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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Kwashiorkor, the human disease of protein-energy malnutrition, has been implicated in the aetiology of malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus, a form of diabetes not uncommon in developing countries. We have previously demonstrated that temporary protein-energy malnutrition in young rats causes a persisting impairment of insulin secretion. The present study investigates whether this secretory deficiency is accompanied by structural alterations of the endocrine pancreas. Three-week-old rats were weaned onto semi-synthetic diets containing either 15% or 5% protein and these diets were maintained for 3 weeks. From 6 weeks of age all rats were fed a commercial chow containing 18% protein. The endocrine pancreas was investigated by light and electron microscopic morphometry at 3, 6 and 12 weeks of age. In rats not subjected to protein-energy malnutrition there was a progressive increase, with age, of total pancreatic Beta-cell weight and individual Beta-cell size. In 6-week-old rats fed the low protein diet total pancreatic Beta-cell weight and individual Beta-cell size were diminished. In 12-week-old rats previously fed the low protein diet total Beta-cell weight remained lower compared to control rats. It is concluded that protein-energy malnutrition early in life may result in a diminished reserve for insulin production. This may predispose to glucose intolerance or even diabetes in situations with an increased insulin demand.
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PMID:Persistent reduction of pancreatic beta-cell mass after a limited period of protein-energy malnutrition in the young rat. 145 50

Histopathological changes in rat pancreas were induced by cyclic periods of experimental malnutrition or by cassava (manioc) feeding for 11 weeks. Decline of body weight was correlated with decrease in testicular fat pad weight as a measure of body fat stores. A marked decrease in pancreatic weight in the cassava-fed group was correlated with shrinkage of acinar structures and degenerative features in exocrine pancreas. In the malnutrition group vacuolisation and loss of tissue architecture were observed in some parts of the organ. No signs of ductal obstruction as a tentative cause of pancreatic pathology after malnutrition could be detected. Loss of islets tissue was occasionally seen in degenerative areas. It is concluded that histopathological changes in exocrine pancreas result from malnutrition and cassava feeding differentially and precede ultimate degenerative processes of pancreas endocrine tissue. Tropical malnutrition type diabetes and low protein related diabetes may in their etiology be different entities, but may coincide in practice and aggravate each other to yield severe and irreversible morbidity.
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PMID:Histopathological changes in rat pancreas after fasting and cassava feeding. 145 49

We analyze 40 episodes of unsuspected hypoglycemia (glycemia < or = 3.30 mmol/l) in 36 in patients during seven months in a tertiary hospital. Only 22% of them were diabetics, the rest had other risk-factors such as malnutrition (47%), infections (47%), liver diseases (22%), renal failure (19%) or neoplasias (17%). Only 14% of the subjects had symptoms related to hypoglycemia, and only 27% received treatment. There were no significative differences between those patients over 65 years and the younger ones. Hypoglycemia was not the apparent cause of death in any of the patients, but hospital mortality of these patients was 25%, and it was related with the number of risk factors. We conclude that hypoglycemia in hospitalized patients is often unnoticed, as it appears with diseases other than diabetes, and that it is related with a high mortality in patients with severe diseases.
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PMID:[Unexpected hypoglycemia in hospitalized patients]. 147 Jul 18

Bacterial translocation is defined as the passage of viable bacteria from the gastrointestinal tract to extraintestinal sites, such as the mesenteric lymph node complex, liver, spleen, kidney, and blood. The major mechanisms promoting bacterial translocation in animal models are: (a) disruption of the ecologic equilibrium to allow intestinal bacterial overgrowth, (b) deficiencies in host immune defenses, and (c) increased permeability of the intestinal mucosal barrier. These mechanisms can act in concert to promote synergistically the systemic spread of indigenous translocating bacteria to cause lethal sepsis. Studies are presented of attempts to delineate the mechanisms promoting bacterial translocation utilizing animal models of intestinal bacterial overgrowth, immunosuppression, T-cell deficiencies, solid tumors, leukemia, diabetes, endotoxemia, hemorrhagic shock, thermal injury, bowel obstruction, bile duct ligation, protein malnutrition and parenteral nutrition. Also described are the use of selective antibiotic decontamination or nonspecific macrophage immunomodulators in attempts to reduce bacterial translocation from the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Bacterial translocation from the gastrointestinal tract. 147 1

The aim of the study is to evaluate thyroid serum levels in a geriatric community to confirm the presence of a low T3 syndrome during normal ageing. The authors consider 413 subjects (125 male and 288 female) admitted to our Geriatric Division. The group affected by thyroid and extrathyroid disease (such us malnutrition, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, etc.) was withdrawn. In the selected patients (271) was operated a statistical evaluation to correlate the hormonal parameters (T3, T4, TSH, FT3, FT4) with age and sex. According to international literature, we confirm a progressive T4 and FT4 reduction (p less than 0.05) during ageing, both in male and in female. These data range within normal values. On the contrary, TSH shows no modifications with age and sex. Unlike all other parameters, T3 presents a more evident decrement with age, confirming a low T3 syndrome.
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PMID:[Profile of thyroid hormones in aging: evaluation of a hospitalized elderly population]. 149 52

