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

The effect of the instillation of gamma-glutamylcysteinylethyl ester (gamma-GCE), which has been reported to function as a precursor of glutathione, on cataract formation was examined in rats in which diabetes had been induced by Streptozotocin (STZ). Three days after i.p. treatment with 50 mg/kg body weight of STZ, male Wistar rats aged 6 weeks received instillations of gamma-GCE in solution or liposomes prepared with dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) for a period of 9 weeks. Cataract formation and development were observed by use of a cataract camera every week. After 9 weeks' observation, the lenses were enucleated and the content of the lens GSH was measured. Instillation of gamma-GCE in solution or liposomes to STZ-diabetic rats not only inhibited cataract formation but also kept lens GSH level almost at the control level. In addition, the inhibitory effect of the instillation of gamma-GCE in liposome was stronger than that of gamma-GCE in solution. The present results indicate that the administration of gamma-GCE in solution or in liposomes inhibits diabetic cataract formation, possibly by preventing lens GSH depletion.
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PMID:[The inhibitory effect of gamma-glutamylcysteinylethyl ester (gamma-GCE) instillation on experimental diabetic cataract formation in rats]. 183 18

The effect of piroxicam on the blood-retina barrier was evaluated in rats with experimentally induced diabetes. Diabetes was induced in rats by intraperitoneal injection of streptozocin (STZ). Diabetic rats were divided into two equal groups: those treated with piroxicam, a long-acting platelet inhibitor, and an untreated control group. Vitreous fluorophotometry (VFP) was performed both before and two weeks after induction of diabetes and piroxicam intake. Streptozocin-induced diabetes caused an alteration in the blood-retinal barrier evidenced by an increase in vitreous fluorescein concentration in diabetic rats compared with normal rats. Piroxicam intake did not lead to significant change in vitreous fluorescein concentrations. However, the examination had to be terminated at two weeks because of cataract formation. The piroxicam treated group showed less incidence of lens opacity formation (59.1% compared to 81.8% in the untreated group, p = 0.0006). Piroxicam administration appears to protect the diabetic rat eye against lens opacification.
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PMID:Effect of piroxicam on the blood-retina barrier in experimentally induced diabetes in rats. 183 66

Aldose reductase activity can be measured in the neutrophil and it has been proposed that this may be a marker for risk of complications in diabetes. We have studied aldose reductase activity in neutrophil, nerve, and lens in diabetic patients undergoing sural nerve biopsy or cataract extraction. A correlation was demonstrated between lens and neutrophil aldose reductase activity (r = 0.53, p = 0.01) but no correlations were demonstrated between nerve aldose reductase activities and nerve morphometry, nerve function or neutrophil aldose reductase activity. No significant difference was found between neutrophil aldose reductase activities in groups of patients with severe neuropathy, or cataract, or no complications (24 (interquartile range 16-32) vs 24 (16-40) vs 24 (16-40) nmol NADPH min-1 10(8)-cells-1). In a group of 56 Type 1 diabetic patients screened within 6 years of diagnosis, multiple regression analysis failed to show any relationship between neutrophil aldose reductase activity and abnormalities of neurophysiological function. These results suggest that neutrophil aldose reductase activity cannot be used as a marker for the development of cataract or neuropathy in diabetes.
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PMID:Neutrophil aldose reductase activity as a potential marker for neuropathy and cataract in diabetes. 183 41

One hundred and eighty-eight known Type 2 diabetic patients aged over 60 years identified by a geographically based survey of a population of 40,076 were followed for a median of 6 years to determine the incidence of various complications. There were 63 deaths and two patients were lost to follow-up. The presence of complications was determined using a structured questionnaire and clinical examination. Incidence rates of ischaemic heart disease, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease (PVD) were 56 (95% CI 41-75), 22 (13-35), and 146 (117-174) 1000-person-years-1 of follow-up, respectively. Rates of stroke and PVD rose significantly with age. Retinopathy occurred at a rate of 60 (42-83) 1000-person-years-1 and cataract at 29 (17-46) 1000-person-years-1 although visual acuity in survivors did not deteriorate overall, probably reflecting the high mortality associated with cataract. The rate of proteinuria (albumin concentration greater than 300 mg l-1) was 19 (9-34) 1000-person-years-1. Incidence rates were unrelated to sex or duration of diabetes. Diabetes is associated with a continuing incidence of complications into old age. Adequate facilities are required to assess and treat the resulting morbidity in a population with an increasing proportion of elderly people.
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PMID:A population-based study of the incidence of complications associated with type 2 diabetes in the elderly. 183 44

A total of 1,030 diabetic patients were studied in order to identify factors associated with various complications. A higher proportion of women was found (64.1%). Using regression analysis of prevalence versus the logarithm of the duration of diabetes, a half-life of 5.14 years was calculated. In the study of complications, peripheral neuropathy, amputations, renal impairment, albuminuria, myocardial infarction, cataract and amaurosis were strongly associated with duration of diabetes rather than with the age of the patient or the age at diagnosis; in contrast, blood pressure and impotence correlated better with the age of the patient. A discriminant function analysis permitted to identify several factors as predictors of diverse complication mainly: the duration of the disease, and previous use of insulin (negative correlation). Other predictors were glycemia, alcoholism, smoking habit and intake of legumes (beans). Albuminuria was assessed with a radioimmunoassay procedure and found to be associated with: duration of diabetes, urinary tract infection, systolic blood pressure and amaurosis. Some alimentary habits were also included as predictors of complications.
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PMID:[Risk factors of the complications of diabetes mellitus]. 186 94

