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

Sera were collected from 49 pairs of identical twins, 27 of whom were discordant (only one twin affected) and 22 concordant (both diabetic) for insulin-dependent diabetes. All were tested for antibodies to mumps, cytomegalovirus, rubella, Coxsackie virus types B1-5, and Mycoplasma pneumoniae. The diabetic co-twins had no more antibodies to any of the viruses than the non-diabetic co-twins of the discordant pairs. Antibodies to Coxsackie B2, rubella virus, and M pneumoniae were found more often in the discordant than in the concordant twins. In 30 of the 71 diabetic twins symptoms began when they were aged 4-6 years or 10-15 years. More concordant than discordant twins were diagnosed during the months January to March. Hence there was no direct evidence of a virus aetiology of juvenile onset diabetes in these twins, and the difference in antibody titres between the concordant and discordant twins was in keeping with a genetic difference between them. The age and time of onset suggested that environmental factors may be important in causing diabetes in the twins.
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PMID:Viruses and the aetiology of diabetes: a study in identical twins. 17 83

The nonviability of fertilized eggs or the death of the embryo is a frequent event (34 to 60%). They are called recurrent or habitual in the case of more than 2 consecutive abortions. Maternal etiologic factors are discussed: Endocrine disorders (sexual hormones, diabetes, thyroid function), uterine congenital anomalies (septale uterus), uterine tumors (fibromyoma) and uterine synechia formation, cervical incompetence, infections (i.e. mycoplasma infections, chlamydia infection, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus) and autoimmune-disease with antinuclear antibodies. According to the etiology the diagnostic procedures in cases of recurrent abortions consist of hormone analysis, basal body temperature, oral glucose tolerance test, thyroid function and endometrial biopsy. Sonographic examination of the uterus, hysterosalpingography, search for local and systemic infections and cytologic examination for genetic disorders of both parents are obligatory. At the end of the diagnostic scheme HLA-analysis of the parents must be included.
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PMID:[Differential diagnostic considerations in the assessment of habitual abortion]. 208 Jun 25

A group of 55 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, aged from 8 to 40 years, was followed and compared to a group of controls, in view of detecting a possible relation between the presence of inframicrobial agents and diabetes pathogenesis. The investigations revealed, in patients, significantly higher positivity rate of antibodies against mumps (27% versus 16.3% in controls), parainfluenza type 1 (45.4% versus 29.1%) and Epstein-Barr (54.5% versus 10.9%) viruses, and Mycoplasma pneumoniae (43.6 versus 18.2%).
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PMID:[Inframicrobiological research on cases of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus]. 222 56

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

Physicians in the State of Wisconsin were contacted by mail and asked to report all cases of diabetes in patients under 20 yr diagnosed between 1 July 1982 and 30 June 1984 in order to study factors associated with seasonality in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Wisconsin's population is fairly homogeneous and is primarily middle socioeconomic class, small-town or rural, and of northern European Caucasian descent. The incidence of IDDM in winter was higher than in summer during the first year of the study, similarly to results of other studies. However, there was no significant winter peak in diagnosis during the second year. When monthly incidence rates from both years were combined, the increased evidence of IDDM in winter vs. summer was evident in males, but not in females. There appeared to be a spike in the number of new cases of IDDM in the first year of the study which was more evident in males. Such a spike is consistent with spikes in the incidence of IDDM occurring about the same time in Europe and in North America. The percentage of patients with antibody titres to Coxsackie virus and mycoplasma pneumoniae diagnosed during the first winter's peak were equal to those in nondiabetic controls. The distributions of HLA DR types of patients diagnosed in winter were no different from diabetics diagnosed in other seasons. The distribution of HLA DR types (5% DR2, 55% DR3, 82% DR4 and 38% DR3DR4) were similar to those of other groups of Caucasian subjects with IDDM. Also similarly to other studies of IDDM, 14% of the patients had thyroid microsomal antibody titers. The results of this study support the previously-advanced idea that winter might precipitate overt carbohydrate intolerance in individuals in whom insulin cell destruction is already well established (Diabetes, 36, 265-268, 1987). If this is true, studies of seasonality in IDDM might not be informative about the causation of IDDM.
Diabetes Res 1989 Dec
PMID:Epidemiology of insulin dependent diabetes before age 20 in Wisconsin, with particular reference to seasonality. 263 92

