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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many clinical studies have shown an increased insulin response to oral glucose in patients with
ischemia
of the heart, lower limbs, or brain. Hyperinsulinemia also occurs in patients with angiographically proved atherosclerosis without
ischemia
and thus appears to be related to arterial disease and not to be a nonspecific response to tissue injury. Fasting insulin levels and insulin responses to intravenous stimuli, including glucose, tolbutamide, and arginine, are normal, suggesting a gastrointestinal factor may be involved in the increased insulin response to oral glucose. In patients with atherosclerosis, insulin sensitivity appears to be normal or enhanced with respect to both glucose and lipid metabolism. Five population studies have shown that insulin responses to glucose are higher in populations at greater risk of cardiovascular disease. Many of the hyperinsulinemic populations also had upper-body obesity, hypertriglyceridemia, lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL) levels, and hypertension. These prospective studies support an independent association between hyperinsulinemia and ischemic heart disease, although their results differ in detail. Hyperinsulinemia is associated with raised triglyceride and decreased HDL cholesterol levels. Total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is less closely related to hyperinsulinemia. Upper-body adiposity is associated (in separate studies) with coronary heart disease,
diabetes
, hyperinsulinemia, and hypertriglyceridemia. Insulin and blood pressure are closely related in both normotensive and hypertensive people. Although obesity and
diabetes
are often found in hypertensive people, hyperinsulinemia also occurs in nonobese nondiabetic hypertensive people. Thus, hyperinsulinemia is closely associated with a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors, i.e., hypertriglyceridemia, low HDL levels, hypertension, hyperglycemia, and upper-body obesity. There is a possibility that insulin has a role in the sex differences in ischemic heart disease incidence and their absence in
diabetes
, but additional work is required for its clarification. Long-term treatment with insulin results in lipid-containing lesions and thickening of the arterial wall in experimental animals. Insulin also inhibits regression of diet-induced experimental atherosclerosis, and insulin deficiency inhibits the development of arterial lesions. Insulin stimulates lipid synthesis in arterial tissue; the effect of insulin is influenced by hemodynamic factors and may be localized to certain parts of the artery. In physiological concentrations, insulin stimulates proliferation and migration of cultured arterial smooth muscle cells but has no effort on endothelial cells cultured from large vessels. Insulin also stimulates cholesterol synthesis and LDL binding in both arterial smooth muscle cells and monocyte macrophages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Diabetes
Care 1990 Jun
PMID:Insulin and atheroma. 20-yr perspective. 199 42
Our experience with 91 operated cases in 84 patients (47 men, 37 women) relates essentially to arterial diseases resulting from overloading and diabetic arteriopathy. Diagnosis of critical
ischemia
is easy in clinical conditions, but it is advisable to rely on universally recognized hemodynamic standards to define this condition. Ankle pressure should be less than 400 mmHg and the Doppler trace flat or barely perceptible. Patients in our series had a mean ankle pressure of 32.4 mmHg. Local examination can determine the extent of gangrene, whereas general examination detects numerous, often associated defects
diabetes
, coronary artery disease, rhythm disorders, arterial hypertension, etc. As far as possible, these defects are to be corrected before surgery. X-ray examination (M. Kasbarian) is frequently done in conjunction with conventional aorto-arteriography and digital angiography. The later technique allows arteries to be visualized which are not seen with the conventional technique. The x-ray examination will indicate whether revascularization is feasible, although it cannot show whether it will be efficient. In our series, opacification of the plantar arches was predictive neither of success nor failure. But do tests exist which can predict the success of a revascularization attempt? It would be necessary to be able to estimate ankle pressure after the operation, and several methods have tried to do this. TcPO2 would seem to be a good examination. The possibilities of nuclear magnetic resonance are being studied, and the results thus far are promising. Preoperative explorations are carried out in a different situation. Arteriography performed in the operating room is a simple act which can reveal a usable downstream bed not indicated in preoperative X-rays, although it provides no hemodynamic data. Measurement of peripheral resistances would appear to be a very good predictive examination. Flow measurements by infusion or electronic flowmeter also seem to be predictive for bypass results. Unfortunately, these measurements are at present not widely performed and the critical threshold is assessed differently. Given the difficulty of correctly estimating the value of these numerous methods, many surgeons, ourselves included, have chosen to revascularize patients whenever the upstream bed as evaluated by X-ray indicates the presence of at least one viable artery.
...
