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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Wolfram syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive disorder beginning in childhood that consists of four clinical features:
diabetes insipidus
,
diabetes mellitus
, optic atrophy and deafness. Its pathogenesis remains unknown, although the tendency to develop this syndrome has been related to some class II antigens of the HLA system. We report six new cases in four families. A review of published data from the genetic features of this syndrome is performed, establishing the high frequency of the HLA-DR2 antigen in the WS (44.4%) compared with a control group (21.9%; relative risk, 2.8) and to patients with Type 1 insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(Type 1
diabetes
) (6.77%; relative risk, 9.7). We also comment the high frequency of the HLA-DQw1 antigen (85.5%) in this syndrome, without statistical significance. A familial segregation study of the HLA haplotypes has been carried out without finding correlation between the autosomal recessive pattern attributed to the WS, and the major histocompatibility complex. In conclusion, whereas HLA may increase susceptibility to the WS, as shown by the existence of an HLA-DR2 association, the major genetic influence on the inheritance of the WS must be at another locus.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 1994 Jan
PMID:Analysis of the contribution of the HLA system to the inheritance in the Wolfram syndrome. 820 Feb 99
The aim of this review was to demonstrate that RM function is altered in various endocrinopathies and that RM weakness is a common finding. RM function has been well-studied in diseases such as thyroid dysfunction, and steroid induced RM myopathies. Less well documented reports on RM function were found in parathyroid dysfunctions, disorders of mineralocorticoids and pituitary disturbances. Controversial reports were found in
diabetes mellitus
. No report was found connecting RM function with androgens, pheochromocytoma or adrenaline deficiency in humans. These diseases could potentially cause RM impairment leading to severe respiratory failure (pump failure) putting life in great danger. Therefore, it is obvious that further studies are needed to investigate the performance of RMs in endocrinopathies. Such studies are extremely urgent in Cushing's and Addison's disease, acromegaly, disorders of the adrenal medulla, and in
diabetes insipidus
.
...
PMID:Respiratory muscles in endocrinopathies. 820 54
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
In vivo and in vitro bladder function were studied in three different models of increased diuresis: 1) Brattleboro rats with hereditary
diabetes insipidus
(di/di), 2) Sprague-Dawley rats with streptozotocin-induced
diabetes mellitus
(STZ), and 3) Sprague-Dawley rats with increased diuresis due to 5% sucrose added to the drinking water. When compared with controls, all three models showed bladder mass, increased water consumption and urine output, higher mean and maximal increased micturition volumes, and greater bladder capacity and compliance by in vitro cystometry. The changes were more extensive in di/di rats than in the STZ and sucrose-drinking rats. The concentration of bladder collagen decreased in all three rat models when compared with controls. However, the collagen concentration of STZ bladders was significantly lower than the collagen concentration of di/di and sucrose bladders, suggesting that the decrease in bladder collagen concentration associated with experimental
diabetes mellitus
is only partly related to the increased diuresis. Contractile function was studied using a whole bladder model. Responses of whole bladders from control and diabetic rats to electrical field stimulation, carbachol and KCl were identical. Volume-pressure relations of the isolated whole bladder showed that the magnitude of the contractile response to KCl is constant at intravesical volumes ranging from about 10 to 95% of cytometrical bladder capacity. Bladders from Brattleboro di/di rats and STZ rats showed a rightward shift of volume-passive pressure curves when compared with appropriate controls. Bladders from sucrose-drinking rats had volume-passive pressure curves similar to the bladders from controls. This study suggests that while contractile function remains intact with increased diuresis, the passive function changes, with the bladder becoming more distensible.
...
PMID:Comparison of urinary bladder function in rats with hereditary diabetes insipidus, streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus, and nondiabetic osmotic diuresis. 828 65
The Wolfram syndrome (MIM 222300) is a disease of unknown origin consisting of
diabetes insipidus
,
diabetes mellitus
, optic atrophy, and deafness. Here we report on a generalized deficiency of the mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activities in skeletal muscle and lymphocyte homogenate of a girl suffering from the Wolfram syndrome. In addition, we provide evidence for a 7.6-kilobase pair heteroplasmic deletion (spanning nucleotides 6465-14135) of the mitochondrial DNA in the two tissues and show that directly repeated sequences (11 bp) were present in the wild-type mitochondrial genome at the boundaries of the deletion. Neither of the patient's parents was found to bear rearranged molecules. This study supports the view that a respiratory chain defect can present with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
as the onset symptom. It also suggests that a defect of oxidative phosphorylation should be considered when investigating other cases of Wolfram syndrome, especially because this syndrome fulfills the criteria for a genetic defect of the mitochondrial energy supply: (a) an unexplained association of symptoms (b) with early onset and rapidly progressive course, (c) involving seemingly unrelated organs and tissues.
