Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Essential hypertension affects more than 40 million Americans, or one in four adults. The prevalence of hypertension is greater among the African-American population, with a distressingly high rate of end-organ complications. Although
diabetes mellitus
has surpassed hyper tension as the dominant etiology of end-stage renal disease in the United States, kidney failure secondary to hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
remains a significant problem, particularly among African Americans. During the past decade, a shift in the paradigm for the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) has evolved from a circulating vasoactive cascade toward angiotensin II (ANG II) formation at the cellular level. The molecular components of the RAS have been identified in cells, documenting the existence of an autocrine tissue RAS, as well as the presence of enzymes, which catalyze the formation of ANG II by angiotensin-converting-enzyme-independent pathways, providing new targets for therapeutic intervention. The latter challenge has important clinical implications, in view of recent evidence implicating ANG II in pathologic cell growth and cell death and fundamental events in the remodeling of the vascular wall and myocardium in the setting of hypertension. This review focuses on ANG II as a major determinant of end-organ damage in essential hypertension; the benefits of ANG II blockade at the end-organ level, which appear to be independent of the blood pressure-lowering effect; and the emerging role for ANG II receptor antagonists as first-line agents in the treatment of essential hypertension.
...
PMID:Emerging concepts in antihypertensive therapy: the benefits of angiotensin II blockade. 1082 7
The Ramipril Efficacy in Nephropathy (REIN) study found that angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors effectively decreased proteinuria, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) decline (DeltaGFR), and incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in patients with proteinuric chronic nephropathies. In this study, we prospectively investigated the main clinical determinants of progression and response to treatment in the 352 patients enrolled into the REIN study. Mean DeltaGFR (0.56 +/- 0.05 [SEM] versus 0.21 +/- 0.05 mL/min/1.73 m(2)/mo; P = 0.0001) and incidence of ESRD (30% and 10%; P = 0.0001) were more than twice that in patients with proteinuria of 2 g/24 h or greater of protein compared with those with protein less than 2 g/24 h (relative risk [RR], 4.07; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.20 to 7.52), as well as in patients with hypertension compared with normotension (mean DeltaGFR, 0.48 +/- 0. 05 versus 0.22 +/- 0.05 mL/min/1.73 m(2)/mon; P = 0.0006; ESRD, 25% versus 10%; P = 0.004; RR, 3.18; 95% CI, 1.38 to 7.32). Hypertension at study entry (P = 0.038), greater mean blood pressure on follow-up (P = 0.002), and urinary protein excretion rate (P = 0.0001) were independent predictors of faster DeltaGFR. DeltaGFR was approximately twofold faster in patients with type 2 diabetes than in those with primary glomerular disease (P = 0.002; including immunoglobulin A [IgA] nephropathy, P = 0.009);
nephrosclerosis
(P = 0.03), adult polycystic kidney disease (APKD), or chronic interstitial nephritis (P = 0.006).
Diabetes
at study entry (P = 0. 02) and greater mean blood pressure (P = 0.0001) and urinary protein excretion rate (P = 0.0001) on follow-up were independent predictors of faster DeltaGFR. After correction for baseline covariates,
diabetes
was also associated with an increased risk for progression to ESRD (RR, 2.39; 95% CI, 1.01 to 5.68; P < 0.05). At multivariate analyses, ramipril significantly decreased DeltaGFR (regression coefficient,-0.23 +/- 0.11 [SEM]; P = 0.036) and ESRD (RR, 2.08; 95% CI, 1.21 to 3.57; P = 0.008) in patients with baseline proteinuria of 2 g/24 h or greater of protein, and the renoprotective effect increased for increasing levels of proteinuria. Ramipril decreased DeltaGFR to a similar extent in normotensive and hypertensive patients (-0.14 +/- 0.11 versus -0.14 +/- 0.09) and significantly limited ESRD in hypertensive patients (RR, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.26 to 3. 26; P = 0.004). DeltaGFR was decreased by 42% in primary glomerular disease (P = 0.017), by 35% in IgA nephropathy, and by 37% in
nephrosclerosis
, but was not improved in type 2 diabetes, APKD, or interstitial nephritis. At multivariate analyses, ramipril significantly slowed DeltaGFR (-0.24 +/-0.08; P = 0.004) and progression to ESRD (RR, 2.32; 95% CI, 1.36 to 3.96; P = 0.002) in patients without
diabetes
, but not in patients with
diabetes
, who tended to have a faster DeltaGFR (+0.62 +/- 0.44) on ramipril therapy. In summary, patients with proteinuria of 2 g/24 h or greater of protein, preexisting hypertension, or type 2 diabetes were faster progressors. Greater blood pressure and degree of proteinuria were the strongest determinants of faster GFR decline. The renoprotective effect of ramipril was similar in patients with normotension and hypertension. Hypertensive patients and those with proteinuria of 2 g/24 h or greater of protein, primary glomerular disease, or
nephrosclerosis
gained the most from ACE inhibitor treatment. During the study period, those with proteinuria less than 2 g/24 h of protein, type 2 diabetes, or polycystic kidney disease did not benefit by treatment to an appreciable extent.
