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

A proportion of newly diagnosed diabetic patients have features so characteristic that they form a distinct syndrome. The patients are predominantly male and present with a foot lesion which is often long established. They are subsequently found to have diabetes mellitus and diabetic retinopathy. In addition, many of them manifest a striking indifference towards their illness. 47 such patients have been seen between the years 1960-1969 at a diabetic clinic in Birmingham which saw a total of 6451 newly diagnosed patients in the same period. 26 of the 45 patients in whom follow-up was complete have died. The present state of health of the 19 surviving patients indicated that the prognosis is poor for patients who have retinopathy and foot lesions when diabetes is diagnosed.
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PMID:Association of foot lesions with retinopathy in patients with newly diagnosed diabetes. 4 32

The development of diabetes in a small percentage of female beagles receiving large doses of synthetic progestogen for one year is described. The abnormalities in blood sugar and plasma insulin responses to oral glucose arising during induction of diabetes are presented. After a two-year period of diabetes, two animals were examined histologically. Lesions in the kidney and retina, similar to early lesions associated with human diabetic nephropathy and retinopathy, were present. Histologic changes related to the diabetes were also seen in the pancreas and pituitary. The means of induction of the diabetes is discussed. The study supports the view that the dog is a useful species in which to study the long-term pathology of diabetes,
Diabetes 1975 Apr
PMID:Progestogen-induced diabetes in the dog. 4 86

We found that patients with long-standing (greater than 10 years) diabetes who have not developed retinopathy had a significantly higher and almost normal fibrinolytic response to venous occlusion and also a higher spontaneous fibrinolytic activity than those who had developed retinopathy. In the latter, the low fibrinolytic activity of the blood was, however, not correlated to a low plasminogen activator activity of the vessel walls. Although generally lower than in controls, the activator activity of the vessel walls in the retinopathy group tended to be higher than in the rest, and in fact those with only minor vascular changes (microaneurysms) had a significantly higher activity than the other diabetics. The fibrinogen and alpha2-macroglobulin levels were higher in the retinopathy group. Thus multiple abnormalities of the fibrinolytic system were found to be related to diabetic microangiopathy.
Diabetes 1975 Jun
PMID:Diabetic retinopathy and the fibrinolytic system. 4 82

Serum-lipid concentrations and their relationship to blood-glucose and serum-insulin were examined in non-insulin-requiring diabetics, 62 with and 45 without retinopathy. The age, sex-body-weight, and duration of known diabetes was comparable in the two groups. All were treated by diet only or diet and oral hypoglycaemic agents. Patients with retinopathy had higher fasting serumtriglyceride and serum--cholesterol levels than those without. Compared with a non-diabetic population, significantly more diabetics with retinopathy had raised derum-lipids. The lipid concentrations did not correlate with body-weight, serum-thyroid-stimulating-hormone levels, renal involvement, or fasting blood-sugar. While the blood-sugar concentrations were similiar in the two groups the absolute insulin increment and the relative insulin response to a 50 g. oral glucose load were significantly lower in those with retinopathy than in those without. The impairment of insulin response correlated significantly with the frequency of hyperlipidaemia. It is suggested that insulin deficiency with secondary hyperlipidaemia is characteristic of diabetic patients with retinopathy.
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PMID:Plasma-lipids and glucose/insulin relationship in non-insulin-requiring diabetics with and without retinopathy. 4 69

To gain further insight into the genetic determinants of diabetic small vessel disease, we studied 22 HLA antigens in 110 juvenile-onset, insulin-dependent diabetics with terminal glomerulosclerosis and retinopathy, who were being prepared for kidney transplant. HLA antigens were comtemporarily determined in non-diabetic kidney transplant recipients and healthy controls. The frequency of antigens A1 and B8 were significantly higher in diabetics than in controls (P less than .02 and .011), but the frequency of BW15 was normal. The data are compatible with the concept that juvenile diabetes with microangiopathy is one of the HLA-B8 associated disorders.
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PMID:Histocompatibility (HLA) antigens and diabetic microangiopathy. 5 63

