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

One month following a cadaver renal transplant for obstructive uropathy, a 27-year-old man developed diabetes mellitus. Two years later, marked proteinuria and decreased renal function were detected. Eight months later, a second decline in function occurred. Light microscopy of graft biopsy specimens obtained after each decline in renal function showed increased mesangial cells and matrix, thickening of Bowman capsule, and tubular atrophy with basement membrane thickening. Vascular changes, interstitial infiltrate, and fibrosis were not prominent. Electron microscopic studies of the second biopsy specimen confirmed the light microscopic changes; subepithelial dense deposits were also detected. Immunofluorescent studies of both biopsy specimens demonstrated linear staining of glomerular and tubular basement membranes and Bowman capsule for IgG and albumin. Antikidney antibodies were not detected in the patient's serum. These observations suggest development of the diffuse form of diabetic nephropathy in a renal homograft following steroid-induced diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Development of a lesion resembling diabetic nephropathy in a renal homograft. 32 61

In a comparative period of 20 years is reported on the frequency of diabetes mellitus in urological diseases. It was found that 0.87% of the patients suffer from a concomitant diabetes. The peak of the disease is between the 60th and 70th year. As to the distribution of sex was established that the concomitant diabetes is to be found more frequently in males (ratio 2.4: 1). The lethality in diabetics with a urological disease is with 9.4% more than twice as high as in the other urological patients (4.3%). At the top of the immediate causes of death is the cardiovascular failure (30.7%), followed by the pulmonary blood clot embolism and the uraemic coma with 15.4% each. A diabetic coma never appeared. In the analysis of the urological diseases with concomitant diabetes the lithiasis (34.4%) is in the first place; then follow the adenoma of the vesical cervix (32.4%), the chronic relapsing pyelonephritis (12.9%), and the malignant tumours (7.1%). Many urological forms of diseases appeared combined. In the investigation of the complications without lethal exitus which appeared in 25.1% of all cases with concomitant diabetes the cardiovascular failure is again in the first place, then follow thrombotic diseases, urea-nitrogen disturbances. Peculiarities in conduction and treatment of the diabetes mellitus are shown and a close collaboration between several specialities is considered necessary.
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PMID:[Frequency of diabetes mellitus and nature of treatment in urologic diseases]. 73 75

Established urodynamic and electrophysiological techniques have been applied to assess the frequency and extent of autonomic and peripheral neuropathy in 60 subjects with diabetes mellitus; 38 were diabetics with suggestive symptoms and the others were representative newly diagnosed (11) or treated (11) diabetics. Objective evidence neuropathic bladder dysfunction was detected in 43 of them (71.7%). The commonest abnormality was a hypotonic, insensitive large capacity bladder, which condition was usually asymptomatic. Less freuqently (15%) was this complicated by bladder decompensation and sphincter involvement, resulting in excessive residual urine and infection; some of these had bladder paralysis with chronic painless retention of urine (7%). Electrophysiological studies found a sensory defect in the lower limbs in all tested patients (100%), and in 41 patients (69%) as associated motor conduction abnormality, which was more frequent and marked in the lower than the upper limb. These functional abnormalities appeared to be related to the severity of diabetes, but less to its duration. Indeed of 11 newly diagnosed diabetics tested 7 had a peripheral neuropathy and 4 urodynamic abnormalities. The high incidence of bladder dysfunction and peripheral neuropathy in this series indicates the frequency of subclinical diabetic neuropathy and a factor needing more emphasis in diabetic uropathy.
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PMID:Bladder dysfunction and neuropathy in diabetes. 95 36

The incidence of analgesic nephropathy in the United States is greater than previously reported. Because of the characteristic radiographic features of papillary necrosis, this diagnosis may be made while it is still clinically unsuspected. Early diagnosis is extremely important because cessation of analgesic abuse may avert progressive renal damage. Uncovering the diagnosis calls for special care in obtaining the telltale history. This must be sought in patients with radiographic evidence of papillary necrosis when a history of diabetes mellitus, obstructive uropathy, or sicle cell anemia is absent, or in patients with unexplained nephrocalcinosis or nephrolithiasis.
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PMID:Analgesic abuse syndrome: a frequently overlooked cause of reversible renal failure. 109 67