...
PMID:Chronic proteinuric nephropathies: outcomes and response to treatment in a prospective cohort of 352 patients with different patterns of renal injury. 1084 31
The majority of patients with acute coronary syndromes have renal impairment from either the aging process or from underlying disease, such as
nephrosclerosis
or
diabetes
. For example, in the phase 3 studies of bivalirudin use in PTCA, only 25% of patients had normal renal function: 46% had mild renal impairment, 28% had moderate renal impairment and about 1% had severe renal impairment. In patients with normal renal function, the intravenous pharmacokinetics of bivalirudin are dose proportional (linear) and are characterized by rapid plasma clearance (4.58 ml/minute/kg), a small volume of distribution (0.2 L/kg), and an elimination half-life of about 30 minutes. Renal clearance is the primary route of elimination of bivalirudin. As for other small polypeptides, bivalirudin is filtered at the glomerulus, secreted in the proximal convoluted tubule, reabsorbed in the distal convoluted tubule and degraded within intracellular lysosomes to constituent amino acids. There is a direct positive relationship between the dose of bivalirudin, plasma concentrations and the activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) or activated clotting time (ACT). A study comparing the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of bivalirudin with normal renal function (GFR greater than or = 90 ml/minute; n = 8), mild (GFR 60-89 ml/minute; n = 8), moderate (GFR 30-59 ml/minute; n = 7), or severe (GFR < 30 ml/minute; n = 10) renal impairment showed that while clearance was similar in the normal (4.58 ml/minute/kg) and mildly impaired (4.94 ml/minute/kg) groups, the clearance rate was reduced 45% in the moderate impairment (2.50 ml/minute/kg) group and about 68% in the severe impairment (1.46 ml/minute/kg) group. Clearance was further reduced (77%) in a group of 12 dialysis dependent patients (1.04 ml/minute/kg). There was a strong positive correlation between plasma bivalirudin concentrations and aPTT. The derived maximal effect (Emax) was similar for the normal (58.3 seconds), mildly impaired (44.7 seconds) and moderately impaired (56.8 seconds) groups, but prolonged in the severely renally impaired (79.4 seconds) and dialysis dependent (84.4 seconds) patients. These kinetic and dynamic results have recently been substantially confirmed in patients undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), where reduced plasma clearance (20%) and elevated ACTs were observed in patients with moderate renal impairment. The bleeding results of the phase 3 PTCA clinical trial (involving 4,312 patients) in which patients were classified as having normal renal function, or mild, moderate or severe renal impairment (using the above criteria), is consistent with the pharmacokinetic data. The incidence of major bleeding was directly correlated with renal function for both bivalirudin (normal, 1.2%; mild, 1.9%; moderate, 6%; severe, 0%) and heparin (normal, 3.1%; mild, 8.5%; moderate, 12.7%; severe, 26.7%). Importantly, the incidence of major bleeding was significantly less on bivalirudin than heparin in patients with any degree of renal impairment. The mean 45-minute ACT values were similar (350-400 seconds) in the normal, mild and moderately impaired groups, but elevated in the severely impaired group (450 seconds). A multivariate analysis of bleeding covariates in this database indicated that GFR is an important risk factor for bleeding (r(2) = 0.054), and accounted for twice the variability in bleeding as either sex or age.
...
PMID:The use of bivalirudin in patients with renal impairment. 1115 32
For various ethnic and socioeconomic reasons the pattern of renal disease in the inner city displays distinctive features. Hypertension is frequent, often intractable, and generally conditioned by salt sensitivity and a high sodium intake. Chronic hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
, found predominantly in African Americans, comprises marked cardiomegaly, renal shrinkage, and hypertensive retinopathy. It has been overdiagnosed in the past, but actually accounts for less than 20% of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in African Americans. Malignant hypertension, less frequent nowadays, may cause renal shutdown, which is reversible in a few cases; the heart and kidneys are often of normal size. Idiopathic focal segmental glomerulosclerosis is the most common cause of the primary nephrotic syndrome in blacks, but its incidence has also been rising in whites and Hispanics; it does not respond well to treatment, and almost one half of the patients develop ESRD within 10 years. Systemic lupus erythematosus is also more common in African Americans, in whom the severe proliferative forms of lupus nephritis pursue a more virulent course: one half of such patients develop ESRD in 5 years. Cocaine, the use of which has assumed epidemic proportions, may cause accelerated hypertension, acute renal failure from rhabdomyolysis, and progression of preexisting renal disease. Heroin nephropathy has all but disappeared and has been replaced by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) nephropathy. The prognosis of HIV-infected patients maintained by dialysis has greatly improved. Sickle glomerulopathy, consisting of mesangial expansion, basement membrane duplication, and the absence of immune deposits, may cause the nephrotic syndrome in 4% of patients with severe sickle cell anemia, heralding death within 2 years in one half of patients and ESRD in two thirds; survival has not improved with dialysis.