The spontaneous fibrinolytic activity of the blood is abnormally low significantly more often in persons with diabetes mellitus than in nondiabetic controls. The fibrinolytic response stimulated by venous occlusion is poor six times more frequently in diabetics than in controls, and the fibrinolytic activity of the endothelial cells is abnoramlly low in one-fourth of the diabetics tested. These changes are not related to the duration of diabetes. However, if patients with long-standing diabetes (greater than 10 years) are separated into those with retinopathy and those without, it is found that those who remain free from opthalmoscopically visible retinopathy have an almost normal fibrinolytic response on stimulation, while the others have a significantly lower response. This difference seems to be caused by a faulty plasminogen activator release mechanism. Compared with the other diabetics, those with retinopathy also have a significantly increased level of fibrinogen and of alpha2-macroglobulin, a protein that acts as an inhibitor of fibrinolysis. These findings imply a poor defense mechanism against fibrin deposits in the vessel walls in diabetes, which might contribute to the development of diabetic microangiopathy.
Diabetes 1976
PMID:Fibrinolysis and diabetic retinopathy. 6 Nov 39

Blood viscosity at low shear-rates was significantly higher in sixty-four patients with longstanding diabetes than in sixty-one matched non-diabetic controls. This increase was most striking in patients with either proliferative retinopathy or nephropathy, although it was present to a lesser extent in diabetic patients with evidence of myocardial or peripheral ischaemia. Erythrocyte deformability was lower in the fourteen diabetic patients with the most extensive microangiopathy than in twenty-two diabetics with slight or no complications or in controls. Hyperviscosity and reduced erythrocyte deformability may well be important and potentially treatable factors in the aetiology or progression of microcirculatory disease is diabetes.
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PMID:Is hyperviscosity a treatable component of diabetic microcirculatory disease? 7 1

The plasma beta-thromboglobulin (betaTG) content was measured in 56 diabetic patients with known complications of this disease, including neuropathy, retinopathy, and ischemic skin lesions. Although two patients were found to have elevated levels beyond the normal range, there was no significant difference between the diabetic group as a whole and the group of 35 controls. The significance of these findings with regard to the proposed contribution of small-vessel platelet sequestration in the pathogenesis of late complications of diabetes mellitus is discussed.
Diabetes 1977 Dec
PMID:Plasma beta-thromboglobulin in diabetes mellitus. 7 86

"Mason-type" diabetics (mild diabetes which is dominantly inherited) are relatively free of retinopathy. Alcohol almost invariably causes facial flushing in these patients when they are given chlorpropamide (chlorpropamide alcohol flush, C.P.A.F.). 291 non-insulin-dependent diabetics were examined to see whether there was a difference in frequency of retinopathy between C.P.A.F. positive and negative cases who were of comparable age and duration of diabetes. Retinopathy was commoner and often severe in CPAF negative patients. Blindness from retinopathy was almost confined to C.P.A.F.-negative cases. Lens opacities, on the other hand, were equally common in both groups. Since C.P.A.F. is an inherited trait, retinopathy in non-insulin-dependent diabetics is to a considerable extent, although not entirely, determined by genetic factors.
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PMID:Chlorpropamide alcohol flushing and diabetic retinopathy. 8 72

Men who participated in the Whitehall survey and were found to be glucose intolerant have been studied 6--8 years later, together with a control group of men with normal screening blood-sugar levels. Ophthalmoscopically visible microvascular retinal disease was confined to men diagnosed as probably diabetic after the survey because their 2 h blood-sugar level (after a 50 g oral glucose load) in the survey examination or during a subsequent standard oral glucose-tolerance test was greater than or equal to 200 mg/dl (11.1 mmol/l). The lowest blood-sugar in a "diabetic" subsequently found to have retinopathy was 229 mg/dl. Men with lesser degrees of glucose intolerance, including 34 who had "worsened to diabetes", did not have visible retinovascular disease at follow-up. If diabetes implies a risk of specific microvascular complications in the medium term, then the findings in this study support proposals for the revision of diagnostic criteria based on glucose-tolerance tests.
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PMID:Oral glucose-tolerance tests and the diagnosis of diabetes: results of a prospective study based on the Whitehall survey. 8 97


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