streptozotocin induced
diabetes
in rats the increased number of AO positive cells coincides with an elevated EU/HET ratio.
...
PMID:Alteration of chromatin in early experimental arteriosclerosis. 721 38
Thrombosis is a well-recognized complication of atherosclerosis and may be a factor in initial lesion formation. Experimental endothelial cell injury results in activation of the coagulation mechanism and therefore may be a critical aspect of the pathogenesis of occlusive vascular disease. If this is so, then risk factors for atherosclerosis should affect the endothelium either by causing cell injury, inhibiting repair mechanisms, or altering its thromboresistant properties. To test this, we studied the effect of several risk factors on endothelial cell behavior in vitro. Since the smooth muscle cell is the major cellular component of human atherosclerotic
plaque
and since a primary smooth muscle cell lesion is suggested by the clonal nature of human
plaque
, we also studied the effect of risk factors on arterial smooth muscle behavior. We have found that homocysteine directly injures human endothelium, which may account for the premature arterial disease in homocystinuria. Serum from patients with familial hypercholesterolemia inhibits the critical function of endothelial cell migration, as well as arterial smooth muscle cell migration. Moderate hypoxia has no effect on endothelial cell or smooth muscle cell viability, proliferation, or migration. Platelet factors are shown to affect human smooth muscle cell proliferation and both endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell migration. Preliminary study of platelet activation in
diabetes
with retinopathy suggests a relation to glucose control, but might reflect underlying vessel disease rather than direct platelet effect.
Diabetes
1981
PMID:Studies on the cellular basis of atherosclerosis: the effects of atherosclerosis risk factors on platelets and the vascular endothelium. 729 72
In the ten year interval from 1967 to 1976, in a group of 200 patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease, six were identified who presented a unique combination of physical findings, angiographic abnormalities and pathologic changes. Atherosclerotic coarctation describes this entity because of the discreteness of the lesion found, the extent to which the aorta is occluded and the presence of extensive collaterals. Pathologically, the lesion is an organized thrombus forming on a single ulcerated
plaque
in an aorta with a lumen that is otherwise well preserved. Distally, infantile vessels are found. Other features have been the absence of
diabetes mellitus
and the fact that all of these patients have been women. All but one patient smoked cigarettes. Local endarterectomy restored pedal pulses and provided lasting relief of symptoms in all of the patients.
...
PMID:Atherosclerotic coarctation of the abdominal aorta in women. 736 56
The immune responsiveness in streptozotocin (SZ)-induced diabetic mice was studied using the immune responses to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) as an indicator system. In SZ-diabetic mice, the weights of such lymphoid organs as the thymus and spleen were significantly decreased with time after SZ administration, whereas the weight of liver was markedly increased. In SZ-diabetic mice, the level of delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) to SRBC was not lower than that in normal controls in most cases, although the level of DTH was significantly depressed, on occasion, in SZ-diabetic mice. In contrast, antibody-forming activity, measured as the number of
plaque
-forming cells (PFC), was markedly decreased in SZ-diabetic mice. It seems that antibody production is more profoundly depressed than is DTH in SZ-diabetic mice. The transfer of normal thymus and bone marrow cells into SZ-diabetic mice caused only a partial restoration of PFC activity. When normal spleen cells were transferred into diabetic irradiated mice, proliferation of spleen cells and production of splenic PFC was greatly reduced as compared with normal irradiated mice. Treatment with insulin completely reversed such depression in the transfer system. These findings suggest that the chronic insulin-deficient diabetic state caused a depression and delay in the proliferation and differentiation of lymphoid cells.
