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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diabetes
leads to periodic fluctuations in levels of nutrients and cyclic nucleotides in plasma and various tissues. Variations in cyclic nucleotide levels, periods of nutrient elevation and surges of insulin combine to stimulate growth. Growth stimulation may be associated with the promotional phase of
carcinogenesis
.
Diabetes
should therefore predispose the individual to
carcinogenesis
and limited epidemiological data available suggest that it does.
...
PMID:Diabetes and cancer: a postulated relationship. 39 24
The following species; superoxide (O2-.), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), hydroxyl radical (.OH) and singlet oxygen (1O2), are generally called as reactive oxygen species (ROS). These species have been suggested to play important roles in various diseases caused by oxygen toxicity such as ischemia,
carcinogenesis
, inflammation,
diabetes
and aging. During the past two decades, considerable interests have been focused on chemical and biological research of ROS. We have also reported about the research results on ROS, which can be classified as following below; 1) chemical reactivities of O2-., 2) formation and toxicity of 1O2, 3) chemical reactivities of .OH, 4) enzyme mechanism of xanthine oxidase, 5) development of the compounds which induce the formation of O2-. and H2O2 in living cells and 6) development of superoxide dismutase mimics. These studies are reviewed from the standpoint of both chemical and biological interests.
...
PMID:[Chemical and biochemical studies on reactivities, formations and toxicities of reactive oxygen species]. 164 54
The descriptive and analytical epidemiology of endometrial cancer is reviewed. Over the last few decades, age-standardized incidence rates have been rising in several countries. The rise has been even greater in terms of absolute numbers of cases, and hence public health implications, due to the aging of the population. Although endometrial cancer rates were found to be higher in richer countries and urban populations, there is now evidence of some changes in the socioeconomic determinants of the disease in developed countries. In etiological terms, any factor that increases exposure to unopposed estrogens (such as menopausal replacement treatment, obesity, and irregular menstrual cycles) tends to increase the risk of the disease, while factors that decrease exposure to estrogens or increase progesterone levels (such as oral contraceptives or smoking) tend to be protective. Less well defined, or more difficult to explain in biological terms, is the role of other factors, such as births, miscarriages, or
diabetes
and hypertension, and only suggestive evidence is available on diet from analytical epidemiology. The data reviewed herein are discussed in terms of models of
carcinogenesis
, as well as attributable risks and public health implications.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of endometrial cancer. 202 52
The renal tumor promoting activity of barbital sodium (BBNa) and the role of renal tubular cell hyperplasia in tumor promotion following initiation with streptozotocin (STZ) was investigated. Six week old male F344/NCr rats were given STZ as a single i.p. injection of 50 mg/kg body wt and beginning 2 weeks later were fed diets containing 0 or 4000 p.p.m. of BBNa until they were killed at 33, 52 or 72 experimental weeks for histological evaluation and determination of levels of renal DNA synthesis by bromodeoxyuridine (Brdu) immunohistochemistry. A promoting effect on renal
carcinogenesis
was found by 72 weeks, but not at 33 or 52 weeks, confirming that prolonged administration of BBNa is necessary to promote renal tubular cell neoplasms. The promoting effect was evident as a higher incidence of large renal tubular tumors after 52 weeks, rather than an increase in number of dysplastic tubules, putative preneoplastic lesions. These findings suggest that the targets for the promoting activity of BBNa may be dysplastic lesions which may progress to tumors. Detailed examination by the step section technique through the entire kidneys revealed that STZ or BBNa administration induced a high incidence of putative preneoplastic renal tubular lesions (dysplasias) which seemed to be derived from the P1 or P2 segment of the nephron, also a site of high Brdu labeling index (LI) associated with BBNa toxicity. STZ administration was also associated with attenuation of BBNa-induced nephropathy and with
diabetes
from pancreatic islet degeneration and atrophy. The reduction in severity of nephropathy was correlated with a reduction in the LI of the renal cortical and medullary tubules, but not with the renal tumor incidence. These results indicate that decreased DNA synthesis in target cells does not eliminate tumor promoting activity in renal tubular epithelium. In addition, BBNa alone induced papillomas of the transitional epithelium of the renal pelvis and renal tubular cell adenomas.