Emphysematous pyelonephritis is a severe necrotizing infection that usually occurs in patients with diabetes mellitus or obstructive uropathy. Although glucose fermentation has been considered as the main cause of gas production the actual mechanism remains controversial. Compositions of gas samples from 2 patients with emphysematous pyelonephritis recently encountered were analyzed, and showed 15% hydrogen, 4.8% carbon dioxide, 60% nitrogen, 6.7% oxygen and some unknown gases in case 1, and 3.4% hydrogen, 22% carbon dioxide, 66% nitrogen and 9.8% oxygen in case 2. These results tend to implicate mixed acid fermentation of glucose as the pathway by which emphysematous urinary tract infections develop.
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PMID:Mixed acid fermentation of glucose as a mechanism of emphysematous urinary tract infection. 205 76

Renal tubular acidosis refers to a group of disorders that result from pure tubular damage without concomitant glomerular damage. They could be hereditary (primary) or acquired (secondary to various disease states like sickle cell disease, obstructive uropathy, postrenal transplant, autoimmune disease, or drugs). The hallmark of the disorder is the presence of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis with, or without, associated defects in potassium homeostasis, a UpH greater than 5.5 in the presence of systemic acidemia, and absence of an easily identifiable cause of the acidemia. There are three physiologic types whose basic defects are impairment of or a decrease in acid excretion, i.e., type 1 (dRTA); a failure in bicarbonate reabsorption, i.e., type 2 (pRTA); and deficiency of buffer or impaired generation of NH4+, i.e., type 4 RTA. Several pathophysiologic mechanisms have been postulated for these various types. pRTA is the least common of all in the adult population. It rarely occurs as an isolated defect. It is frequently accompanied by diffuse proximal tubule transport defects with aminoaciduria, glycosuria, hyperphosphaturia, and so forth (Fanconi syndrome). dRTA is associated with a high incidence of nephrolithiasis, nephrocalcinosis, osteodystrophy, and growth retardation (in children). Osteodystrophy also occurs in pRTA to a lesser degree and is believed to be secondary to hypophosphatemia. Patients with type 4 RTA usually have mild renal insufficiency from either diabetes mellitus or interstitial nephritis. Acute bicarbonate loading will result in a high fractional excretion of bicarbonate greater than 15% (FEHCO3- greater than 15%) in patients with pRTA, but FEHCO3- less than 3% in patients with dRTA. Type I patients will also have a low (U - B) PCO2 with bicarbonate loading. They are also unable to lower their urine pH to less than 5.5 with NH4Cl loading. The treatment of these patients involves avoidance of precipitating factors when possible, treatment of underlying disease, correction of electrolyte imbalance, particularly hypokalemia and hyperkalemia, and most importantly, the use of alkali. This will prevent or reduce all the various complications.
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PMID:Renal tubular acidosis. 208 16

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and renal plasma flow (RPF) were measured by intravenous injection of 99mTc-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) and 131I-Hippuran in 115 insulin-dependent diabetic patients with albumin excretion rates (AER) less than 200 micrograms/min, and in 45 normal subjects. Separate kidney function and urinary elimination were estimated by renography. GFR was increased in the diabetic patients (152 +/- 24 ml/min/1.73 m2 vs. 128 +/- 15) and correlated significantly with RPF (r = 0.5; p less than 10(-9)). No relationship was found between GFR and the duration of diabetes, blood glucose, HbA1c, or AER. Fifty patients were hyperfiltering with RPF and filtration fraction higher than those in the normofiltering group. Slow intrarenal or pyeloureteral elimination, either unilateral or bilateral, was observed in 3 controls and 60 diabetic subjects (24 hyperfiltering; 36 normofiltering) and did not disappear with the patient in the standing position. In these 60 patients, mean age, duration of diabetes, blood glucose, HbA1c, 24 h albumin excretion rate, and frequency of peripheral or autonomic neuropathy did not differ from patients with normal scintigraphy; GFR was lower in the group with slow elimination, but not significantly so. 99mTc-DTPA renal uptake was symmetric in all the controls; asymmetric renal uptake with asymmetric GFR was observed in 13 patients (7 hyperfiltering; 6 normofiltering) and often associated with slower elimination. No evidence for renal stenotic atheroma or parenchymatous disease was found on the angiopyeloureterography. The results suggest that incipient uropathy is a very common phenomenon that occurs irrespective of glomerular dysfunction.
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PMID:Renal scintigraphy in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: early glomerular and urologic dysfunction. 214 32