In 1919, glucose intolerance became the earliest recognized metabolic abnormality in cancer patients. Prior to the development of severe malnutrition, colon, gastric, sarcoma, endometrial, prostate, localized head, neck, and lung cancer patients had many of the metabolic abnormalities of type II (noninsulin dependent) diabetes mellitus. These metabolic abnormalities include glucose intolerance, an increase in both hepatic glucose production (HGP) and glucose recycling, and insulin resistance. In a study of over 600 cancer patients, a diabetic pattern of glucose tolerance test was noted in over one-third of the patients. An increased rate of HGP, commonly seen in diabetics, has been noted in almost all types of cancer patients studied to date. Etiology of the increased glucose production in the cancer patient is not known, but abnormalities in the counter regulatory hormones, especially growth hormone, may contribute to the development of abnormal glucose metabolism. A second possible stimulus for the increase in HGP could be the glucose needs of the tumor. Abnormally high glucose utilization rates in small amounts of tumor tissue have recently been described. This suggests that small tumors may have large needs for glucose calories. An increase in anaerobic glycolysis in the tumor tissue can increase lactate production in the tumor-bearing human, thus supplying substrate to the liver to increase glucose production rates. In this paper, the nature of abnormal glucose metabolism in cancer patients is described.
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PMID:A review of cancer cachexia and abnormal glucose metabolism in humans with cancer. 150 7

Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) has become a commonly performed procedure to provide nutritional support to chronically ill patients. Following a PEG-related death, we retrospectively reviewed our complication rate with that of the published values. In the past 48 months at Madigan Army Medical Center and Eisenhower Army Medical Center, 147 PEGs have been performed. We have had 20 minor complications and 5 major complications, with 2 reported deaths directly related to the procedure. Minor complications included 14 cases of localized cellulitis and 5 cases of prolonged ileus. The major complications included two cases of necrotizing fasciitis (both fatal), two cases of tube extubation within 24 hours, both resulting in surgical gastrostomy, and one bowel obstruction requiring laparotomy. Both patients who developed necrotizing fasciitis had several predisposing factors including diabetes, malnutrition, obesity, and long-term hospitalization. In conclusion, we believe PEG is an extremely valuable procedure which should be utilized with caution in the immunocompromised or morbidly obese patient.
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PMID:Complications of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. 152 71

In a comparative study of tropical chronic pancreatitis (TCP) and alcoholic chronic pancreatitis (ACP) occurring in the same population, we analyzed the clinical profile of 50 patients of ACP seen over the past 3 years at our centers and compared this with the profile of our TCP patients. A majority (75%) of patients in both groups belonged to Tamil Nadu and 90% had never consumed cassava. Whereas TCP occurred in young subjects of both sexes, ACP patients were all males and presented at an older age. The frequency of pain, diabetes, and pancreatic calcification was similar in the two groups. Patients in both groups were lean, but signs of severe malnutrition were rare. Prediabetic patients had normal body mass index. There were striking differences in radiological appearance of pancreatic calculi in TCP and ACP. Malignancy of the pancreas was present in three patients with TCP. Benign bile duct stenosis was seen in three patients with ACP but not in TCP. Compared to ACP seen in the West, our ACP patients had a shorter duration of symptoms in spite of having advanced disease. TCP and ACP have distinct clinical profiles and it is possible that some environmental factors may hasten the progress of ACP in the tropics.
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PMID:Comparative study of the clinical profiles of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis and tropical chronic pancreatitis in Tamil Nadu, south India. 155 46

There are few reports on the genetic, immunological and nutritional characteristics of insulin-using youth-onset diabetes mellitus, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus (MRDM) in Korea. Among 1266 hospitalized Korean diabetics, 29 (2.3%) were IDDM and 84 (6.6%) were MRDM. A diabetes history of first-relatives (28.6%) was more frequently found in the MRDM group than in the IDDM (14.8) and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) (19.0%) groups. HLA-DR4 was more common among IDDM (54.2%) and MRDM (52.4%) patients than controls (26.3%), and HLA-DR3 was more common among only IDDM patients (29.2%) than controls (10.9%). Conventional islet-cell antibodies were detected in 8 of 15 IDDM patients tested (53.3%) and in 11 of 22 MRDM patients (50.0%). MRDM patients had higher serum basal (1.02 +/- 0.51 ng/ml) and peak (1.44 +/- 0.76 ng/ml) C-peptide concentrations than IDDM patients, but lower concentrations than NIDDM patients. Before the onset of diabetes, the calorie intake of 21 MRDM patients assessed was 63.1% of the daily requirement and the intake of carbohydrate, protein and fat was 71.7%, 55.9% and 39.8%, respectively. In summary, our data suggest that IDDM in Korea is associated with HLA-DR3 or HLA-DR4, indicating a risk for IDDM in Western societies; furthermore, MRDM has a history of undernutrition at the preonset period and is also associated with HLA-DR4. It might be also concluded that MRDM in Korea is another expression of IDDM caused by the shortage of some nutrients for the structural and/or functional maintenance of pancreatic beta-cells.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1992 Apr
PMID:Immunogenetic and nutritional profile in insulin-using youth-onset diabetics in Korea. 157 33

J type diabetes is grouped as a subtype of type III or malnutrition-related diabetes, known as protein-deficient pancreatic diabetes, (PDPD). J type diabetes has not been reported recently, but a clinical picture called phasic insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (PIDDM) has been elaborated in Jamaica, the same home country of PDRD and appears to be a "formes frustes" syndrome. The following comparative studies were performed on a group of diabetic patients and normal controls: insulin receptor binding; renal, hepatic, and pancreatic function; and abdominal ultrasonography. The results show a considerably decreased white and red blood cell binding to insulin (P less than .05), extensive kidney damage (P less than .05), and increased pancreatic echogenicity in PIDDM, supporting a separate identity of this latter syndrome from types I and II diabetes mellitus. Also, the features of relative insulin resistance, absence of ketosis even in the presence of severe hyperglycemia, and intermittent insulin requirement suggests that PIDDM, J type diabetes, and PDPD are one and the same syndrome.
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PMID:J type diabetes revisited. 162 24


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