Carcinogenesis
1990 Dec
PMID:Amelioration of sodium barbital-induced nephropathy and regenerative tubular hyperplasia after a single injection of streptozotocin does not abolish the renal tumor promoting effect of barbital sodium in male F344/NC4 rats. 214 84
Previous studies in our laboratory have demonstrated that the beta-cell toxin streptozotocin (STZ) inhibits the development of exocrine pancreatic cancer in the hamster when STZ is administered prior to treatment with the pancreatic carcinogen N-nitrosobis(2-oxopropyl)amine (BOP). Because the administration of STZ leads to
diabetes
, we wished to determine whether the presence of
diabetes
was important in the inhibitory effect of STZ on pancreatic
carcinogenesis
or whether STZ acted through a mechanism unrelated to
diabetes
, perhaps by a direct toxic effect on tumor precursor cells. Whole pancreas transplantation was used to create a two-pancreas hamster model to test this hypothesis. The study demonstrated that (1) STZ inhibits the induction of pancreatic cancer in the hamster when given prior to BOP and (2) the inhibitory effect of STZ was demonstrable only when
diabetes
was present. The inhibitory effect of STZ appears to be systemic, related to
diabetes
, and not a direct effect on the pancreas.
...
PMID:Importance of diabetes in inhibition of pancreatic cancer by streptozotocin. 252 87
Dehydroepiandrosterone (3 beta-hydroxy-5-androsten-17-one; DHEA) and its conjugates are abundant circulating steroids that originate largely from the adrenal cortex. Their levels decline profoundly with age in human beings of both sexes, as the incidence of most cancers rises. Low levels of these steroids have been associated with the presence and risk of development of cancer. Administration of DHEA to rodents produces protection against spontaneous tumors and chemical carcinogenesis, suppresses weight gain without significantly affecting food intake, ameliorates the severity of
diabetes
in genetically diabetic mice, and restrains autoimmune processes. DHEA and related steroids also depress the mitogenic effects of carcinogens, tumor promoters and plant lectins, and block viral and carcinogen-induced cell transformations. DHEA and certain congeners are also potent and quite specific inhibitors of mammalian glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenases. We have observed that the conversion of 3T3-L1 and 3T3-F442A preadipocyte clones to the adipocyte phenotype, in response to appropriate differentiation stimuli (fetal calf serum, insulin, dexamethasone, and 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine), is blocked by DHEA and other steroidal inhibitors of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The structural requirements for blocking adipocyte differentiation and for inhibiting glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase are closely correlated. Evidence is reviewed suggesting that the inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is central to the anticarcinogenic and differentiation-blocking actions of DHEA and related steroids. The 3T3 preadipocyte clones provide a valuable system for the analysis of the mechanisms of the effects of DHEA on growth, differentiation and
carcinogenesis
.
...
PMID:Modulation of growth, differentiation and carcinogenesis by dehydroepiandrosterone. 296 Jan 33
Clinical studies suggest that
diabetes mellitus
may predispose to the development of pancreatic cancer. The current study investigated the effect of experimental
diabetes
on the susceptibility of the Syrian hamster to the induction of exocrine pancreatic carcinoma by the carcinogen BOP.
Diabetes
was induced with the B-cell toxin streptozotocin. Three groups of animals were studied: nondiabetic control animals and animals with streptozotocin-induced
diabetes
, and a third group of animals in which the diabetogenic effect of streptozotocin was blocked with nicotinamide. Streptozotocin-induced
diabetes
significantly inhibited the induction of pancreatic carcinoma by BOP, decreasing the incidence of carcinoma to 24 percent compared with an incidence of 75 percent in nondiabetic control animals (p less than 0.002). In diabetic animals, the degree of inhibition of
carcinogenesis
paralleled the severity of the
diabetes
. Blocking the diabetogenic effect of streptozotocin with nicotinamide restored the incidence of induced invasive pancreatic carcinoma to that occurring in nondiabetic control animals. In the hamster model,
diabetes
appears to have a strong influence on susceptibility to the development of pancreatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Influence of diabetes on susceptibility to experimental pancreatic cancer. 296 53
Epidemiological data from different populations have suggested positive relationships between the incidence of colon cancer and meat and fat intake and a negative relationship with dietary fiber consumption. Within population comparisons have been less clearcut. Current theories on colonic
carcinogenesis
in man involve increased concentrations of bile acids and their metabolites, alterations in colonic pH, low Ca++, raised NH3 and long chain fatty acid levels, and alterations in bacterial numbers, type, and metabolic capabilities. The many laboratory studies in rats have been difficult to interpret since powerful initiators of
carcinogenesis
are always required and this rather than the promotion of spontaneous neoplastic change is the sine qua non for tumor growth in this situation. The current dilemma highlights the lack of knowledge of most aspects of human colonic physiology. Until these issues are more clearly resolved the epidemiological leads would point to low fat diets rich in less processed starchy foods with increased fiber as possible protection. Such advice is in common with the pronouncements of heart foundations,
diabetes
associations, and recommendations of official bodies to the general public.
