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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have carried out a study into retinal sensitivity alterations in the course of primary open angle glaucoma to see if their appearance and evolution might be influenced by concomitant diabetes mellitus. The visual field examination (Perimeter Octopus 500 EZ, programme G1) indicated prevalent sensitivity defects in the superior hemifield, both in glaucoma only subjects and in those with diabetes as well. As to the inferior hemifield, a greater, statistically significant, retinal sensitivity defect was found in the inferior temporal quadrant of the left eye in the group of diabetics.
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PMID:The influence of diabetes mellitus on primary open angle glaucoma perimetry. 958 36

Glaucoma is one of the leading causes of blindness in adult Americans. This disease remains undetected in one half of the people with this disease. Primary open angle glaucoma is the most common form of the disease. Patients at risk for glaucoma usually have one or more of the following characteristics: advanced age, diabetes, myopia, elevated intraocular pressure, large cup to disc ratio, and a positive family history of the disease. Presently in the United States, treatment for primary open angle glaucoma is usually medical. Six classes of glaucoma medications are available, all of which have side effects. The second most prevalent form of glaucoma is angle closure glaucoma, the treatment for which is usually surgical. Although a cure for the various forms of glaucoma does not exist, an awareness of the problem and early detection and treatment minimize the impact of the disease.
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PMID:Gradual painless visual loss: glaucoma. 985 60

Glaucoma, the third leading cause of blindness in the western world, is characterized by painless, gradual loss of visual fields which may lead to severe visual impairment or even blindness. In 4 years of operation of a mobile glaucoma unit for screening and early diagnosis of glaucoma, 10,037 subjects aged 18-95 years were screened (4504 women, 45%); 55% were under 50 years (Graph 1). Ocular hypertension was diagnosed in 8.0%; primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) in 0.8%, with 2/3 already under treatment, the rest newly diagnosed. Pseudo-exfoliative glaucoma was diagnosed in 0.2%; only 2 cases had closed angle glaucoma; 91% of those screened were normal (Fig. 4; age stratification, Graph 3). POAG increased with age, from 0.2% in those under 40 years to 10% in those over 80; POAG was more common in men, but OHT was similar in both sexes (6.0% vs. 5.3%). There was no correlation between incidence of POAG and place of work except in the Sorek Nuclear Center (1.9% vs. 0.8%, p = 0.11). Other conditions significantly more frequent in POAG than normals were diabetes mellitus (x 2.5), systemic hypertension (x 4), myopia (x 2) and history of intraocular surgery (x 6).
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PMID:[Early detection of glaucoma by a mobile unit--results from 10,000 examinees]. 1088 8

Disease genes may be identified through functional, positional, and candidate gene approaches. Although extensive and often labor-intensive studies such as family linkage analysis, functional investigation of gene products and genome database searches are usually involved, thousands of human disease genes, especially for monogenic diseases with Mendelian transmission, have been identified. However, in diseases caused by more than one gene, or by a combination of genetic and environmental factors, identification of the genes is even more difficult. Common examples include atherosclerosis, cancer, Alzheimer's disease, asthma, diabetes, glaucoma, and age-related macular degeneration. There have been conflicting reports on the roles of associated genes. Even with population-based case-control studies and new statistical methods such as the sib-ship disequilibrium test and the discordant alleles test, there is no agreement on whether alpha2-macroglobulin (A2M) is a gene for Alzheimer's disease. Another example is the inconsistent association between age-related macular degeneration and ATP-binding cassette transporter (ABCR). Ethnic variation causes further complications. In our investigation of LDL-receptor variants in familial hypercholesterolemia, and the trabecular meshwork inducible glucocorticoid response protein, or myocillin (TIGR-MYOC) mutation pattern in primary open angle glaucoma, we did find dissimilar results in Chinese compared to Caucasians. New information from the Human Genome Project and advancements in technologies will aid the search for and confirm identification of disease genes despite such challenges.
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PMID:Hunting for disease genes in multi-functional diseases. 1109 34

Glaucoma is the second most common cause of legal blindness in the United States. Open-angle glaucoma is an asymptomatic, progressive optic neuropathy characterized by enlarging optic disc cupping and visual field loss. Patients at increased risk for open-angle glaucoma include blacks older than 40 years, whites older than 65 years, and persons with a family history of glaucoma or a personal history of diabetes or severe myopia. Elevated intraocular pressure is a strong, modifiable risk factor for open-angle glaucoma, but it is not diagnostic. Some patients with glaucoma have normal intraocular pressure (i.e., normal-pressure glaucoma), and many patients with elevated intraocular pressure do not have glaucoma (i.e., glaucoma suspects). Routine measurement of intraocular pressure by primary care physicians to screen patients for glaucoma is not recommended. Open-angle glaucoma usually is discovered during an adult eye evaluation performed for other indications. Final diagnosis and treatment occur in collaboration with ophthalmologists and optometrists. Formal visual field testing (perimetry) is a mainstay of glaucoma diagnosis and management. Eye drops, commonly nonspecific beta-blocker or prostaglandin analog drops, generally are the first-line treatment to reduce intraocular pressure. Laser treatment and surgery usually are reserved for patients in whom medical treatment has failed. Without treatment, open-angle glaucoma can end in irreversible vision loss.
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PMID:Open-angle glaucoma. 1275 55