...
PMID:Deletion of mitochondrial DNA in a case of early-onset diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness (Wolfram syndrome, MIM 222300). 838 98
A 62-year-old male with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) associated with Cushing's syndrome and
diabetes insipidus
(DI) is reported. The patient was referred to our hospital for treatment of SCLC. A diagnosis of paraneoplastic Cushing's syndrome was made on the basis of an elevated serum ACTH (623.5 pg/ml) level, elevated excretion of urinary 17-OHCS (18.01 mg/day), obesity, hypertension, hyperglycemia, persistent hypokalemia, alkalosis, and no history of
diabetes mellitus
. He was also diagnosed as having DI based on polyuria and polydipsia, low specific gravity of the urine (1.007-1.010), low serum ADH (1.4 pg/ml) level, normal plasma osmolarity (29 mOsm/kg H2O), and the results of water deprivation test. DI and a left visual field defect was suggestive of metastasis to the pituitary region, but no lesion was detected by either CT scan or MRI scan. The patient failed to show a good response to intensive chemotherapy, and died of the tumor five months after commencing chemotherapy. Post-mortem examination revealed metastases to the hypothalamic-neurohypophyseal region, lungs, liver, adrenal glands, bone, bone marrow, and hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes.
...
PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with diabetes insipidus and Cushing's syndrome]. 839 May 89
Wolfram's Syndrome is a rare disorder comprising
diabetes insipidus
,
diabetes mellitus
, optic atrophy and high tone sensineural deafness. Successful pregnancy is extremely rare and has not previously been reported in siblings with this disorder. We report on two Irish sisters suffering from Wolfram's syndrome who have given birth to three healthy male infants.
...
PMID:Successful pregnancy in two sisters with Wolfram syndrome. 844 96
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
Polyuria is usually the result of a water diuresis or an osmotic diuresis. Traditionally, the assessment of the extracellular fluid (ECF) volume and the concentration of Na+ in plasma is sufficient to differentiate between the two. We present a case and our approach, which is based on calculations and quantitation of osmoles, to demonstrate the utility of this approach. A patient with
diabetes mellitus
, human T-cell lymphocyte virus, type 1 (HTLV-1) associated lymphoma, and hypercalcemia presented with marked ECF volume contraction and polyuria. A spot urine osmolality was 567 mOsm/kg H2O in the face of urine output of approximately 6 L/d. The initial diagnosis was an osmotic diuresis. However, a quantitative analysis revealed the enormous number of osmoles could not be accounted for physiologically. Hence, we postulated a water diuresis to be the cause of the polyuria. To confirm this hypothesis, we found that at different times during his hospitalization, the urine specific gravity ranged from 1.005 to 1.022, and urine output varied markedly over 8-h periods. Despite a plasma sodium of 147 mmol/L, the patient did not complain of thirst. Taken together, this suggested the presence of a hypothalamic lesion which caused central
diabetes insipidus
with variable output of antidiuretic hormone together with a blunted thirst response. Illustration of the utility of a quantitative approach to polyuria is the focus of the discussion.
...
PMID:Challenging consults: application of principles of physiology and biochemistry to the bedside. Osmotic diuresis: the importance of counting the number of osmoles excreted. 852 23
Wolfram syndrome was originally described as a combination of familial juvenile-onset
diabetes mellitus
and optic atrophy. Other neurological features subsequently emerged, and "DIDMOAD" (
diabetes insipidus
,
diabetes mellitus
, optic atrophy, and deafness) became a commonly accepted acronym. Here, we describe 4 further cases from 2 families, in whom there occurred previously unrecognized neurological features, central apnea and neurogenic upper airway collapse, together precipitating primary respiratory failure (fatal in 1 case), startle myoclonus (in 2 unrelated cases), axial rigidity, and Parinaud's syndrome. Magnetic resonance images revealed striking brainstem atrophy affecting, in particular, the pons and midbrain. The mitochondrial DNA from 3 cases (and relatives) showed no evidence of any of the previously reported abnormalities. These neurological and neuroradiological features, in conjunction with (1) analyses showing the neurodegenerative origin of optic atrophy, deafness,
diabetes insipidus
, and incontinence, (2) other previously reported neurological complications (including anosmia, ataxia, epilepsy, and neuropsychiatric and cognitive abnormalities), and (3) the very small number of published postmortem studies, indicate that Wolfram syndrome should be reemphasized as a unique hereditary neurodegenerative disorder with prominent optic atrophy and
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Wolfram syndrome: hereditary diabetes mellitus with brainstem and optic atrophy. 860 54
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