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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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To determine variations of serum creatinine level immediately after percutaneous angioplasty for renal artery stenosis. After technical success of unilateral or bilateral percutaneous angioplasty for renal artery stenosis in 91 patients (mean age 62.7 years) in whom ioxaglate was always used (90 to 300 ml, mean 195), serum creatinine levels immediately before and 48 hours after dilatation were compared. In the whole population, no significant variation was observed in the overall population. No significant difference was observed between unilateral and bilateral renal angioplasty. The volume of contrast media did not influence creatinine level, nor did iodine injection performed during (n = 4) or more than 3 days before angioplasty. A significant difference was observed with or without diabetes mellitus (n = 15, p = 0.05). In patients without diabetes mellitus technically successful percutaneous angioplasty for renal artery stenosis when using ioxaglate do not significant alter serum creatinine level 48 hours later.
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PMID:[Evolution of serum creatinine level 48 hours after angioplasty for renal artery stenosis in 91 patients]. 876 47

Long-term outcome was studied in 233 patients who had undergone renal artery revascularization (51 with balloon angioplasty, 182 with surgery) between 1976 and 1992. Patients (excluding renal transplants) were treated for renal vascular hypertension without or with renal insufficiency (serum creatinine > 1.6 mg/dl. All patients still alive (n = 188) were contacted to determine current blood pressure, medications, serum creatinine, and subsequent significant medical events. In patients who had died the cause of death was determined and renal function status at the time of death noted from medical records. Some follow-up information was obtained on all 233 patients; follow-up serum creatinine data were obtained in 193 (82.8%) patients. Some 24 patients (10.3%) became dialysis-dependent. Using a multiple logistic regression analysis only, preoperative creatinine maintained significance (P < 0.001) for increased dialysis risk. There was no statistically significant association of dialysis for type of revascularization (percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, autogenous artery, saphenous vein, endarterectomy or synthetic material), simultaneous or previous aortic or other vascular surgery (carotid endarterectomy, femoropopliteal bypass, etc.), pathology (atherosclerosis or fibromuscular dysplasia), number of renal arteries stenosed or treated, length of follow-up, age, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, stroke, chronic lung disease or type II diabetes. It is concluded that, in patients with renal artery stenosis, the timing of renal artery revascularization relative to the level of renal function is the most important determinant for long-term renal salvage.
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PMID:Late renal function in patients undergoing renal revascularization for control of hypertension and/or renal preservation. 890 17

Treatment with ACE inhibitors results in kidney protection due to reduction of systemic blood pressure, intraglomerular pressure, an antiproliferative effect, reduction of proteinuria and a lipid-lowering effect in proteinuric patients (secondary due to reduction of protein excretion). Elderly patients with diabetes melitus, coronary heart disease or peripheral vascular occlusion are at risk for deterioration of kidney function due to a high frequency of renal artery stenosis in these patients. In patients with renal insufficiency dose reduction of ACE inhibitors is necessary (exception: fosinopril) but more important is the risk for development of hyperkalemia. Patients at risk for renal artery stenosis and patients pretreated with diuretics should receive a low ACE inhibitor dosage initially ("start low - go slow"). For compliance reasons once daily ACE inhibitor dosage is recommended.
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PMID:[ACE inhibitors and the kidney]. 903 82

