Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lipoprotein [a] (Lp[a]) is known to show high values in patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD). In the present study attempts were made to determine Lp[a] levels and to investigate the association of Lp[a] and other atherosclerotic risk factors in patients with chronic renal failure treated by hemodialysis. Lp[a] concentrations were measured in 30 hemodialysis patients in the age range 34 to 77 years. Mean (+/- SD) levels of serum Lp[a] were not elevated in the hemodialysis patients compared to controls (19.3 +/- 18.0 mg/dl vs. 18.3 +/- 10.4 mg/dl, respectively). We found no statistically significant correlation of Lp[a] with either cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL-C or apoproteins. However, compared with controls, more than fivefold as many of those hemodialysis patients had high risk (greater than 30 mg/dl) concentrations of Lp[a]. Lp[a] tended to increase in hemodialysis patients with diabetes mellitus and/or ischemic heart disease. In patients with high levels of Lp[a] (greater than 30 mg/dl), Lp[a] tended to correlate positively with cholesterol, LDL-, HDL-C, apo B or apo B/AI. Incidence of IHD was also elevated in these patients. Along with other known risk factors such as hyperlipidemia and hypertension, an increased concentration of Lp[a] may play an important role in accelerating development of atherosclerosis in this condition.
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PMID:[A study of clinical significance of Lp[a] lipoprotein in patients with chronic renal failure treated by hemodialysis]. 214 55

Diabetics have an increased risk of developing renal insufficiency, as well as congestive heart failure independent of coronary atherosclerotic or hypertensive heart disease. Aluminum toxicity is being recognized with increased frequency in patients with reduced renal function and aluminum accumulates to a greater degree in tissues of patients with diabetes. Studies in patients with end stage renal disease have implicated aluminum overload as a potential cause of reduced cardiac function. Since both diabetes and aluminum decrease the activity of (Ca + Mg)-ATPase, a key enzyme involved in myocardial calcium transport, the interaction of experimental diabetes mellitus and aluminum toxicity on myocardial sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport was investigated in rats. Aluminum alone had no effect on (Ca + Mg)-ATPase activity, while activities in both the diabetic ([DM]) and diabetic plus aluminum loaded ([DM + Al]) groups were significantly lower than controls ([C]). Oxalate-dependent calcium uptake in the [DM] rats was slightly, but not significantly lower than controls, however, uptake was markedly reduced in rats which were both diabetic and aluminum loaded. The calcium regulatory protein calmodulin was measured by a functional assay in the soluble fraction of myocardial tissue prepared from each of the four groups. Compared to [C], calmodulin activity was significantly reduced in both the [DM] and [DM + Al] groups but not affected by aluminum alone. These data indicate that diabetes mellitus is associated with decreased myocardial calmodulin activity that may contribute to reduced sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca + Mg)-ATPase and calcium transport activities and that aluminium toxicity potentiates the adverse effects of diabetes on decreasing sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium uptake.
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PMID:Effects of diabetes mellitus and aluminum toxicity on myocardial calcium transport. 214 51

Diabetic nephropathy is now the most common cause of ESRD in the US, and no other complication of diabetes is associated with more deaths. In addition to its impact on morbidity and mortality, it extracts a tremendous cost from the health-care economy. Prevention and better treatment of diabetic renal disease should be a high priority for both the health-care system and society at large. Ultimately, diabetic nephropathy should be preventable, but that goal can be accomplished only by the coordinated efforts between investigators, who work to uncover pathophysiologic processes and design new treatments, and clinicians, who take those findings to the patient's bedside.
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PMID:The natural history of diabetic nephropathy. 219 Feb 76

