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

This report describes, at least in part, the role of prostaglandin and cyclic nucleotide metabolism in the etiology of the vascular disease associated with diabetes mellitus. Alterations in this metabolism seem associated with induction of platelet aggregation leads to microthromboses leads to microangiopathy sequences that are subtle but inexorable over a long period of time. Prostaglandins are generally elevated in blood from patients having frank signs of diabetic retinopathy when compared with nondiabetic subjects. Prostaglandin concentration remained elevated in diabetic retinopathy patients receiving indomethacin. We formed, therefore, the working hypothesis--yet to be fully tested either in patients or animal models with and without indomethacin treatment--that the increased prostacyclin (synthesized by endothelial microsomes) and cyclic-AMP production, both of which favor prevention of platelet aggregation, accompany the increased concentration of one or more of the prostaglandin E and F compounds. Concurrently, there may be an accompanying reduction of thromboxane A2 (synthesized by platelet microsomes) and cyclic-GMP (both of which favor platelet aggregation) production in the diabetic patients. The elevated prostaglandin in the diabetic patients not receiving indomethacin could possibly be directed toward slowing but not preventing the progression of the complex disease process in diabetes.
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PMID:Proposed metabolic dysfunctions in diabetic microthromboses and microangiopathy. 23 37

Abnormal platelet function may play a role in the genesis of vascular complications in diabetes mellitus. We measured plasma levels of ristocetin-Willebrand factor and factor VIII antigen in 75 subjects and also measured aggregation-enhancing factor in subsets. We found increased levels of ristocetin-Willebrand factor in all groups of diabetics studied, even in mild diabetics free of vascular disease. Factor VIII antigen was increased only in diabetics with vascular disease. We could not find an aggregation-enhancing factor in any group.
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PMID:Increased von Willebrand factor in diabetes mellitus. 31 May 4

The prevailing concept of etiologic heterogeneity for the diabetes mellitus syndrome is one of multiple genetic factors interacting with a variety of environmental influences. Variation in expression of the disorder, particularly the need for insulin, does not correlate with known etiologic distinctions. There is much evidence for genetic heterogeneity, as well as phenotypic variation when etiology can be presumed to be identical. The vascular manifestations of diabetes include microangiopathy unique to diabetes and larger vessel disease that differs from that of normal aging only by its prematurity. There is as much evidence for heterogeneity of the vascular expression as there is for glucose intolerance. Approximately 25% of persons with insulin-dependent diabetes may never develop the microvascular disease. The pathogenesis of vascular disease in diabetes may involve a number of abnormalities of plasma, circulating cells, and vascular tissue. Were absolute control of glycemia possible, some of the contributing factors involved in vasculopathy would possibly be alleviated. In the absence of automated physiologic insulin replacement the potential deleterious effect of our current methods of treatment might be reduced by specific inhibition of excess catecholamine, growth hormone and/or glucagon responses.
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PMID:Nature and nurture in the expression of diabetes mellitus and its vascular manifestations. 33 1

Progress in our understanding diabetic angiopathy has been slow, but we are now learning a number of lessons of interest to the cardiologist. Diabetic angiopathy is a collective term for conditions specific to the diabetic state and related to its duration more than to patient age. The angiopathy produces calcification of the media of larger arteries, but its major effects are in the microcirculation. Intense interest in one feature, skeletal muscle capillary basement membrane thickening, has dominated the last decade. Capillary basement membrane thickening, while characteristic of diabetes, is associated with little direct impairment of the microcirculatin. It appears to play no role in the pathogenesis of diabetes itself. The pathology of diabetic retinopathy and diabetic nephropathy suggests that arteriolar changes may be the major mediator of diabetic angiopathy. This concept is supported by the interactions between hypertension and diabetes in the eye and kidney. The course of diabetes of youthful onset differs from that of maturity onset. The relative frequency of diabetic angiopathy is higher, and of atherosclerotic complications is lower. This has made it difficult to demonstrate the potential value of preventive measures. Benefit to one type of problem may become hidden by worsening of the other. If the diabetic benefits from what is learned about how ischemic heart disease risk can be reduced, he will require even more effective management to prevent or control diabetic angiopathy.
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PMID:Diabetic angiopathy--its lessons in vascular physiology. 35 70