Blindness in diabetics is largely due to retinopathy and/or cataract. Hyperglycaemia and the duration of diabetes are major risk factors for the development of cataract and retinopathy. This review details some of the reactions of glucose that are relevant to the development of complications, and follows the elucidation of monosaccharide autoxidation and its relevance to the aldose reductase reaction and its determination. Inhibitors of this 'aldose reductase' reaction are shown to have a number of effects which may be of importance to their action in vivo. The pharmacological implications of chemotherapy for diabetics with complications are briefly discussed.
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PMID:Aldose reductase inhibitors and cataract. 190

To assess the significance of glycation, nonenzymatic browning, and oxidation of lens crystallins in cataract formation in elderly diabetic patients, we measured three distinct products of glycation, browning, and oxidation reactions in cataractous lens crystallins from 29 diabetic patients (mean +/- SD age 72.8 +/- 8.8 yr) and 24 nondiabetic patients (age 73.5 +/- 8.3 yr). Compounds measured included 1) fructoselysine (FL), the first stable product of glycation; 2) pentosidine, a fluorescent, carbohydrate-derived protein cross-link between lysine and arginine residues formed during nonenzymatic browning; and 3) N epsilon-(carboxymethyl)lysine (CML), a product of autoxidation of sugar adducts to protein. In diabetic compared with nondiabetic patients, there were significant increases (P less than 0.001) in HbA1 (10.2 +/- 3.1 vs. 7.1 +/- 0.7%), FL (7.6 +/- 5.4 vs. 1.7 +/- 1.2 mmol/mol lysine), and pentosidine (6.3 +/- 2.8 vs. 3.8 +/- 1.9 mumol/mol lysine). The disproportionate elevation of FL compared with HbA1 suggests a breakdown in the lens barrier to glucose in diabetes, whereas the increase in pentosidine is indicative of accelerated nonenzymatic browning of diabetic lens crystallins. CML levels were similar in the two groups (7.1 +/- 2.4 vs. 6.8 +/- 3.0 mmol/mol lysine), providing no evidence for increased oxidative stress in the diabetic cataract. Thus, although the modification of lens crystallins by autoxidation reactions was not increased in diabetes, the increase in glycation and nonenzymatic browning suggests that these processes may acclerate the development of cataracts in diabetic patients.
Diabetes 1991 Aug
PMID:Role of glycation in modification of lens crystallins in diabetic and nondiabetic senile cataracts. 190 46

We reported a case of successful treatment of early-stage metastatic endophthalmitis caused by Enterococcus faecalis with vitrectomy and lensectomy. The case was a 50-year-old male with poorly controlled diabetes. Following T-tube drainage for a necrotic cholecystitis operation, he developed iridocyclitis in both eyes as well as fever. At the time of his first visit to our clinic, his right eye had already lost light perception. His left eye had visual acuity recognizing of hand movement, marked uveitis, complicated cataract, and dense vitreous opacity. As gram positive cocci were isolated from the aspirated vitreous, we conducted lensectomy and vitrectomy under irrigation of antibiotics. With systemic postoperative antibiotics and human immunoglobulin, the patient showed remarkable improvement in his ocular fundus. By 60 days after the operation, the visual acuity of his left eye recovered to 4/20. Metastatic Enterococcus faecalis endophthalmitis has almost nerve been reported in Japan. The diagnosis and treatment of this disease with a reference to the above findings were discussed.
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PMID:[A case of metastatic Enterococcus faecalis endophthalmitis]. 191 Feb 53

The course of diabetic retinopathy following cataract extraction was studied retrospectively in 89 patients (89 eyes). Cataract extraction was extracapsular in 12 eyes (13.5%), extracapsular with intraocular lens implantation in 37 (41.6%), and intracapsular in 40 (45%). In 55 eyes (61.8%) there was no change in the retinal status after surgery, and in 34 (38.2%) there was progression of diabetic retinopathy. In the eyes showing progression there was appearance or aggravation of non-proliferative changes in 85.3% and development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy in 14.7%. Most of these eyes (91%) deteriorated within six months of surgery. Risk factors for the progression of diabetic retinopathy were the preoperative existence of diabetic retinopathy (p less than 0.005) and the need for antidiabetic agents in addition to dietary control in the management of diabetes (p less than 0.025).
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PMID:Progression of diabetic retinopathy after cataract extraction. 191 58

To investigate the effects of normoglycaemia on diabetic retinopathy, we evaluated 18 uremic diabetic patients before and after successful pancreas kidney transplantation. In all, 12 uremic diabetic patients who submitted to kidney transplantation alone served as the control group; 4 of these subjects received a kidney transplantation alone, whereas 8 underwent a double kidney-pancreas transplantation but lost the pancreas graft within the first few weeks post-surgery. The mean age and the mean duration of both diabetes and dialysis were comparable in the two groups. All patients were studied prior to and at 6 and 9 months after surgery, then at annual intervals. Subjects were divided into three groups according to follow-up: less than 1 year, between 1 and 3 years and greater than 3 years. At each control visit, a complete clinical examination was performed by two independent examinators; retinal fluorescein angiography was carried out as well. The following parameters were evaluated: visual acuity, capillary closure, macular oedema, neovascularization at the disk and elsewhere and vitreous haemorrhage. A score ranging from -2 to +2 was assigned to each parameter for quantification of the variation between baseline values and those obtained at the end of the follow-up. This score was assigned by two different ophthalmologists. Eyes that were affected at baseline by end-stage diabetic retinopathy (secondary retinal detachment, neovascular glaucoma) were not entered in the study. A total of 18 eyes were lost to follow-up in the 2 groups because of laser treatment, cataract extraction, anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy and cytomegalovirus retinitis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Diabetic retinopathy after successful kidney-pancreas allotransplantation: a survey of 18 patients. 191 16


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