Several factors are involved in the persistence of endocrine alterations after renal transplantation, among which the following are to be mentioned: (1) duration of chronic uraemia before renal transplantation; (2) residual function of the patients' native kidneys; (3) quality of function of the renal graft; (4) modulation of secretion, transport, and degradation of hormones, and/or (5) altered target organ responsiveness to hormones induced by immunosuppressive drugs (glucocorticoids, azathioprine, cyclosporin A) or altered internal environment. In kidney transplant patients the following endocrine abnormalities are to be mentioned: dissociation of the physiological relationship between aldosterone synthesis and function of the renin-angiotensin system, abnormal volumetric regulation of arginine vasopressin secretion, suppressed responsiveness of cortisol secretion to stimulatory manoeuvres, persistent secondary hyperparathyroidism, relative deficiency of insulin (induced by glucocorticoid therapy), with consequent carbohydrate intolerance or even diabetes mellitus, suppressed response of gastrin and pancreatic hormone secretion to a test meal, and reduced responsiveness of atrial natriuretic peptide secretion to central hypervolaemia. Episodes of acute graft rejection are characterized by endocrine alterations similar to those seen in patients with acute or chronic renal failure.
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PMID:Endocrine alterations in kidney transplant patients. 219 17

The relative importance and behaviour of plasma and platelet plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) in disease has not hitherto been examined. In this study the concentration of PAI-1 in the plasma and platelets of patients with a variety of disorders was examined using a specific ELISA and a functional assay. Mean plasma PAI-1 was elevated in groups of patients with diabetes mellitus, hypertension, alcoholic cirrhosis, angina and myocardial infarction. Plasma PAI-1 was raised in the post-operative phase and the PAI-1 released after surgery was not derived from platelets. In all groups PAI-1 in the platelet pool reflected the platelet count, except in type II diabetes mellitus and chronic renal failure, where a reduced quantity of PAI-1 antigen per platelet was found. In severe chronic renal failure, abnormal platelets and diminished platelet PAI-1 may contribute to the haemorrhagic tendency sometimes seen in this disorder. Plasma PAI-1 represents a larger proportion of total circulating PAI-1 in disease than it does in healthy individuals; PAI-1 per platelet is abnormal only in a minority of disorders. Plasma and platelet pools of PAI-1 vary independently in disease and both merit consideration in evaluating the importance, if any, of PAI-1 in thrombosis or haemorrhage.
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PMID:The platelet and plasma pools of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) vary independently in disease. 220 5

Strategies abound for the setting of analytical goals in clinical chemistry. Many, especially those more recently proposed for particular clinical situations, are concerned with tests used in diagnosis. We suggest a general theory for the setting of goals in situations that specifically involve the monitoring of individuals. Goals are calculated from the formula CVA less than [(delta c 2/2Z2)-CVB2]1/2, where CVA is the analytical imprecision (as coefficient of variation, CV); delta c is the percentage change in serial results that is considered clinically significant; Z is the Z-statistic, which depends only on the probability selected for statistical significance; and CVB is the average inherent within-subject biological variation (as CV). Examples given show applications in hematology and in monitoring diabetes mellitus, chronic renal failure, and hepatitis. The derived goals are for total random analytical error (imprecision and intermittent systematic variation), and provide objective criteria that should be achieved in practice. The effect of analytical variability on both variability in test results and the probability that a stated change can be considered significant should be calculated whether or not the goals are attained.
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PMID:Setting analytical goals for random analytical error in specific clinical monitoring situations. 201 90

This study examined the acid base disturbances in 18 adults with acute renal failure (ARF) from one of new aspects, which is lactate metabolism and pathophysiology. 10 patients (55%) of them were accompanied by lactic acidosis and 9 patients (90%) of those with lactic acidosis also had severe hepatic failure. Mortality of patients with lactic acidosis was 80%, and much higher than that of ARF (66.7%). Lactate, pyruvate, lactate-to-pyruvate ratio (L/P) were 76.7 +/- 15.66 mg/dl, 3.30 +/- 0.74 mg/dl and 19.9 +/- 1.41, respectively. All of them significantly raised, compared to values of healthy adults, patients with liver cirrhosis, chronic renal failure and diabetes mellitus. Arterial pH and HCO3- levels were 7.20 +/- 0.04 and 10.6 +/- 1.20 mEq/l. Anion gap (AG) was 30.0 +/- 3.66 mEq/l. Significant correlations of lactate with pH, HCO3-, AG and L/P were demonstrated, while correlations of lactate with BUN, CR and prothrombin time were not significantly observed. Lactic acidosis results from two mechanisms. One is lactate overproduction (e.g tissue hypoxia) and the other is lactate underutilization (e.g severe liver and/or renal failure). Whenever lactic acidosis occurred, both mechanisms were present simultaneously and continuously. Especially, the latter mechanism had a very important role on it, and seemed to decide the prognosis of the patients with lactic acidosis. Therapy of lactic acidosis was very difficult. First of all, we tried to improve the circulatory failure and severe acidemia (pH less than 7.20) not to fall into vicious cycle. Then, CAVH, if combined with alkali infusion, seemed to be the most useful technique in managing lactic acidosis with ARF.
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PMID:[Acute renal failure with lactic acidosis]. 221 21