The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and profile of renal artery stenosis (RAS) in NIDDM population with severe hypertension. 60 consecutive NIDDM with severe HT (> or = 3 hypotensive drugs), 42 F/18 M (SR: 2.8), mean age: 66.6 +/- 6.5 years, diabetes duration: 14.1 +/- 6 years have had metabolic, ABPM and renal investigations: color duplex scan (CDS) (with renal us): n = 60, and/or arteriography: n = 17). 13 (21.5%) renal artery stenosis > or = 70%: 8 unilateral/5 bilateral were proved by arteriography. We compared classic HT (n = 47) versus renovascular HT (n = 13). There was no difference for age (years): 64.8 +/- 8 versus 70.6 +/- 6.4, HT duration (years): 11.6 +/- 6.8 versus 12.3 +/- 6. B.M.I.: 31.5 +/- 6 versus 27.6 +/- 3.3, HBA1C (%): 8.9 +/- 2.2 versus 8.8 +/- 0.9, cholesterol (mmol/L): 5.7 +/- 1.3 versus 5.5 +/- 0.6. Significant difference (p < 0.05) was noticed for S.R. (F/M): 2.9 versus 1.16, diabetes duration (years): 11.7 +/- 5 versus 16.5 +/- 8, frequency of retinopathy (%): 30 versus 61, smoking (%): 10 versus 40, triglycerides (mmol/L): 1.9 +/- 1.1 versus 2.6 +/- 1.1, and (p < 0.01) for blood pressure level (mmHg) (SBP: 142 +/- 20 vs 155 +/- 7, DBP: 81 +/- 13 vs 87 +/- 10, MBP: 103 +/- 16 vs 111 +/- 6), frequency (%) of HT escape (> or = 140/SBP, > or = 90/DBP) on ABPM: 40 versus 75 and 24 versus 40, insulin requirence (%): 36 versus 69, macroangiopathy (%): 51 versus 100 (coronaropathy: 34 vs 61, legs arteritis: 21 vs 69, carotid stenosis: 17 vs 30) and for renal function: frequency (%) of micro-macroalbuminuria: 36 versus 92 creatinaemia (mmol/L): 80 +/- 24 versus 124 +/- 44, creatinaemia clearance (mmL/min): 65 +/- 30 versus 40 +/- 12 while are found 5 renal insufficiencies (> or = 120 mmol/L). In NIDDM population with severe HT, renovascular HT is frequent (21.5%), and RAS must be evocated in unstable HT and/or renal injury with macro angiopathy, old NIDDM (> 15 years), requiring insulin. Colour duplex scan (+ renal US) mays lead to arteriography to confirm renal artery stenosis.
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PMID:[Prevalence and profile of renovascular disease in type II diabetic patients with severe hypertension]. 940 9

Renal artery stenosis (RAS) is a relatively uncommon but important potentially reversible cause of renal failure. Little is known about the natural history of ischemic renal disease secondary to RAS. In previous reports, these researchers examined the incidence and risk factors associated with RAS. The study presented here investigates the long-term follow-up of these patients, specifically the effect of RAS on 4-yr, all-cause mortality in a group of 1235 patients undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization and abdominal aortography. A total of 1235 consecutive patients undergoing cardiac catheterization also underwent an abdominal flush aortogram. Significant RAS was considered present if one or more renal artery had 50% or greater narrowing in luminal diameter. Four-year unadjusted survival for patients with RAS was 65% compared with 86% for patients undergoing catheterization without significant RAS. Factors associated with decreased 4-yr survival included increased age, increased serum creatinine, presence of RAS, peripheral vascular disease, congestive heart failure, diabetes, hypertension, and reduced ejection fraction. Using the Cox proportional hazards model, the factors associated with decreased 4-yr survival were the presence of significant RAS, reduced ejection fraction, elevated serum creatinine, and symptoms of congestive heart failure. These observations indicate that the presence of significant RAS is a strong independent predictor of 4-yr survival in this patient population.
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PMID:Survival in renal vascular disease. 952 1

Diabetes mellitus is associated with alterations in a number of key metabolic pathways. Despite theoretical concerns, clinically significant alterations in the pharmacokinetic properties of commonly prescribed drugs are relatively uncommon. Indeed, dose adjustment is rarely required in the setting of well controlled diabetes mellitus. However, significant alterations in drug handling may occur in the context of poor metabolic control or in the presence of complications such as nephropathy. Metformin use may be complicated by lactic acidosis. Fortunately, this is a rare occurrence providing that the agent is not used in circumstances in which it is contraindicated. Indeed, the risk of death from metformin-related lactic acidosis is similar in magnitude to the risk of death related to hypoglycaemia in sulphonylurea-treated patients. The novel hypoglycaemic agent troglitazone may be associated with abnormalities in liver function in approximately 2% of patients. Discontinuation of treatment is followed by normalisation of liver enzyme levels. Current prescribing information recommends frequent monitoring of liver function tests and immediate cessation of therapy if abnormalities develop. In addition to disturbances in intermediary metabolism, diabetes mellitus may also lead to chronic microvascular and marcovascular complications. Thus, in addition to the use of drugs for the control of blood glucose, patients with diabetes mellitus are likely to be prescribed medication for associated conditions such as cardiovascular disease. Such medication includes the ACE inhibitors which are contraindicated in patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis. This complication may be theoretically more common in patients with diabetes mellitus because of accelerated atherosclerosis. However, in clinical practice this is an uncommon occurrence in the absence of clinical features that should alert the treating clinician that an individual patient might be at high risk. Although caution should also be used with beta-blocker therapy in patients with diabetes mellitus, current evidence suggests that, like ACE inhibitors, these drugs may be particularly useful in this patient group.
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PMID:Drug administration in patients with diabetes mellitus. Safety considerations. 963 89

