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)

Leucocyte-migration inhibition was to determine the state of hypersensitivity in 65 diabetic patients with different stages of retinopathy and 21 nondiabetic controls. About one third of the patients with simple or proliferative retinopathy exhibited significant leucocyte-migration inhibition of 0.2 mg/ml. protein concentration of uvreoretinal antigen. In contrast, only one of 15 patients with minimal retinopathy and none of the controls showed significant leucocyte-migration inhibition. Corneal and lenticular antigens did not evoke a cellular immune response in any of the tested individuals. These findings suggest that cell-mediated hypersensitivity to uveoretinal antigen may develop in diabetic patients with prolonged, progressive, simple or proliferative retinopathy.
Diabetes 1976 Dec
PMID:Leucocyte-migration inhibition induced by uveoretinal antigen in patients with diabetic retinopathy. 99 29

Material of research: 350 cases of diabetes mellitus. The time between the manifestation of diabetes mellitus and the onset of retinopathy is reduced in two cases: with diabetes manifesting itself (a) at the age of puberty, (b) after the age of fifty. The retinopathy appears as "retinopathia simplex" (in all its different subvarieties) and as "retinopathia proliferans". Out investigation showed a gradual decrease in the benign forms of the retinopathia simplex with advancing years--from twenty to sixty--of diabetic manifestation, with retinopathia proliferans simultaneously gaining ground. With diabetes manifesting from sixty on, retinopathia proliferans dwindles to insignificance; there remains an indefinite form of retinopathia simplex.
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PMID:[Manifestation of diabetes (author's transl)]. 99 83

A report is given on seventeen cases of spontaneous regression of diabetic retinopathy. The diabetes became manifest, without exception, at an early age, particularly in childhood. Regression came on slowly and inconspicuously, retinopathy disappearing completely in two thirds of the cases. Of the other forms of diabetic angiopathy only arterial hypertension was found. No case of specific nephropathy, but frequently chronic infections of the urinary tract, and intermittent proteinuria were observed.
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PMID:[Spontaneous regression of diabetic retinopathy (author's transl)]. 100 40

After an extensive review of the literature showing how the existence of diabetic retinopathy in the dog had been confirmed by various research workers and in particular by histological studies, a clinical picture of this retinopathy is given, together with a description of tis individual features based on opthalmoscopic examinations carried out on 13 dogs with diabetes and illustrated with the photographs taken with the KOWA retinograph.
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PMID:The clinical picture of diabetic retinopathy in the dog. 101 May 1

Reversible abnormalities of many vascular beds have been observed in early diabetes, before irreversible structural changes of diabetic microangiopathy became apparent. In the bulbar conjenctiva and in the kidney the changes are associated with vascular dysfunction and may be due to autonomic neuropathy. The role of autoregulation in these vascular beds is not clear. In the limb muscles and in the retina the functional abnormality in early diabetes and in those with only mild retinopathy is increased blood flow. This increase in blood flow is probably the result of autoregulatory adaptation to hypoxia induced by 2,3 diphosphoglycerate deficiency. Lactic acid accumulation may also contribute. Breakdown of the autoregulation in the retina results in the development of diabetic retinopathy. The late stages of retinopathy, new vessel formation, are an attempt at revascularisation of areas of capillary non-perfusion.
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PMID:Dynamic changes in the microcirculation of diabetics as related to diabetic microangiopathy. 105 73

The occurrence of retinopathy and its relationship to diabetes in 1,640 Pima Indians age 15 and over has been determined. Eighteen per cent of those with two-hour postload plasma glucose levels of equal to or greater than 200 mg./dl. had some evidence of retinopathy. Of those with retinopathy and diabetes, 7 per cent were found to have proliferative or neovascular changes, the remainder having microaneurysms and/or exudates. The frequency of retinopathy increased from 3 per cent among newly diagnosed diabetics to 47 per cent among those with diabetes of 10 or more years duration. No relationship was found with sex, age at diagnosis of diabetes, or age at time of examination when duration of diabetes was taken into account. The occurrence of retinopathy was confined largely to those who fell into the second or hyperglycemic component of the frequency distribution of plasma glucose levels in the population, indicating the significance of the bimodal glucose tolerance frequency distribution.
Diabetes 1976 Jul
PMID:Retinopathy in Pima Indians. Relationships to glucose level, duration of diabetes, age at diagnosis of diabetes, and age at examination in a population with a high prevalence of diabetes mellitus. 108 6