One hundred adult Sudanese patients who presented to Soba University Hospital (SUH) with established chronic renal failure (CRF) were studied to determine the aetiology. Thirty-eight had chronic glomerulonephritis, 12 renal calculi, nine diabetic renal disease, seven chronic pyelonephritis, five sequelae of acute renal failure (ARF), four renal vascular disease, three polycystic disease of the kidneys, and two obstructive uropathy. In 20 patients the aetiology was not determined because of late presentation to hospital. The results were compared with those of the developed countries, which differ greatly from Sudan in climate, diet, race, culture and social habits. The main differences were in the prevalence of renal calculi which, although being the second commonest cause of CRF in the Sudan, were rare in European countries. Also, diabetes mellitus was a much commoner cause of CRF in Sudan than Europe. Other aetiological factors were similar.
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PMID:The aetiology of chronic renal failure in adult Sudanese patients. 260 79

Since January, 1, 1976, epidemiologic study of renal diseases has been leading in a French rural area of 400,000 inhabitants located in north coast of Britanny. Annual incidence of end stage renal failure (ESRF) treated by dialysis increased of 25% when two consecutive periods of five years each were compared: A (1976-1980) 46 per 10(6) inhabitants, B (1981-1985) 62 per 10(6) inhabitants. In 1986, the progression was confirmed: 96 per 10(6). At the time of the beginning of dialysis treatment, mean age (+/- SD) was not different between two periods: 53 +/- 17 yrs (A) vs 51 +/- 17 yrs (B) but it increased in 1986: 61 +/- 14 yrs. Sex ratio (M/F) progressed from 1 (A) to 1.75 (B). The study of causes of ESRF showed a net increase of secondary renal diseases (diabetes, amyloidosis), interstitial nephropathies due to obstructive uropathy (lithiasis) and drugs. For the period B, 91% of primary glomerulonephritis reaching ESRF had had renal biopsy. Idiopathic IgA nephropathy was the first cause of ESRF (13.7%, 0.85 pts/100,000) before diabetes (12%, 0.75/100,000), Polycystic disease (11.3%, 0.70/100,000), reflux nephropathy (9.6%, 0.60/100,000), focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (8.8%, 055/100,000). Prevalence of ESRF for primary glomerulonephritis was calculated to 20.6% and according to the histological type to 28.3% for idiopathic IgA nephropathy, 34.8% for local and segmental glomerulosclerosis, 40% for idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis and only 6.6% for membraneous nephropathy. In the studied area, 58% of patients were treated out of hospital (at home or in self-dialysis units) whose 46% by hemodialysis and 12% by CAPD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Epidemiology of terminal renal insufficiency treated by dialysis and therapeutic options in a population of 400,000 inhabitants (1975-1986)]. 333 May 78

From 1980 to 1983, 69 patients (36 male) with end-stage renal disease underwent kidney transplantation (11 from cadaveric donors). Twenty-six out of 69 (17 male) with a mean age of 37 years (range 16-50 years) developed 69 UTI episodes. The standard immunosuppressive regimen consisted of prednisolone and azathioprine and, in selected cases, antilymphocyte globulin or cyclosporin A were given for a short period of time. Thirty-five episodes (50%) occurred within two months of the operation. The most commonly isolated bacteria were E. coli (28 cases), Ps. aeruginosa (16) and Proteus mirabilis (9). Kidney graft dysfunction, diabetes mellitus, urological complications and antirejection treatment were the main predisposal factors. Recurrence or reinfections were finally diagnosed in 19/26 patients (73%). Thirteen patients presented with asymptomatic bacteriuria (55% of episodes). Aminoglycosides, ureidopenicillins and third-generation cephalosporins were found to be very effective for treating severely ill, febrile patients. In addition, trimethoprim/sulphamethoxazole and mecillinam were useful for patients on long-term chemotherapy. There were no deaths or impairment of the renal graft function directly attributable to the urinary infection. In conclusion, UTIs are a very common cause of morbidity in kidney graft recipients, with the highest incidence in the early post-transplant period. Recurrences or reinfections occur often and asymptomatic bacteriuria is a common finding which needs not be treated aggressively in the absence of symptoms or obstructive uropathy. Patient and graft survival in the long term remain unaffected by the presence of the urinary infection.
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PMID:Urinary tract infections after renal transplantation. 391 78


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