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

Vitiligo is probably an autoimmune disorder of the skin and is commonly associated with a number of known autoimmune endocrinopathies. We present a patient with vitiligo associated with diabetes mellitus and autoimmune thyroid disease. Further, we present evidence that vitiligo and autoimmune disorders coexist and discuss the interrelationship between vitiligo and autoimmune endocrine disorders.
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PMID:Vitiligo and polyglandular autoimmune endocrinopathy. 406 62

Thirty-four insulin-dependent diabetics with a coexistent organ-specific autoimmune disease (Graves' disease, primary myxedema, adrenal insufficiency, generalized vitiligo, primary biliary cirrhosis) were compared to 100 insulin-dependent patients in whom no obvious etiology was detectable. The autoimmune group was characterized by a predominance of females, a family history of autoimmune disease, a later age at onset, better glycemic control, low insulin requirement, persistence of ICA, and greater frequency of HLA B8 but not of B18. However, there was a large overlap between the two groups for all these criteria. In addition, a family history of IDD in first degree relatives and the frequency of serum positive for neutralizing anti-Coxsackie B antibodies were identical in the two groups. These results do not justify the separation of this group of patients as having purely autoimmune diabetes, to the exclusion of other etiological factors, whether genetic or viral.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics and etiological markers in insulin-dependent diabetes associated with an organ-specific autoimmune disease. 631 21

After a short explanation of the epidemiology of the genuine vitiligo the pathogenesis of this disease is described above all from the point of view of immunology. The accumulated concomitant diseases, such as pernicious anaemia, diseases of the thyroid glands, diabetes mellitus and so on, are shown, also potential secondary diseases of the adrenal gland and the liver. Though the genesis of the vitiligo is very probable also of autoimmunological nature the causes of the common appearance are still fully unclear as in many other overlapping syndromes. The practical consequences from the hitherto got knowledge about vitiligo and its secondary diseases are discussed.
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PMID:[Genuine vitiligo and its relevance for internal medicine]. 699 61

An apparently high frequency of Graves' disease encountered in New Orleans, Louisiana, prompted an investigation for a possible infectious agent that might be triggering the disease in genetically susceptible individuals. We studied 40 patients with Graves' disease, and compared them to the following groups of controls: age and gender matched healthy subjects; patients with multinodular goiter (non-autoimmune thyroid controls); patients with chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis (autoimmune thyroid disease controls) and additional organ or tissue specific autoimmune controls exclusive of thyroid autoimmunity, including patients with Type I diabetes and other endocrine autoimmune complex disorders. Serum antibodies against a prototypic strain of a human intracisternal A-type retroviral particle type 1 (HIAP-1) were detected by a sensitive and specific immunoblotting assay. In 87.5% (35/40) of the Graves' disease patients there was a positive reaction against several HIAP-1-associated proteins, predominantly 97 Kd and 80 Kd, with only 5 showing no reactivity to any. In contrast, 2% (2/105) of sera from normal controls showed positive reactivity. Furthermore, only 10% (1/10) of sera from multinodular goiter control patients and 10% (1/10) of Hashimoto's patients showed reactivity (p < 0.0005). Sera from 3 of 20 (15%) of Type I diabetic patients none of whom had Graves' disease, showed reactivity but there was no reactivity in 9 other patients with one or more of the endocrine autoimmune complex disorders, including Addison's disease, vitiligo, myasthenia gravis and pernicious anemia. In addition we studied two individuals with Graves' disease from each of two families residing outside Louisiana, all of whom were positive for these antibodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Evidence for a retroviral trigger in Graves' disease. 757 70

A typical case of Schmidt syndrome is reported. The syndrome comprises signs of primary adrenocortical failure and hypothyroidism. Other endocrine and non-endocrine immunopathies may be present also, such as type I diabetes, gonadal failure, Addison-Biermer anaemia, myasthenia gravis, vitiligo or alopecia areata. The possibility of these concomitant changes should be taken into account in the treatment of Schmidt syndrome. The case in a 52-year-old woman is reported in view of rare occurrence of thr syndrome and its few descriptions in the Polish literature as well as diagnostic difficulties.
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PMID:[A case of Schmidt's syndrome]. 781 82