According to a recent epidemiological study done in Japan, 2 or 3 million Japanese people are thought to be suffering from glaucoma, and 70-80% of them have not been examined or diagnosed by ophthalmologists. Therefore, the problem is how to find these untreated and undiagnosed people. At present, treatment of glaucoma continues to be directed at lowering intraocular pressure to prevent progression of glaucomatous optic neuropathy. However, theoretically, there are three stages in the prevention of progression of glaucoma. In the first stage, diagnosis of glaucoma can be done by genetic examination, before occurrence of glaucoma. The MYOCILIN/trabecular meshwork-inducible glucocorticoid response gene and the optineurin gene were identified as the genes that cause open angle glaucoma. Although some Japanese patients have sequence changes in the myocilin gene, there are no apparent specific mutations in Japanese glaucoma patients, in the MYOCILIN/TIGR and optineurin genes. Secondary glaucoma such as steroid glaucoma, induced by allergic diseases, and neovascular glaucoma, induced by retinal circulatory insufficiency, are preventable by improving the causal diseases, diabetes and hypertension. The education of doctors and laymen is important to reduce the occurrence of diabetes, and hypertension to prevent diabetic retinopathy, and retinal vessel occlusion. The second stage in preventing progression of glaucoma is to find the disease as early as possible. In Japan, a physical examination system is in place for everybody over 40 years old, in companies and local districts. Therefore, ocular examination, specially non-mydriatic fundus photographs should be taken in these examinations, and the film should be evaluated by an ophthalmologist, to search for retinal and optic disc abnormalities. Primary open angle glaucoma can be detected through this system in early stages. In primary angle closure glaucoma, instruments for estimating anterior chamber rapidly and accurately are necessary for the diagnosis. There is a special machine which can be handled easily, safely, and economically for detecting angle closure glaucoma, has been developed by Yamanashi University. This machine might help to reduce the number of angle closure glaucoma patients in the world. In the near future, a glaucoma network system should be put in place all over Japan. This organization consists of central headquarter and local central office. Most hospitals and private offices will belong to a local central office, and several glaucoma specialists will work in central and local offices. All glaucoma patients will be registered in local glaucoma office. The information on glaucoma patients will be communicated in the system the through light fiber cables or a satellite system. The patients can ask about their own disease through this glaucoma center system. In the third stage of glaucoma prevention, progression of glaucomatous optic neuropathy is retarded by conventional IOP lowering treatment or neuroprotective drugs. This stage compromises rehabilitation of visual function, implant of artificial visual systems, and regeneration of retinal ganglion cells(RGC). The disturbances of axonal flow in guinea pig optic nerve fibers was demonstrated electromicroscopically by quick-freeze, deep-etching method and, the decrease in numbers of motor proteins like "Kinesin" "Dynein" and "MAP-1" was shown in guinea pig eyes with elevated intraocular pressure by immunohistochemistry. Retinal glanglion cells have been isolated and new findings have been reported using this RGC culture system. Therefore, new neuroprotective drugs will be developed through this culture system.
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PMID:[21st century management of glaucoma]. 1473 29

To obtain epidemiological data on the prevalence and risk factors for open angle glaucoma in hospital workers of African origin, and investigate appropriate methods of a rapid, cost-effective screening procedure for glaucoma. A cross-sectional study of workers in the University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, using a structured questionnaire for data collection. The variables available for data analysis include workers demographic characteristics, visual acuity, pupil status, intraocular pressure, cup-disc ratio, central visual fields, family history of glaucoma, chronic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes. The data was analysed with EPI-INFO version 6.02 for simple analysis, while the SPSS package was used for multivariate analysis. A total of two thousand, one hundred and nine (2,109) UCH workers participated in the screening exercise for glaucoma. A high majority of the workers 1794 (85.1%) were negative to the diagnosis of glaucoma, while the remaining 315 (14.9%) were suspected to have glaucoma out of which 57 (2.7%) were confirmed as definite glaucoma cases. The prevalence of glaucoma among UCH workers was 27 per 1000, 95%, confidence interval = 20 per 1000, 35 per 1000. Factors associated with glaucoma were relative afferent pupillary defect, cup-disc ratio greater than 0.7, intraocular pressure, family history of glaucoma and the presence of chronic diseases such as diabetes. The left eye appears to have a higher probability of ocular problems compared with the right eye. The prevalence of glaucoma among hospital workers was 2.7% The cup-disc ratio appears to be a better diagnostic tool for glaucoma since it gives the best positive predictive value (with a cut-off point of 0.7) than all other variables.
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PMID:The Ibadan glaucoma study. 1525 20

