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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The investigation covers the necropsic material of the Pathological Anatomy Chair, Medical Academy-Sofia, with a total of 3519 necropsies for a period of 5 years (1968--1970). In that material, 285 cases with uremia were established, due to chronic renal diseases, which might be referred to 13 nozological entities. The highest number of cases are with chronic pyelonephritis (64,96 per cent). The chronic glomerulonephritis, though it ranks second, is considerably rarely met (9,47 per cent). Endemic
nephropathy
, according to the incidence, follows--4,21 per cent,
nephropathy
in
diabetes mellitus
--3,86 per cent, subacute glomerulonephritis--3,16 per cent, amyloidosis--2,81 per cent, hypertonic disease--2,81 per cent, malignant tumors of the kidneys--2,81 per cent cystic kidneys--2,10 per cent, lupus erythematosus--1,05 per cent, sclerodermia--0,70 per cent, myeloma disease--0,70 per cent and polyarteriitis nodosa--0,35 per cent. As to the chronic
renal disease
, most frequently met in the material discussed, the chronic pyelonephritis, the authors discuss the factors that played certain role in its development as well.
...
PMID:[Mortality due to uremia resulting from chronic kidney diseases]. 24 19
Forty patients (including 37 juvenile diabetic patients) with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and end-stage renal failure received 42 renal allografts during the interval from June 1970 to December 1975. Of the 30 patients who are alive (between six and 72 months after transplantation; average, 29 months), 19 have been fully rehabilitated. Gangrene of peripheral extremities occurred in 30% of the survivors. The use of "pretreated" cadaveric kidneys in the diabetic patient may become an attractive alternative to grafts from living related donors. Renal transplantation with living related and pretreated cadaveric donor kidneys is the treatment of choice and is superior to dialysis in the insulin-dependent diabetic patient with end-stage
renal disease
.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 32 Mar 53
A case can be made that life expectancy has been prolonged in the diabetic, and some disabling symptoms have been ameliorated by the more recent procedures employed in the management of coronary artery disease and
nephropathy
. At the same time, the procedures described admittedly present problems and may not be generally available to the vast majority of diabetics. The definitive answer lies in attempting to control
diabetes
to prevent the development of these and other complications. A number of laboratories are attempting to develop an artificial pancreas or islet transplantation to substitute for the insulin secretory capacity that has been lost or impaired. This is an area of research that demands the highest priority. One cannot be confident that present therapeutic programs can be altered to provide the type of diabetic control necessary for the prevention of complications.
...
PMID:Potentially lethal complications of diabetes mellitus. 35 5
Pancreatic islet cell, thyroid, and gastric antibodies were studied in 116 young insulin-dependent diabetics and 257 relatives. Seventy-four per cent of the diabetics studied within three months of diagnosis had islet-cell antibodies but only 20% of those studied three years or more after diagnosis. Persistence of these antibodies was associated with a high prevalence of thyrogastric autoimmunity, which suggests that some cases have an aetiology similar to that of "polyendocrine" autoimmune disease. Retinopathy or
nephropathy
, or both, was present in 10 diabetics, who were all members of "autoimmune" families, in which one or more members had organ-specific antibodies. Nine of the 10 healthy relatives with islet-cell antibodies and all families with more than one diabetic were also in this autoimmune group. These data suggest that an autoimmune factor may contribute to juvenile
diabetes
and that such autoimmune
diabetes
has a tendency to run in families and may be more likely to cause complications.
...
PMID:Autoimmunity in juvenile diabetics and their families. 35 41
In general, individuals who have a chronic illness must make major emotional and physical adjustments. Do patients forced to cope with two chronic conditions make these adjustments with greater difficulty or with increased ease? This study compared diabetic and nondiabetic patients having end-stage
renal disease
and examined how individuals already ill with
diabetes
adapt to the additional stress of hemodialysis treatment.
...