The muscle capillaries of diabetic subjects, with and without retinopathy, have been measured. The groups with retinopathy had significantly thicker laminae than those without the fundal changes. No significant difference was found between the group with proliferative retinopathy and the group with nonproliferative retinopathy. The focal and segmental nature of the basal lamina thickening was confirmed by the increasing standard deviation of the measurements within and among capillaries. This study also confirms the fact that, at least for muscle capillaries, an apparent relationship exists between the thickness of the basal lamina of these vessels and the presence of clinical retinopathy.
Diabetes 1975 Mar
PMID:Capillaries of South African diabetics. IV. Relation to retinopathy. 111 51

Clinical factors related to the development and progression of renal lesions were studied in twenty-three diabetics by the use of serial renal biopsies or autopsy. The results were as follows: Most of the juvenile and intermediate type diabetics were poorly controlled, with the glomerular lesion progressing rather rapidly. In contrast, many cases of the adult type were able to be maintained under good control and the renal lesion neither developed nor progressed. Two of the adult type diabetics with poor control showed slowly and slightly progressing renal lesions. The progression of glomerular lesions was significantly related to the control of blood glucose, type of diabetes, age at onset, type of treatment, and degree of obesity, but not to the duration of diabetes or the length of the follow-up period. There was a significant correlation between the type of diabetes and the control of blood glucose over the years. Arteriolar lesions developed concurrently with the progression of the glomerular lesion. Retinopathy also had a tendency to develop in proportion to the progress of glomerular lesions although it was not statistically significant. We have discussed the clinical factors responsible for the progression of diabetic glomerulosclerosis and have suggested that the type of diabetes rather than the degree of control of blood glucose might be more important in determining the development and progression of diabetic glomerulosclerosis. Nevertheless, the possibility remains that successful control of blood glucose may prevent or retard the development of diabetic glomerulosclerosis.
Diabetes 1975 Jan
PMID:Onset and progression of diabetic glomerulosclerosis; a prospective study based on serial renal biopsies. 112 May 40

The recent literature relating to the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy, with or without nephropathy, is critically reviewed. Particular attention is given to the (GH) growth hormone hypothesis. The various procedures of hypophysectomy are discussed including the possible ways of suppressing GH production or overproduction by drugs, especially with (MAP) medroxyprogesterone acetate. Personal results obtained with long-term administration of MAP in depot form on alternate days in 10 patients with advanced retinopathy are described. An inconstant and barely significant suppression of the GH response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was noted in 6 cases showing that a complete pituitary inactivation had not been achieved. Therefore, the modifications observed in the fundus picture seem to have no relationship with such a condition. The features involved were Microaneurysms and Hemorrhages and Exudates. New vessels and retinitis proliterans were unaffected. Subjective improvement in visual acuity appeared to be more frequent with various possible explanations. MAP was without appreciable effect on the clinical and metabolic course of the diabetes or on renal function in cases of concomitant nephropathy. In light of these preliminary results, further investigation seems to be justified. (author's modified) (summary in ENG).
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PMID:[Trial treatment of diabetic retinopathy by inhibition of pituitary somatotropin secretion with MAP]. 112 48

In a population of 744 diabetics composed mainly of elderly female patients, 172 developed hypertension after the onset of diabetes. Compared to normotensive diabetics, they had an increased prevalence of diabetic retinopathy (p less than 0.001), cerebral accidents, ischemic disorders of the lower limbs and a decreased glomerular filtration rate (p less than 0.05); they are frequently insulin-dependent and difficult to manage. In 173 other indivuals the diabetes emerged several years after the hypertension. This group was characterized by relatively easily controlled blood sugar and increased prevalence of angina and myocardial infarction (p less than 0.001). The association of hypercholesteremia with hypertension increases the risk of coronary disease (p less than 0.02) and, to a lesser degree, of glomerular insufficiency. The prevalence of coronary symptoms increases with obesity (p less than 0.05) while retinopathy increases with insulin dependence (p less than 0.001). From this information it may be concluded that the importance of various risk factors in the diabetic chiefly varies according to the vascular territory involved: cerebral vascular accidents occur mainly in hypertensives, while the presence of retinopathies, proteinuria and peripheral ischemia is directly related to the diabetes and particularly to insulin dependence. The risk of coronary lesions increases considerably when hypertension is added to the diabetes, with an even greater risk in the case of a diabetic, hypertensive, hypercholesterolemic nexus.
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PMID:[Factors of arterial and renal complications in diabetes]. 112 60


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