Diabetes
is now the most common cause of ESRD. Familial aggregation of ESRD is frequently encountered. Interventions useful in the general population, such as vascular bypass procedures, should be undertaken with great caution and restraint in dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Renal disease in the inner city. 1145 21
In September, 2000, the National Institute of
Diabetes
and Digestive and Kidney Diseases of the National Institutes of Health called an early halt to the amlodipine arm of the African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension (AASK) trial after careful deliberation by an independent data and safety monitoring board. An interim analysis of the AASK at 3 years revealed a renoprotective effect of the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor ramipril as compared to the dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker (DHP-CCB) amlodipine in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency. This differential effect was independent of the blood pressure (BP) levels reached and was evident in proteinuric patients and suggestive in patients with baseline proteinuria < 300 mg/d, but was not conclusive. The AASK trial data suggest that DHP-CCBs should be used cautiously in the presence of mild to moderate renal insufficiency. Judgment should be reserved for the use of other CCBs, such as verapamil or diltiazem, since these are fundamentally different CCBs with the potential for a different impact on hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
. The blinded observation period for AASK will be completed at the end of September, 2001, at which time additional, clinically useful information is expected to become available. (c)2001 Le Jacq Communications, Inc.
...
PMID:The African American Study of Kidney Disease and Hypertension (AASK): new findings. 1149 55
Nephrosclerosis
constitutes a major cause of end-stage renal disease. Independently of blood pressure control, ACE inhibitors (ACEIs) are considered to be more nephroprotective than other antihypertensive agents. We have reviewed the long-term evolution of renal function in our series of essential hypertensive patients diagnosed as having
nephrosclerosis
when first seen in our unit. The analysis was performed depending on whether or not their antihypertensive therapy contained an ACEI alone or in combination for the whole follow-up. The end point was defined as the confirmation of a 50% reduction in creatinine clearance or entry in a dialysis program. A historical cohort of 295 patients was included in the analysis. Mean follow-up was 7.4+/-3.9 years.
Diabetes
prevalence was higher in ACEI-treated patients (25.7% versus 7.1%, P=0.000), but the diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy could not be confirmed on clinical grounds, including renal biopsy. Twenty-three out of 183 (12.6%) patients in the ACEI group and 23 out of 112 (20.5%) patients in the non-ACEI group experienced a renal event (P=0.0104 by log rank test). Similar results were observed when only nondiabetic patients were considered for the analysis. Cox regression analysis showed that baseline serum creatinine, absence of ACEI administration, mean proteinuria during follow-up, and age were independent predictors for the development of a renal event. In hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
, therapy containing an ACEI alone or in combination significantly reduces the incidence of renal events. This effect is independent of blood pressure control.
...
PMID:ACE inhibitors and appearance of renal events in hypertensive nephrosclerosis. 1156 48
Abnormalities of glucose metabolism and hyperinsulinemia have been demonstrated in patients with end-stage renal disease and may contribute to the development of atherosclerotic complications in these patients. In the present study, we investigated the stage of renal failure in which abnormalities of glucose metabolism develop and whether these abnormalities were associated with an increased prevalence of cardiovascular events in patients with early renal failure. In 321 untreated essential hypertensive patients, we assessed renal function by measuring 24-h creatinine clearance, urinary protein excretion, and microalbuminuria; we assessed cardiovascular status by clinical and laboratory tests; and we measured plasma glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels at fasting and after a 75-g oral glucose load. To evaluate insulin sensitivity, a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp was performed in a subgroup of 104 patients. Patients with creatinine clearance < 30 ml.min(-1).1.73 m(-2), severe hypertension, BMI < 30 kg/m(2), and
diabetes
or family history of
diabetes
were excluded. Hypertensive patients were found to be hyperinsulinemic when compared with 92 matched normotensive subjects. Early renal failure (creatinine clearance < 90 ml.min(-1).1.73 m(-2)) caused by hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
was detected in 116 of 321 patients. Analysis of patients with varying degrees of renal function impairment demonstrated increased plasma glucose and insulin response to oral glucose load, decreased fasting glucose-to-insulin ratio, and reduced sensitivity to insulin only in those patients with creatinine clearance < 50 ml.min(-1).1.73 m(-2). Parameters of glucose metabolism were not correlated with creatinine clearance and microalbuminuria. Prevalence of atherosclerotic cardiovascular events was significantly related to reduction of creatinine clearance, but parameters of glucose metabolism were comparable in patients with and without evidence of atherosclerotic damage. Thus, in patients with hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
and early impairment of glomerular filtration, alterations of glucose metabolism become evident only when creatinine clearance is < 50 ml.min(-1).1.73 m(-2) and are not related to microalbuminuria and cardiovascular complications.