PMID:Diabetic patients on hemodialysis. 35 66
Twenty-one insulin-dependent diabetics with azotemic
nephropathy
were evaluated for renal transplantation by selective coronary angiography and cine left ventriculography. All had hypertension, retinopathy, neuropathy, and required salt restriction plus diuretics for volume overload. There was no clinical or electrocardiographic evidence of ischemic coronary artery disease in twenty. Ten patients (five males, five females, mean age 29.3 years; mean duration of
diabetes
21.9 years; mean serum cholesterol 239 mg%) had significant coronary artery disease, seven demonstrating focal abnormalities in left ventricular wall motion. Two patients (one male, one female; mean age 36.5 years; mean duration of
diabetes
28.5 years; mean serum cholesterol 250 mg%) had no significant coronary artery disease, but demonstrated diffusely abnormal left ventricular wall motion with diminished ejection fraction. Thirty-eight percent had significant coronary artery disease unpredictable by electrocardiographic or clinical data. The finding of no significant coronary artery disease in 52% of a group with severe renal-hypertensive complications of
diabetes
is surprising. Two patients may have a demonstrated cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Asymptomatic coronary artery disease: angiographic assessment of diabetics evaluated for renal transplantation. 36 Dec 77
Renal disease
, particularly glomerulosclerosis, is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with juvenile-onset
diabetes mellitus
. Signaled by the onset of proteinuria after 15 or more years of insulin therapy, progressive renal insufficiency due to glomerulosclerosis terminates in uremia within five years. Although some patients have benefited from chronic dialysis programs, the outcome in uremic diabetics has been considerably better if successful renal transplantation can be accomplished. Extrarenal complications of
diabetes mellitus
and recurrence of diabetic lesions in transplanted kidneys have hampered the recovery and rehabilitation of transplant recipients. Other renal diseases encountered in juvenile diabetics are reviewed.
...
PMID:Grand rounds: Nashville VA Hospital--Vanderbilt University. Saturday conference: renal disease in the juvenile diabetic. 37 Oct 5
The controversy over the whether strict blood glucose control prevents or attenuates the complications of
diabetes
is still unresolved, but the available data support the value of good blood glucose control. The resolution of the controversy is not feasible at present because of the complexity and financial cost of a definitive prospective study and because we may not presently possess pharmacological agents which can accomplish the goal of long term strict control of the blood glucose. Finally, whereas we regard retinopathy,
nephropathy
and neuropathy as valid pathological endpoints, we are not secure in assuming that blood glucose represents the critical measurement for longitudinal assessment of metabolic control. Studies evaluating control based on blood and urine glucose assessments are complicated by the failure of the data to reflect changes in minute to minute regulation. Thus, the relative insensitivity of some of these parameters of control could account for failures to demonstrate a correlation between adequacy of therapy and diabetic complications.
...
PMID:Control of the blood glucose in diabetes mellitus is it valuable? Is it feasible. 38 Sep 57
A standard intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) and the insulin response to the glucose loads were studied in 14 cases of
diabetes mellitus
in dogs. In addition, urinary glucose excretion, and clearances of urea, creatinine and phosphate were also determined in these dogs. All diabetic dogs were characterized by glucose intolerance as expressed by an abnormal half-time (T 1/2) or fractional clearance rate (k-value) and were further classified as Types I, II or III
diabetes
on the basis of their insulin responses. Renal functional impairment was observed in about 60 percent of the cases and was generally mild. There appeared to be no apparent relationship between advanced chronic
renal disease
and severity of
diabetes
in dogs.
...
PMID:Renal clearance, insulin secretion and glucose tolerance in spontaneous diabetes mellitus of dogs. 39 59
The fate of the diabetic today is essentially determined by the late complications of
diabetes
. Of the forms of clinical expression of diabetic microangiopathy,
nephropathy
and retinopathy are the most significant. Findings are presented which suggest that diabetic microangiopathy is not of genetic or immunologic origin, but is to be considered a consequence of insulin deficiency. More recently, some studies have been carried out which which strongly support the concept that metabolic control of the diabetic prevents or at least delays the development of late complications of
diabetes
. For this reason an optimal for control of
diabetes
, if at all possible with aglycosuria, should be aimed at.
...
PMID:[The effect of metabolic control on the development of late complications of diabetes (author's transl)]. 40 63
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