Diabetes
1980 Jul
PMID:Immunologic features of mice with streptozotocin-induced diabetes: depression of their immune responses to sheep red blood cells. 738 Jan 15
ODU Plaque-susceptible rats (ODUS/Odu) exhibit markedly heavy
plaque
formation in the lower incisors and develop both periodontal pockets and gingivitis after being fed a commercially available powder diet. These rats have been established as an inbred strain. We have demonstrated that the ODUS/Odu are a very suitable experimental model for studying periodontitis. We already reported about the allelic distribution, changes of
plaque
formation and body weight, biochemical nature, toxic activity, vascular permeability factor and bradykinin inactivating factor of the
plaque
, histological and immunological studies, the pH in the periodontal pocket, amount of saliva, IgA in the saliva, salivary kallikrein, the relationship between sialic acid in the saliva and the serum, leukocyte functions (chemotaxis and superoxide anion) in ODUS/Odu, histamine, mast cell, free radicals, superoxide dismutase activities in gingiva and gingival nerve fibers with substance P or calcitonin gene-related peptide, and effect of
diabetes
. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic ODUS/Odu may be a useful tool for studying the pathological mechanisms in the development of periodontal tissue breakdown in
diabetes
. ODUS/Odu should help to further establish the utility of this strain as a model for experimental periodontal disease.
...
PMID:[Experimental periodontitis in rats]. 762 82
From January 1979 to December 1993, of 2723 carotid revascularizations performed on our service, 168 (6.2%) were isolated carotid eversion endarterectomies (CEEs) for atherosclerotic occlusive disease. Since 10 of these procedures were bilateral, there were 158 patients total (88 men and 70 women). Twenty-six (16.5%) had
diabetes
, 54 (34.2%) had coronary disease, and 107 (67.7%) had hypertension. The mean age was 68.9 +/- 8.9 years (range 38 and 85 years). Preoperative ischemic symptoms were hemispheric in 93 (55.4%) patients, retinal in 31 (18.4%), and vertebrobasilar in 37 (22%). They consisted of one or more strokes in 44 (26.2%) patients and one or more transient ischemic attacks in 99 (58.9%); 25 (14.9%) patients were asymptomatic. The operated lesion contained atherosclerotic stenotic
plaque
in all cases. The lesion was tightly stenotic (> 75%) and hemodynamically significant in 93 (55.4%) cases and irregular or ulcerated in all others. In 86 (51.2%) patients a coil or kink of the distal internal carotid artery was also present. The contralateral carotid artery was totally occluded in eight (4.7%) patients and tightly stenotic in seven (4.2%). All patients were operated on under deep general anesthesia; they were given systemic heparin and normal blood pressure was maintained. After freeing and cross-clamping of the carotid bifurcation, the end of the common carotid artery or the ostium of the internal carotid artery was sectioned. The section allowed a deep-plane endarterectomy through eversion and excellent control over the endarterectomized surface and its extremities. Since January 1989 completion arteriography has been routinely performed after CEE.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Carotid eversion endarterectomy: short- and long-term results. 770 68
Sclerotic involvement of abdominal aorta and lower limb arteries is related to 2 types of fundamental lesions: atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is a focal intimal thickening (
plaque
) of large- and medium-sized arteries, which combines atheroma (lipid deposition) and fibrosis. Plaque rupture is the crucial event in the progression of atherosclerosis, directly causing most acute thrombotic events, and contributing in great part to
plaque
expansion. Arteriosclerosis is a diffuse fibrosis of the arterial wall with thickening of the intima, and thinning of the media. Two forms of arteriosclerosis probably exist with distinct mechanisms and consequences. Obliterating arteriosclerosis mainly involves leg arteries (causing poor distal run-off) and appears to be essentially enhanced by ageing,
diabetes
and chronic renal insufficiency. Dilating arteriosclerosis involves large arteries where it provokes aneurysm formation; it is related to ageing, but seems also to be dependent upon an inborn dystrophy of arterial connective tissue. These 3 components of sclerotic arterial diseases of the lower limbs are often combined in the same individual.
...