Diabetes
2002 Apr
PMID:Abnormalities of glucose metabolism in patients with early renal failure. 1191 49
From November 1998 to March 2000, two hundred patients over the age of 60 years (Elderly) with clinical renal disease were studied. 144 patients were between ages of 60-69 years, 46 between 70-79 years and 10 were above 80 years. The elderly patients (Male 165; Female 35) with renal disease constituted 11% (200/1816) of the total nephrology consultation during the study period. The clinical presentation included chronic renal failure (42.5%); acute renal failure (28%); nephrotic syndrome (14.5%); acute glomerulonephritis (7.5%); renal vascular disease (5%) and renal cystic disease (2.5%). Diabetic nephropathy, obstructive uropathy and hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
were the major causes of CRF, accounting for 80% of total CRF in the elderly. Chronic glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis (CPN) were less common and etiology of CRF was uncertain in 5.9% of cases. However, diabetic nephropathy was the commonest (49.4%) cause of chronic renal failure. We did not see a single case of ischemic nephropathy causing CRF in the present study. Prerenal ARF, obstructive uropathy and sepsis were contributing factors for ARF in 82% of the cases. Volume depletion due to gastrointestinal fluid loss and urinary tract obstruction on account of enlarged prostate were the leading causes of ARF in 20 (35.7%) and 8 (14.3%) cases respectively. Sepsis with or without multiorgan failure was the major (46.7%) cause of mortality in patients with ARF and overall mortality was 26.8%. The commonest (31%) cause of nephrotic syndrome was the idiopathic membranous nephropathy. Diabetic nephropathy related to type-2
diabetes mellitus
was the second most common (24.1%) cause of nephrotic syndrome. Diffuse endocapillary proliferative GN of post infectious etiology was the commonest (73.3%) type of acute GN in our elderly patients. Renal cystic diseases were noted in 5 (ADPKD 3; Simple cyst-2) patients. Thus, overall spectrum of renal disease in our elderly patients is similar to that of developed nations except in two ways: (i) Endocapillary proliferative GN of post infectious origin was the commonest type of acute GN and (ii) Rarity or absence of ischemic nephropathy and atherosclerotic renal artery occlusive disease.
...
PMID:Spectrum of renal diseases in the elderly: single center experience from a developing country. 1209 35
As many as 6.2 million Americans may have chronic renal insufficiency (CRI), an insidious disease that can arise as a result of
diabetes
, hypertensive
nephrosclerosis
, chronic glomerulonephritis, and many other disorders. CRI usually progresses over time to end-stage renal disease, when patients require either dialysis or kidney transplantation in order to survive. With this population identified, primary care physicians, nephrologists, and payers have an opportunity to prevent or at least slow the progression of renal disease. The Renal Anemia Management Period (RAMP) may help raise awareness of the need for early diagnosis and aggressive treatment of anemia, one of the leading causes of morbidity in CRI patients. Such treatment has the potential to prevent or control the development of significant morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Management of chronic renal insufficiency: a call for a proactive approach. 1209 66
In the past few years
diabetes
has become the leading cause of end-stage renal disease in all Western countries. A correlation between blood pressure and rate of progression in diabetic nephropathy was noted very early, and increased local activity of the renin angiotensin system was identified as a major pathophysiological mechanism for proteinuria and
nephrosclerosis
in diabetic patients. Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have been shown to slow progression of nephropathy in type 1 diabetic patients. The majority of diabetic patients with nephropathy, however, are suffering from type 2 diabetes and until last year there was no convincing evidence of ACE inhibitors being able to slow progression in type 2 diabetic patients with nephropathy. Three new studies now fill this gap, showing that angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) are nephroprotective in patients with type 2 diabetes, independently of blood pressure. This review provides an in-depth discussion of the results of these studies and provides recommendations for patient management.
...
PMID:Angiotensin receptor antagonists in patients with nephropathy due to type 2 diabetes. 1255 90
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>