PMID:[Procedures in critical ischemia of the legs in non-emergency situations]. 219 80
The distribution of cerebrovascular lesions is affected by race. Blacks and Japanese have more intracranial occlusive cerebrovascular disease, while whites have more extracranial disease. Despite a high incidence of stroke in China, there are few formal studies of the distribution of vascular occlusive disease in Chinese populations. We compared clinical and angiographic features of 24 white and 24 Chinese patients with symptomatic occlusive cerebrovascular disease. In symptomatic vascular territories, whites had more severe (greater than or equal to 50% stenosis) extracranial lesions, while Chinese had more severe intracranial lesions. When we counted mild and severe lesions in a symptomatic territory, whites had more extracranial lesions while Chinese had more intracranial lesions. When we combined symptomatic and asymptomatic territories, whites had more extracranial lesions, while Chinese had more intracranial lesions. White patients reported more transient ischemic attacks. The distribution of lesions, however, was not explained by differences in incidence of transient
ischemia
, hypertension,
diabetes
, hypercholesterolemia, or ischemic heart disease between the groups. The preponderance of intracranial vascular lesions in Chinese patients is similar to that seen in blacks and Japanese. Racial differences in the occurrence of extracranial and intracranial lesions raise the possibility of a different underlying pathophysiology for the 2 locations.
...
PMID:Chinese-white differences in the distribution of occlusive cerebrovascular disease. 221 45
The pathogenesis of branch retinal vein occlusion has not been completely clarified. The role of abnormal blood viscosity in the appearance and evolution of the disease has recently been advocated. We studied 54 patients with long-standing branch retinal vein occlusion from a hemorrheologic point of view. Depending on the extension of retinal
ischemia
, two subgroups were identified. Hematocrit, blood and plasma viscosity, whole blood filterability, cell deformability, and fibrinogen levels were investigated. Thirty-five subjects of similar age, sex, and risk factors of
diabetes
and hypertension served as controls. Our results showed that blood viscosity is higher in patients with occlusion and particularly in those with severe retinal
ischemia
. Statistical analysis showed a direct correlation between blood viscosity and hematocrit.
...
PMID:Branch retinal vein occlusion: the pathogenetic role of blood viscosity. 222 10
Eight patients with severe pedal
ischemia
in the presence of palpable foot pulses are described. All had atherosclerosis, and seven patients also had
diabetes
. There were two anatomic patterns of disease, including supramalleolar obstruction with reconstitution of pulsatile flow in three patients and segmental occlusion of the pedal vessels in five. All patients underwent arterial reconstructive surgery. Patency was sustained in six patients, with limb salvage in five and below-knee amputation in one patient for persistent necrosis and infection of an open amputation. Of the two eventual bypass failures, a transmetatarsal amputation continued to heal in one patient, and the other required amputation below the knee. Palpable pedal pulses and satisfactory ankle/brachial indexes did not rule out the presence of surgically correctable distal arterial occlusive disease. Therefore arteriography is indicated in any patient with persistent forefoot
ischemia
that fails to respond to conservative measures. The safety and patency of the distal reconstructive procedures performed in this series suggest that salvage of weight-bearing tissue and rapid healing, as well as limb salvage, are legitimate indications for revascularization.
...
PMID:Indications for distal arterial reconstruction in the presence of palpable pedal pulses. 151 Jul 52
Superoxide dismutases (SOD) and their changes in
diabetes
, aging,
ischemia
and cancer were studied, Cu, Zn-SOD undergoes glycation reaction in vitro and in vivo and loses its activity by formation of Amadori compounds. Two lysine residues of Cu, Zn-SOD, Lys-122 and Lys-128 are primary glycated sites which are located on the surface of the molecule. The sites are also located on the active site liganding loop which plays a major role in the activity. The glycated Cu, Zn-SOD increased in the red cells of diabetic patients, especially those with diabetic complications. Mn-SOD appears in the serum of patients with acute myocardial infarction in a biphasic manner. The enzyme appears in sera 16 hr and 108 hr after the attack as determined by ELISA. The Mn-SOD levels are also increased in the serum of patients with epithelial ovarian cancer and it is a good marker for detecting and monitoring this cancer. Mn-SOD may play an important role in the ischemic and cancer tissues.
...