The biological basis for autoimmunity and immunoincompetence in the BB rat has yet to be localized. In spite of normal thymic histology, thymocyte subsets and blastogenesis, thymus gland products (thymosins) have yet to be studied. In the present report, thymus gland function was studied by measuring thymosin alpha 1 levels at one time point in the BB rat compared with control rates, and BB rat responses to exogenous thymosin (Thymosin fraction 5) were observed. At five months of age, BB rats had thymosin alpha 1 levels comparable to Lewis and Wistar furth rats. Thymosin fraction 5 increased the ratio of peripheral blood W3/25 positive to OX8 positive cells, but otherwise had no effect on the BB rats' T-cell immunodeficiency, or frequencies of tissue autoantibodies or insulin-dependent diabetes. Although B-lymphocyte counts were normal in BB rats, splenocyte responses to B-lymphocyte mitogens were depressed. However, thymosin fraction 5 improved the BB rat B-lymphocyte blastogenesis to near normal for Mycoplasma neurolyticum. Coupled with our previous work, our results suggest that the immune derangement in the BB rat resides outside the thymus.
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PMID:Thymosin and the spontaneously diabetic BB rat. 297 10

A 38 year old woman with diabetes mellitus and bronchial asthma was admitted to hospital with pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae; she recovered promptly on erythromycin treatment. Six weeks later she presented with aortic valve endocarditis without concurrent lung disease. A concurrent increase in titres of antibody to Legionella bozemanii, L longbeachae, and L jordanis indicated a Legionella infection. Legionella infection should be considered, even in the absence of pneumonia, in cases of endocarditis where no other cause can be detected.
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PMID:Aortic valve endocarditis associated with Legionella infection after Mycoplasma pneumonia. 311 81

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test using polyvalent antigens and antisera was developed to detect Coxsackie-B-virus-specific IgM responses. The sera of 24 of 64 (37.5%) patients with acute pericarditis and 14 of 38 (36%) with acute myocarditis were positive for Coxsackie-B-virus-specific IgM. 4 of 30 (13.3%) patients with acute ischaemic heart disease and 2 of 28 (7.1%) patients with congestive cardiomyopathy were also positive. Coxsackie-B-virus-specific IgM was detected in the sera of 21 of 57 (36.8%) patients with Bornholm disease and 2 of 4 patients with acute-onset juvenile diabetes. Coxsackie-B-virus-specific IgM responses persisted for 6-8 weeks. Sera from patients with chronic valvular heart disease, Mycoplasma pneumoniae infections, and virus infections caused by viruses other than Coxsackie-B viruses were all negative. False-positive results did not occur when sera containing high titres of rheumatoid factor were tested.
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PMID:Coxsackie-B-virus-specific IgM responses in patients with cardiac and other diseases. 610 69

The partially inbred strain of BB-Wistar rats showed a varying incidence of the insulin-dependent diabetes-like syndrome. The serological typing of a large sample of BB rats verified the homozygosity for the RTlu haplotype, whereas its parental non-inbred Wistar stock segregated for RTlu and RTla haplotypes. The histogenetical typing of BB rats by skin grafting showed a significantly prolonged rejection of grafts from RTla donors unusual in other RTlu recipients. The presumption of some recombinational or mutational events in the RTl haplotype of BB rats was not verified by the simple F1 skin grafting test from LEW.1U/RTlu standard/donors to F1/LEW X BB/recipients. Skin grafts survived permanently. When trying to get a clear-cut answer whether the RTlu haplotype is associated with the spontaneous occurrence of diabetes in F2/LEW X BB/ X /LEW X BB/hybrids, only 7.4% of RTlu homozygotes were found among 359 weaned animals. Moreover, the partial strain of BB rats became extinct with the F1 generation mainly due to an infection by the mycoplasma. A new sample of outbred BB rats with a low incidence of spontaneous diabetes was found as homogeneous for the RTlu haplotype, too. Preliminary results of typing these rats for the secondary antibody response to pig insulin indicate the low responsiveness contrary to the results given earlier for the RTlu typing strains as high responders. All these results support the idea that the RTlu haplotype of the BB rats might be a variant carrying some mutational change(s) at the RTl.B region.
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PMID:The major histocompatibility complex and insulin-dependent diabetes in BB rats. 676 55

Recent observations have shown that insulin-dependent diabetes (JOD) may be the result of autoimmunity causing more or less rapid pancreatic isle cell destruction. This autoimmune process may be initiated in individuals who are genetically vulnerable to specific virus action. Several viruses have been implicated as causing JOD. Rubella and mumps viruses were the first viruses to be proved diabetogenic. A few years ago Coxsackie B viruses were added to the list. A prospective study of all new diabetics was undertaken in order to clarify the association of viral illness with JOD. 45 new insulin-dependent diabetics were studied (complement fixation, neutralizing antibodies or hemagglutination inhibition) within 3 days following admission. Screening for viral illnesses included the study for antibodies to the following: psittacosis, mycoplasma, Q fever, mumps, measles, herpes, CMV, rubella and chickenpox. Control bloods matched for sex, age, season and year with patients were obtained from individuals screened for viral illnesses during the same period. 18 JOD patients had antibodies against various Coxsackie B viruses. 4 patients had elevated rubella antibody titers.
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PMID:Are viral studies indicated in juvenile-onset diabetes? 711 Jul 40


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