The prevalence of various chronic diseases was compared in 517 individuals with alopecia areata, and 2,969 of their first degree relatives. As previous reports have suggested an increased incidence of diabetes in relatives of patients with alopecia areata, special attention was given to the prevalence of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes in the patients and in their relatives. Several immunologic diseases were increased in alopecia probands and relatives. Thyroid disease, vitiligo, Addison disease, and pernicious anemia were more prevalent in probands and in their relatives than in the general population. Specifically, a high rate of thyroid disease was found in probands (14.7%) and in their first degree relatives (4.2%). Only one proband had Type 1 diabetes, yet there were 14 sibs with Type 1 diabetes. Thus, Type 1 diabetes was significantly more prevalent in the sibs (1.2%) than in either the probands with alopecia (0.2%), or the general population (0.12-0.25%) (P < 0.05)). In contrast, Type 2 diabetes was not more common in probands or in sibs than in the general population. These data suggest that alopecia areata protects against Type 1 diabetes in predisposed individuals. The high rate of thyroid disease suggests that screening probands and first degree relatives for thyroid disease should be considered.
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PMID:Increased risk for type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes in relatives of patients with alopecia areata (AA). 807 51

To evaluate the incidence of autoimmune disorders and organ-specific autoantibodies in Korean vitiligo patients, antibodies to nuclear, mitochondrial, smooth muscle, gastric parietal cell, thyroglobulin, and microsomal antigens were screened in 226 vitiligo patients and 120 controls. Of the 226 vitiligo patients, three (1.3%) had thyrotoxicosis and two (0.8%) had diabetes mellitus. The vitiligo patients had an increased incidence of antinuclear (12.4%), antimicrosomal (7.1%), and antismooth muscle antibodies (25.7%). The increased incidence of antismooth muscle antibody was correlated with early onset (less than 15 years), a positive family history of vitiligo, and long duration of vitiligo. These results support an autoimmune origin of vitiligo and suggest that the high incidence of antismooth muscle antibody is a distinctive feature of laboratory findings in Korean vitiligo patients.
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PMID:Increased incidence of antismooth muscle antibody in Korean vitiligo patients. 830 Sep 36

A female patient demonstrating a previously not reported constellation of polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type III (including autoimmune thyroiditis, Graves' ophthalmopathy, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and vitiligo), coeliac disease and sarcoidosis is described. This may be a random association but might also indicate a common immunological and/or genetic disturbance.
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PMID:Polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type III associated with coeliac disease and sarcoidosis. 844 60

Type III polyglandular syndrome is defines as the association of insulin dependent Diabetes mellitus, thyroid gland affection (hyper or hypothyroidism) and a non endocrinological disease, rheumatological or not. Less common manifestations include pernicious anemia, vitiligo and alopecia. Circulating organ-specific auto antibodies are detected in blood smear and a lymphocyte infiltrate in the affected glands. We report a patient with insulin dependent Diabetes mellitus since the age of 3, who developed hypothyroidism at the age of 14 and severe rheumatoid arthritis at 16. Moderate anemia with positive auto antibodies against parital gastric cells was detected. Treatment with methotrexate and indomethacin was indicated with excellent results regarding her arthritis and after 2 weeks of treatment she began to walk normally again.
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PMID:[Type III polyglandular autoimmune syndrome. Report of a case]. 852 84

Human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DRB1 and -DQB1 alleles were analyzed using a PCR-based sequence-specific priming technique in 16 patients with autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type I (APS-I), 31 patients with APS-II, and 110 patients with component diseases of APS-II, including 9 patients with isolated Addison's disease, 43 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, 22 patients with Graves' disease, and 36 patients with vitiligo. No significant associations was observed between HLA and APS-I patients in our data set, nor was sharing of HLA haplotypes by sibling pairs affected by APS I significantly different from the random expectation. Thus, HLA-DRB1 and -DQB1 genes are probably not involved in APS-I. To delineate the associations between HLA-DRB1, DQB1, and APS-II, we analyzed APS-II patients with or without beta-cell autoimmunity [i.e. insulin-dependent diabetes (IDD) and/or islet cell or glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies]. Our results suggest that the association between DR4-DQB1*0302 and APS-II was entirely due to the presence of pancreatic beta-cell autoimmunity, since this haplotype was otherwise not significantly associated with APS-II or with any other of its component diseases. In contrast, the DR3-DQB1*0201 haplotype was associated not only with IDD, but also with APS-II in the absence of pancreatic beta-cell autoimmunity, as were several its component diseases, including isolated Addison's disease, Graves' disease, and Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Interestingly, the frequency of DQB1*0602, a dominantly protective allele against IDD, was not significantly decreased in the APS-II patients with IDD or beta-cell autoimmunity, albeit the patient numbers were small. This phenomenon may suggest that the development of autoimmunity to nonpancreatic endocrine glands may predispose autoimmunity to the pancreatic beta-cells and involve genes other than those of the MHC.
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PMID:Although DR3-DQB1*0201 may be associated with multiple component diseases of the autoimmune polyglandular syndromes, the human leukocyte antigen DR4-DQB1*0302 haplotype is implicated only in beta-cell autoimmunity. 867 78


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