PMID:[Description and mechanisms of sclerotic arterial diseases of the lower limbs]. 772 5
This study compared the periodontal status of a juvenile diabetic study group with that of a non-diabetic control group similar in age and sex. The study group consisted of 26 type I diabetic patients with an average age of 13.42 years and 24 control subjects of similar age. The diabetic subjects were evaluated with glycosylated hemoglobin (GHb) to obtain a measure of diabetic control. Clinical periodontal evaluations were performed for all teeth in each subject, and consisted of the
plaque
index, gingival fluid flow, gingival index, probing depths, clinical attachment levels, recession, and bleeding on probing. Analysis of the data demonstrated no statistically significant differences in the overall means for the 2 groups for average attachment loss, probing depths, recession, gingival index,
plaque
index, gingival fluid flow, or bleeding on probing. There was no significant association between the level of control of
diabetes
(GHb) and clinical variables. However, comparisons based on site-specific measurements showed the gingival index to be somewhat higher among the diabetics (p = 0.0002), and examination of interaction effect plots showed the diabetic group to have higher average gingival index for most teeth and higher or the same
plaque
index levels on all teeth relative to controls. Thus, a young study population with type I diabetes mellitus was found to have significantly increased severity of inflammatory gingival disease compared to controls of similar age.
...
PMID:Periodontal disease and type I diabetes mellitus in children and adolescents. 777 67
Vascular endothelial injury associated with arterial narrowing leads to platelet adhesion and aggregation at the site of endothelial injury and to the local accumulation of several mediators that promote platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction, including thromboxane A2, serotonin, adenosine diphosphate, platelet activating factor, oxygen-derived free radicals, activated thrombin, and tissue factor. At the same sites of endothelial injury, there is a reduction in absolute or relative amounts of the endogenous inhibitors of platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction, including prostacyclin, endothelium-derived relaxing factor (nitric oxide), and tissue plasminogen activator; the loss of the effects of the endogenous inhibitors preventing platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction helps to create a prothrombotic and vasoconstrictive environment. Endothelial injury occurs as a result of atherosclerotic
plaque
fissuring or ulceration, flow shear stress, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, immune complex deposition, infection, and mechanical injury in the form of diagnostic and therapeutic catheterization. Endothelial injury and the accumulation of platelet- and other cell-derived mediators promotes neointimal proliferation in an exaggerated wound-healing response, resulting in further anatomic narrowing of artery in the subsequent days and weeks. Future methods that may prove useful in protecting the individual with these vascular problems from acute myocardial infarction and its consequences are inhibition of multiple mediators of platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction, restoration of the presence of the normal endogenous inhibitors of platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction, and/or rapid therapeutic regeneration of the injured endothelium.
...
PMID:Conversion from chronic to acute coronary heart disease syndromes. Role of platelets and platelet products. 778 65
To gain further information on
diabetes
-related disorders in the somatotrophic and lactotrophic axes, we undertook a functional, morphometrical and densitometrical study of the arcuate nucleus (AN), median eminence (ME) and anterior pituitary gland of adult male rats one month after streptozocin-induced
diabetes
(STZ-D). The basal secretory activity of somatotrophs and lactotrophs was tested by the reverse haemolytic
plaque
assay (RHPA) and plasma GH and prolactin (PRL) levels were determined by RIA. The number of GH-releasing factor (GRF)-labelled axons and the amount of axonal tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-immunoreactivity increased in STZ-D. There were no significant differences in any of the other densitometrical measurements performed on GRF-, somatostatin-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone- and TH-labelled ME axon cross-sections as well as those on tuberoinfundibular-dopaminergic neurones of the AN in STZ-D compared with control rats. Plasma GH and PRL levels and measurements on anterior pituitary GH- and PRL-labelled structures were decreased in STZ-D. However, the GH and PRL
plaque
areas were increased after RHPA implying that the secretory capacity of somatotrophs and lactotrophs was not impaired. Taken together, these results suggest that the accumulated GRF in the ME is due to reduced GRF release. This could account for the reduced amplitude and/or frequency of GH secretory pulses. The increased axonal TH-immunoreactivity may indicate an increased dopamine synthesis. If coupled to increased release this could, in turn, be partly responsible for the reduced plasma and anterior pituitary PRL concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The reduction of circulating growth hormone and prolactin in streptozocin-induced diabetic male rats is possibly caused by hypothalamic rather than pituitary changes. 779 26
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