Renal failure among elderly individuals with diabetes is a substantial clinical and public health problem. These individuals account for the majority of renal failure among people with diabetes mellitus in the United States. Although limited population-based data directly provide evidence regarding the incidence of and risk factors for ESRD, extant data suggest that blacks and Pima Indians have a markedly increased risk of ESRD compared with whites in the United States. Proteinuria and microalbuminuria appear to be extremely common in elderly individuals with NIDDM and are strongly associated with overall survival, cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and the development of ESRD. Although randomized clinical trials are needed to test intervention strategies to reduce morbidity and mortality associated with renal disease among individuals with NIDDM, extant data suggest that management efforts directed at hypertension control and, possibly, moderate restriction of protein intake may be important therapeutic modalities for prevention of renal disease and its associated sequelae among elderly individuals with diabetes.
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PMID:Renal complications in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 222 48

A prospective study of community-acquired pneumonia in adults at Srinagarind Hospital, Khon kaen University was conducted from September 1987 to August 1988. Laboratory specimens were tested for bacterial and mycoplasmal culture, CIE for pneumococcal antigen and serological data for mycoplasma and P. pseudomallei. The results supported by clinical data were evaluated. We could identify the pathogens from 62 of 113 cases (55%). P. pseudomallei was the most frequent etiologic agent (32%) and S. pneumoniae was the second (27%). Overall mortality was 21 per cent and it was high in cases with bacteremia and pneumonia due to P. pseudomallei. Sixty-six per cent of the patients had associated diseases. Diabetes mellitus, chronic renal failure and renal calculi were commonly found in patients with pneumonia due to P. pseudomallei. The results of this study showed the relatively high prevalence of P. pseudomallei pneumonia in our region which was different from other reports.
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PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia in adults at Srinagarind Hospital. 223 Jun 30

Soft tissue infections in compromised patients are frequently caused by Gram-negative organisms and particularly by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These pathogens are effectively eradicated by pefloxacin as well as by ceftazidime. The effectiveness and safety of these two agents were compared in a prospective randomized study in 67 patients with soft tissue infections. Underlying conditions included malignant diseases, diabetes mellitus and chronic renal failure. The infections included: post operative infection, septic foot, soft tissue abscess and cellulitis. Thirty-three patients were treated with intravenous ceftazidime for a mean duration of ten days. More than half the 34 patients given pefloxacin were treated only orally for a mean period of 13 days. The clinical and bacteriological outcomes were similar in both groups. There was clinical cure or improvement in 26 pefloxacin cases and in 23 ceftazidime cases, failure in six pefloxacin cases and in seven ceftazidime and relapse in two pefloxacin and in three ceftazidime patients. The bacteriological responses were eradication in 23 pefloxacin cases and in 22 ceftazidime cases, persistence in five pefloxacin cases and in six ceftazidime cases, relapse in one pefloxacin case and in none of the ceftazidime group, reinfection in four pefloxacin cases and in three ceftazidime cases and there was one unassessed patient in the pefloxacin group and two in the ceftazidime group. Nausea and vomiting occurred in three patients and elevation of liver enzymes in another patient; all side effects were observed only in the pefloxacin treated patients. These results suggest that oral pefloxacin could offer an alternative to intravenous ceftazidime in half the compromised patients with tissue infections. However, adverse reactions due to pefloxacin administration should be watched for during such therapy.
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PMID:Pefloxacin versus ceftazidime in therapy of soft tissue infections in compromised patients. 225 49


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