PMID:[Superoxide dismutases: significances in aging, diabetes, ischemia and cancer]. 223 47
We investigated the incidence of silent myocardial ischemia and infarction as assessed by dipyridamole thallium scintigraphy in 30 diabetic patients with peripheral vascular disease and without clinical suspicion of coronary artery disease. Seventeen patients (57%) had thallium abnormalities, with reversible thallium defects compatible with
ischemia
in 14 patients (47%) and evidence of prior, clinically silent myocardial infarction in 11 patients (37%). Thallium abnormalities were most frequent in patients with concomitant hypertension and cigarette smoking (p = 0.001). These results suggest that unsuspected coronary artery disease is common in this particular group of patients with
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Silent myocardial ischemia and infarction in diabetics with peripheral vascular disease: assessment by dipyridamole thallium-201 scintigraphy. 223 59
Acute renal failure after contrast media injection has been recognized for at least 35 years but the exact mechanism responsible for the renal injury remains an enigma. The clinical characteristics of contrast-induced nephropathy (CAN) are well-known although more recently the nonoliguric presentation has occurred at an increased frequency--in 70 to 90% of cases. For nonoliguric presentation of CAN, one can expect an asymptomatic increase in serum creatinine, the mean peak occurring at 4.2 days. If oliguric, the fractional excretion of sodium will be less than 1% and resistant to either fluid challenge or loop diuretics. Preexisting renal insufficiency, with or without
diabetes mellitus
, increases the risk of CAN 6- to 10-fold but recovery is expected, with less than 10% of all patients requiring dialytic support. Despite the growing body of published reports, the lack of a suitable animal model to evaluate various proposed mechanisms of renal injury has compromised our ability to devise a technique for preventing CAN. A popular scheme has been proposed to describe the possible sequence by which
ischemia
or nephrotoxins, or both, induce acute renal failure. In particular, a vascular mechanism (i.e.,
ischemia
), is an appealing explanation for CAN since acute changes in renal hemodynamics after contrast media injection have been confirmed by several animal experiments. Unlike other vascular beds in which contrast media induce acute vasoconstriction followed by vasodilatation, the initial effect on the renal circulation is acute vasodilatation, followed by progressive vasoconstriction, increasing renal vascular resistance and a concomitant decrease in both renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Experimental contrast-associated nephropathy and its clinical implications. 223 94
Sudden fissuring of an atherosclerotic plaque has been suggested as the primary trigger of transient spontaneous
ischemia
in both the coronary and cerebral circulation. Measurements of urinary 11-dehydro-TXB2 and 2,3-dinor-TXB2, as well as results of Aspirin trials, have suggested that episodic platelet activation at the site of this acute vascular lesion is mediated, at least partly, by enhanced thromboxane (TX) A2 biosynthesis. Thus, episodic increases in metabolite excretion have been detected in unstable angina. Aspirin (75-325 mg/day) prevents about one third of all fatal and nonfatal thrombotic events in this setting. That a similar "dynamic" thrombotic process occurs during the early phase of acute myocardial infarction is suggested by thromboxane metabolite measurements and by the results of the ISIS-2 trial showing a similar impact of short-term Aspirin therapy to that seen in unstable angina. Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty is associated with transiently enhanced TXA2 biosynthesis and Aspirin-suppressable periprocedural thrombotic complications. On the other hand, both non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and type IIa hypercholesterolemia are associated with a relatively reproducible and persisting abnormality of TXA2-dependent platelet function. This association is likely to reflect a systemic rather than localized stimulus to platelet activation and a continuous rather than episodic alteration. Low-dose (50 mg/day) Aspirin can largely suppress thromboxane metabolite excretion in both diseases. Thus, low-dose Aspirin and/or selective prostaglandin H2/TXA2-receptor antagonists may be important tools to test the hypothesis that TXA2-dependent platelet activation represents an important transducer of the enhanced thrombotic risk associated with these metabolic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Thromboxane biosynthesis in cardiovascular diseases. 226 Jan 37
This paper reports the determination of blood flow of the lower leg in 50 cases of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) using an XLJ-2 Bipolar Rheoencephalometry Impedance Rheogram. In patients with leg pain (but without obvious vascular pathological changes, 85 legs) the blood flow was decreased. In male patients the blood flow of the left leg (9 legs) was 3.28 +/- 0.47 ml/100ml.tissue.min (mean +/- S), while that in the right leg (11 legs) was 3.88 +/- 0.80; in females, the blood flow of the left leg (32 legs) was 2.72 +/- 0.8; while that in the right leg (33 legs) was 2.94 +/- 0.66. These figures were significantly (P less than 0.01-0.001) lower than those obtained from normals. In diabetic feet (15 painful legs) the decrease of blood flow of the lower leg was more apparent: it averaged 1.87 +/- 0.79 for the left leg (7 legs) and 2.66 +/- 0.87 for the right leg (5 legs) in male patients. The values were significantly different when compared with those of normals (P less than 0.001) or with those of the diabetic patients with leg pain (P less than 0.05). These results demonstrated that determination of the blood flow of the lower leg of diabetic patients might aid in early discovery of the abnormal changes of blood supply to the lower legs in
diabetes mellitus
and judge the degree of
ischemia
. Of the 50 cases of diabetics 32 were Qi-Yin deficiency with blood stasis while the remaining 18 cases were deficiency of both Yin and Yang with blood stasis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Determination of blood flow of the lower leg in patients with diabetes mellitus and the effects of treatment with the principle of vitalizing blood and solubilizing thrombus]. 226 28
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