...
PMID:Cancer risk: possible protective role of high carbohydrate high fiber diets. 302 Sep 71
Although no absolute certainty exists about the role of nutrition in the etiology of cancer, many facts in favor of the relationship became available during the last decades. Correlation studies, experimental work and to a lesser extent case-control studies made it possible to clarify the role of certain nutrients and foods in
carcinogenesis
. The most important cancer sites where nutrition could play a role are esophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, prostate and breast. Esophageal cancer is of a very complex etiology, in which alcohol intake plays an important role, at least in western countries. The cancer-promoting properties of alcohol intake are enhanced by smoking. Three factors from nutrition are probably related to stomach cancer, namely salt, nitrate/nitrite and vitamin C. Salt is caustic to the stomach mucosa, resulting in atrophic gastritis. Salt is also co-carcinogenic and stomach cancer-promoting in experimental animals. Nitrate is probably important at the stage of atrophic gastritis, where bacterial overgrowth, due to the high pH, converts nitrates in nitrites, making the loco synthesis possible of potent nitrosocarcinogens. Vitamin C inhibits the latter step. The epidemiological evidence for the role of those factors is provided. The most important among them is the strong and consistent association of stomach cancer mortality with stroke. Rectum, colon, prostate and breast cancer are related in some way to fat intake. They all seem positively related to saturated fat intake, whereas breast cancer is probably also promoted by polyunsaturated fat intake. However, polyunsaturated fat seems to be without effect on rectum cancer. Colon and prostate cancer are probably also influenced by polyunsaturated fat but to a lesser degree than breast cancer. An important argument for this are the positive ecological correlations between changes in rectum, colon and breast cancer mortality from 1968 on, and changes occurring in coronary heart diseases, stroke and
diabetes
mortality. Those six types of mortality are decreasing, or only slightly increasing in the USA, Belgium, France, the Netherlands, etc. They are strongly increasing in East European countries. The intake of saturated fat has generally decreased in the first group of countries, and has markedly increased in the second group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Nutrition and cancer. 353 16
Castrate female rats given weekly applications of DMBA to the genital tract and treated additionally with growth hormone, insulin or alloxan (to induce
diabetes
) are heavier and have more sarcomatous and epithelial cervico-vaginal neoplasms than intact animals under the same experimental conditions. Promotion of
carcinogenesis
and gain in body weight are independent phenomena caused by castration in the medicated rats. Growth hormone is most effective in enhancing body weight in all animals, but least as regards tumour formation. It reduces the incidence of sarcomas in intacts, but raises that of epithelial neoplasms, and promotes both types of neoplasms in castrates. The highest incidence of cervico-vaginal epithelial and sarcomatous tumours occurs in spayed diabetics.Squamous celled epitheliomas of the vulva are not affected by castration or additional medication, while basal celled neoplasms tend to be more frequent in intacts than in castrates and particularly numerous in intact failed diabetics. Vulval sarcomas are usually rare but are increased in numbers in diabetic and in insulin treated intacts.Granular myoblastomas of the cervico-vaginal tract occur in intacts only and particularly in diabetics and those medicated with growth hormone or insulin.
...
PMID:The effect of growth hormone, insulin and alloxan-induced diabetes on carcinogenesis in the genital tract of intact and castrate female rats. 433 34
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