Nineteen insulin dependent diabetics with onset at 30 years of age or less and duration of diabetes of greater than 25 years were divided into two groups on the basis of the presence or absence of clinically evident vascular disease. The patients without vascular disease were characterised by a later mean age of onset, lower fasting growth hormone concentration, and a lower frequency of the unusual HLA pattern B8 without A1 compared to the diabetics with vascular complications. The level of blood glucose control assessed over the last 15 years, insulin antibody titres, plasma glucagon levels and plasma cholesterol did not differ between the two groups. Residual beta cell activity was found in only one of the 19 patients. Although this study does not exclude an effect of the degree of blood glucose control or persistence of beta cell function in the early stages of diabetes on the subsequent development of vascular disease, it suggests that genetic factors, age of onset and plasma growth hormone levels may be more important.
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PMID:Hormonal profile, blood sugar control and HLA patterns in long-term insulin dependent diabetes with and without vascular disease. 36 9

Results of dialysis treatment and kidney transplantation are discussed on the basis of data on survival, quality of life and cost. Influence of age, diabetes mellitus and hypertensive vascular disease on various type of treatment is outlined.
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PMID:[Indications for hemodialysis and kidney transplantation]. 37 Sep 73

Simultaneous determinations of unconjugated estriol and 15alpha-hydroxyestriol (E4) levels in maternal serum were studied serially to ascertain the relative usefulness of these estrogens as indicators of fetal welfare. Complicated pregnancies included 16 patients with pre-eclampsia and/or hypertension, six patients with severe Rh-isoimmunization, 12 patients with diabetes mellitus, of which four had vascular disease, three patients with fetal death in utero, and three twin pregnancies. Retrospective analysis failed to indicate a clinically useful role for serum E4 determinations in the evaluation of fetal welfare during high-risk pregnancies.
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PMID:Unconjugated estriol and 15alpha-hydroxyestriol in complicated pregnancies. 40 91

Gas gangrene developed from a chronic foot ulcer in the absence of periferal vascular disease or diabetes mellitus in a hospitalized patient undergoing parenteral antibiotic therapy. Within a 6 hour period the patient developed profound toxemia necessitating emergency and life saving leg amputation. Classically clostridial myonecrosis is diagnosed by the clinical course and the gram stain. In this case, 2 preoperative gram stains failed to show gram-positive rods. At the time of surgery, frank fasical and muscle necrosis in the peroneal compartment dictated extending the below knee amputation to above the knee. In retrospect demonstration of clostridial species and myonecrosis in the pathological specimen confirmed the clinical impression. The identified organism, Clostridium sporogenes has rarely been implicated as a cause of gas gangrene.
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PMID:Clostridial myonecrosis in a patient undergoing oxacillin therapy for exacerbation of chronic foot ulcers and osteomyelitis. A case report. 44 7

A prospective study of mortality in 3,113 diabetics was carried out in Edinburgh over a period of eight years; 1,272 patients (41 %) died. Death rates for females equalled those for males and, in relation to the general population, there was a considerable excess mortality which was greater for females. Statistical analysis indicated that the important mortality risk-factors are age, duration of diabetes of greater than ten years and treatment. The risk of oral therapy or insulin were approximately equally greater than that of diet therapy and probably reflected severity of disease. Using international coding for diagnosis, 27 % of deaths were classified as directly due to diabetes and 49 % to vascular disease. Reclassifying the terminal cause of death left only 26 patients (2 %) recorded with diabetes as the direct cause of death. Three hundred and thirty five males (66 %) and 561 females (73 %) died of vascular disease. There was a predominance of myocardial infarction in males and cerebrovascular disease in females. These percentages were a little lower when post-mortem information was available. These results provide additional evidence that diabetes reduces life expectancy by inducing premature vascular disease and that the effect is greater in women than in men.
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PMID:Diabetic mortality in Edinburgh. 47 85

To study the possible role of an "increased thrombotic tendency" in the vascular complications of diabetes several tests of haemostatic function were carried out on 91 men and 63 women with diabetes aged 35-54 years and the results compared with findings in 686 men and 393 women of the same age in the Northwick Park Heart Study. Mean values for factors VII and X, fibrinogen, and platelet adhesiveness were higher in the diabetics, but mean fibrinolytic activity and whole blood platelet counts were lower. Antithrombin III values were also higher in the diabetics, which may have constituted a protective response to other changes favouring the onset of vascular disease. Diabetics with retinopathy had higher factor VII and antithrombin III values, and those with proteinuria had higher values for factor VII, fibrinogen, and platelet adhesiveness than those without these complications. These findings suggest a potentially important association between a thrombogenic tendency and vascular disease in diabetes. Nevertheless, prospective data are needed to clarify whether the haemostatic abnormalities precede the onset of clinically manifest vascular complications or are a consequence of them.
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PMID:Haemostatic variables associated with diabetes and its complications. 50 77


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