The NIDDM patient, willingly with high blood pressure and atheroma, has frequently an abnormal renal function. Must a renal artery stenosis (RAS) be searched as a determining or favorising cause? We have searched RAS by color duplex scan, in 60 consecutive NIDDM patients with altered renal function (creatinine clearance < or = 60 mL/min). Metabolic blood pressure (ABPM), cardiovascular and renal investigations have been realised. The population was composed of 22F/38M with middle age: 70.7 +/- 6.2 yrs, diabetic duration: 11.6 +/- 8 yrs, the plasma creatinine was: 161 +/- 78 mumol/L and clearance: 40 +/- 13 mL/min. Thirty eight had albuminuria, 28 had plasma creatinine > or = 150 mumol/L. All patients had high blood pressure. Significative RAS (> or = 70%) was detected in 15 patients (25%) by color duplex scan and proved with arteriography (n = 10) or angio NMR (n = 5). Twelve (80%) had unilateral stenosis (4 thrombosis), 3 (20%) bilateral stenosis. Renal US lead the diagnosis in 10 patients (66%): unilateral or bilateral hypotrophy. Those 15 patients had these following characteristics: 4F/11M (sex R : 0.36), middle age: 70.8 +/- 7.2 yrs, diabetic duration: 14.3 +/- 7.5 yrs, HbA1c was at 8.4 +/- 2%, 8 (53%) patients require insuline and 5 have retinopathy, plasma creatinine was at 169 +/- 6 mumol/L; 32% of patients with plasma creatinine > or = 150 mumol/L had RAS (n = 9/60%), creatinine clearance was at 38 +/- 12 mL/min (7/47% < or = 30 mL/min), 9 (60%) had macroalbuminuria and 5 (33%) microalbuminuria. All hypertensive patients were treated (mean SBP: 148 +/- 16, mean DBP: 82 +/- 7 mmHg) and had 62 +/- 28% SBP escape and 33 +/- 19% DBP escape. Ten had severe hypertension (at least 3 hypotensive drugs), 12 received CEI; 8 (53%) were smokers; 14 (93%) had one or more macroangiopathies (10/66% coronary heart diseases, 7/46% lower limbs arteritis, 6/40% carotid atheroma); 13 of these macroangiopathies are severe. In conclusion, renal failure (especially evolutive and/or treated with CEI) in NIDDM must call up a RAS (25%) specially in elderly males with a long diabetes duration, severe hypertension and macroangiopathies. This patient profile must lead to a color duplex scan to confirm the diagnosis already suspected by the renal echography.
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PMID:[Renal artery stenosis and chronic renal failure in NIDDM]. 974 69

Approximately 150 million people worldwide have diabetes mellitus, of whom 90% are type II diabetics. It is therefore of no surprise that diabetic nephropathy has become the leading cause of end-stage renal disease. Opposite to what has been known previously, kidney disease is at least as common in type II as in type I diabetes. However, because the majority of type II diabetics has hypertension for many years before diabetes mellitus becomes clinically relevant, renal lesions are often heterogeneous with frequent exclusive presence of ischemic changes. For the treatment of hypertension in diabetics without nephropathy (no microalbuminuria), drugs that exert beneficial effects or are at least neutral with respect to lipid and glucose metabolism, such as ACE inhibitors, angiotensin II-receptor antagonists, non-dihydropyridine-calcium channel blockers and the thiazide-like indapamide, are to be preferred. Although metabolically neutral, dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers should be used with caution, since an increase in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in type II diabetics treated with these compounds has most recently been described. Once that diabetic nephropathy is established, blood pressure should be lowered to 120/80 mmHg (measured in seated position). Antihypertensive treatment should primarily be based on ACE inhibitors; angiotensin II-receptor antagonists are a valuable alternative if ACE inhibitors are not tolerated. Both ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II-receptor antagonists should be used with high caution in elderly patients with severe atherosclerosis in whom acute renal failure could occur due to the presence of bilateral renal artery stenosis. Newer studies indicate that non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers such as verapamil and diltiazem may be as effective as ACE inhibitors in preserving renal function in diabetic nephropathy. A fix-dose combination of the ACE inhibitor trandolapril with verapamil is now available; it should be reserved for patients whose blood pressure and/or proteinuria can not be adequately controlled with ACE inhibitors. Finally, indapamide is the only antihypertensive diuretic with nephroprotective properties.
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PMID:[Antihypertensive therapy in diabetes mellitus]. 1006 31