Open-angle glaucoma (OAG) is an optic neuropathy characterized by progressive retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death and optic disk excavation. Evidence is accumulating that RGC apoptosis is the fundamental pathology of OAG. Among several risk factors for development and progression of OAG, inclusion of comorbid diabetes has been controversial. Some large population-based prevalence and incidence studies found a positive association between diabetes and OAG, whereas others did not. This inconsistency is derived from selection-, recall-, or survival-bias or misclassification due to low incidence of the two diseases. On the other hand, recent basic studies have shown that diabetes not only affects vascular tissues but also compromises neuronal and glial functions and metabolism in the retina, which ultimately gives rise to apoptotic death of retinal neurons including RGCs. The impaired metabolism of neurons and glia by diabetes may render RGCs susceptible to additional stresses related to OAG such as elevated intraocular pressure. In fact, our latest data demonstrate that retinas taken from rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes, which underwent cauterization of three episcleral veins to become a chronic glaucoma model, had significantly more apoptotic cells than those from rats with diabetes alone or with chronic glaucoma alone. In this regard, diabetes is a 'risk factor' for glaucomatous optic neuropathy. Additionally, prospective studies are needed to determine if OAG patients with diabetes have a more aggressive course than those without diabetes.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus as a risk factor for glaucomatous optic neuropathy. 1562 20

Prolonged exposure to stress and the resulting over-stimulation of the HPA system are often detrimental to the homeostasis of an organism. In fact, chronic stress is believed to affect the pathology of several disease states including coronary heart disease and hypertension, diabetes and obesity. In humans, mutations in the GLC1A gene have been associated with primary open angle glaucoma. Previous studies on this gene have suggested that its expression is also affected by the same factors that mediate the stress response. With the ultimate goal of using the nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans, as an invertebrate model for glaucoma, we have measured the stress responsiveness of the cof-2 gene, one of two C. elegans proteins with significant homology to the myocilin olfactomedin domain. We show that both cof-2 mRNA and protein expression are developmentally regulated and that both are affected by heat shock stress.
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PMID:Glaucoma studies in the eyeless worm: stress responsiveness and temporal expression of the Caenorhabditis elegans myocilin-like gene, cof-2. 1564 Nov 63

Diabetes mellitus develops spontaneously in middle-aged, obese rhesus monkeys, thus making them a good model for examining the effects of co-morbid factors on the development of end-organ damage. Changes in structure and function in the eyes of one monkey who spontaneously developed type 2 diabetes are reported here. This animal had concomitant hypertension, high levels of triglycerides and serum cholesterol, and a low fraction of high-density lipoprotein. The eyes showed intraretinal hemorrhages and large areas of retinal capillary nonperfusion. Indo-cyanin green (ICG) angiography revealed a large area of non- or poorly perfused choriocapillaris in one eye, and immunohistochemistry showed loss of viable choriocapillaries in this region. Both basal laminar deposits and hard drusen were present on areas of Bruch's membrane adjacent to nonviable choriocapillaris. Blood flow via the nasal posterior ciliary arteries to this section of choroid was not detectable by color duplex Doppler ultrasound, indicating contribution of extraocular vascular disease to ischemia in this eye. There was a severe decline in number of photoreceptor inner and outer segments, and corresponding reductions in the multifocal electroretinogram (ERG), in the areas of choriocapillaris loss. The ganzfeld ERG indicated loss in both inner and outer retinal function. Much of the ganglion cell layer was absent throughout the retina, possibly reflecting the effect of diabetes as well as chronic open angle glaucoma; the latter diagnosis supported by elevated intraocular pressures and excavated optic disks. In summary, high resolution, enzyme histochemical and histopathological analyses of a diabetic hypertensive monkey retina and choroid after serial functional in vivo analyses have demonstrated the relationship between vascular dysfunction and visual function loss. Choroidal vascular dysfunction in both large and small vessels was associated with age-related macular degeneration-like changes in Bruch's membrane and photoreceptor degeneration.
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PMID:Ocular structure and function in an aged monkey with spontaneous diabetes mellitus. 1565 24


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