OBJECTIVES: To elucidate the prevalence of nondipping in 24 h blood pressure monitoring (BPM) during hospital care with respect to antihypertensive drug therapy, diabetes, renal artery stenosis, and inverse diurnal blood pressure profiles. METHODS: Prospective, consecutive categorization of routine 24 h BPM was performed according to nondipping, drug therapy, normotension, severity of hypertension, diabetes, and inverse diurnal profile for 2 years. Retrospective analysis of patients examined by intraarterial renal artery angiography were performed. Nondipping was defined as a drop in night-time blood pressure (2200-0600 h) by less than 10% of the daytime values. Normotension was considered a daytime 24 h BPM value below 135/85 mmHg without antihypertensive therapy. RESULTS: We categorized 2105 24 h BPM protocols for patients of mean age 59 years. Nondipping was found for 26% of the normotensives, 38% of hypertensive patients not being administered medication, and 48% of drug-treated hypertensives. The significant increase in nondipping among patients under drug therapy applied for patients with daytime blood pressures below and above 135/85 mmHg and was thus independent of the severity of hypertension. Among the subgroup of 561 predominantly type 2 diabetic patients the prevalence of nondipping was increased significantly only for those patients who were hypertensive and being administered antihypertensive drugs. Subgroup analysis of patients using intraarterial angiography did not find different prevalences of nondipping for patients with and without renal artery stenosis. Patients with an inverse diurnal blood pressure profile and an increase in night-time blood pressure by more than 5% of the daytime values presented as a high-risk group because of morbidity associated with renal, cardiac, and cerebral disease. CONCLUSION: Nondipping is a common phenomenon among hospital patients. Drug therapy of hypertension should be directed not only towards the daytime blood pressure, but also toward alleviation of night-time hypertension.
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PMID:Twenty-four-hour blood pressure monitoring, diurnal blood pressure profile and drug therapy under hospital care conditions. 1023 99

It is important to identify patients at risk for atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis because renal artery stenosis is a progressive disease and a potentially correctable problem. To determine the risk factors for atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis, we performed renal arteriography at the time of cardiac catheterization in 270 patients (M:F, 193:77, mean age: 59 years) with clinical ischemic heart disease. Before the procedure, demographic data, medical history, physical findings and laboratory data were obtained. The degree of coronary artery stenosis and renal artery stenosis was quantified with automatic edge detection technique. Significant renal artery stenosis, defined as a narrowing of the diameter by more than 50%, was identified in 28 (10%) patients. Three patients (1%) had bilateral disease. Significant coronary artery disease, defined as a narrowing of the diameter by more than 50%, was present in 231 patients (85%). By univariate logistic regression analysis, older age (68 +/- 8 vs. 58 +/- 10 years), the presence of hypertension (61% vs. 38%), the extent of coronary artery disease, a high fibrinogen level (391 +/- 93 mg/dl vs. 335 +/- 109 mg/dl), a low albumin level (3.9 +/- 0.4 g/dl vs. 4.1 +/- 0.4 g/dl), and a low hemoglobin level (12.5 +/- 1.6 g/dl vs. 13.5 +/- 1.6 g/dl) were associated with the presence of renal artery stenosis (p < 0.05). Serum lipids, lipoprotein(a), creatinine, sex, smoking, or diabetes were not associated. By multivariate logistic regression analysis, older age (OR: 2.43 analyzed by 10 years increment, p = 0.0001), the presence of hypertension (OR: 2.68, p = 0.039) and a higher fibrinogen level (OR: 1.63 analyzed by 100 mg/dl increment, p = 0. 038) were significant risk factors of renal artery stenosis. Fibrinogen level was negatively correlated with albumin level (r = -0.18, p = 0.004). These results suggest that hyperfibrinogenemia as well as old age and hypertension are independent risk factors for atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis.
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PMID:Hyperfibrinogenemia is an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis. 1059 58


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