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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relationship between microalbuminuria indicated by the logarithm of the
albumin
index and the stage of diabetic retinopathy was investigated using 175 diabetic subjects. The relationship and its dependence on the duration and the age of onset of
diabetes
were analyzed statistically with logistic regression. In younger-onset subjects, microalbuminuria was strongly related to the stage of retinopathy, but in older-onset subjects, the relationship showed to lack. For each subject, the frequency of retinopathy was predicted by the estimated probability calculated with the regression model. When the critical probability was 50%, the sensitivity and specificity were 53.1% and 76.2%, respectively. These results indicated that the regression model using the
albumin
index might be a useful method to predict the frequency of diabetic retinopathy even without ophthalmoscopic examination.
...
PMID:[Statistical analysis of relationship between microalbuminuria and diabetic retinopathy]. 141 6
The increase in urinary
albumin
excretion rate (AER), a hallmark of both diabetic nephropathy and hypertension, has also been described in patients affected with diffuse psoriasis. The aim of this study was to investigate whether such an increase is independent of the coexistence of
diabetes
or hypertension and whether it may be related to the extension and severity of skin lesions. Median AER, determined by radioimmunoassay, was significantly higher in a group of 32 normotensive nondiabetic psoriatic patients than in 36 age- and sex-matched controls (9.6 vs. 5.3 micrograms/min; p = 0.0006). AER was related with grading of skin involvement (r = 0.65; p = 0.001); patients with the most widespread skin lesions (psoriasis area and severity index: PASI greater than 11) were characterized by a significantly raised median AER (14.9 micrograms/min) compared with those with PASI scores between 4 and 11 (9.8 micrograms/min) or less (5.6 micrograms/min) and controls (F = 10.58; p = 0.0001), independent of other covariates such as age, sex and blood pressure (p = 0.001). This latter finding was confirmed by the prevalence of microalbuminuria (AER greater than 10 micrograms/min) which was present in 2 out of 8 patients with PASI less than 4, 0 out of 12 patients with PASI ranging between 4 and 11 and in 5 out of 12 psoriatics with PASI greater than 11 (p = 0.038 by two-tailed Fisher's exact test).
...
PMID:Relation between urinary albumin excretion and skin involvement in patients with psoriasis. 142 37
The contribution of the preceding blood glucose level to glycated protein was theoretically analyzed using a linear kinetic model and was compared with experiments using streptozotocin-diabetic rats. We assumed that the glycation process can be described by one irreversible step and that the fraction of glycated protein is small. A formula based on these two assumptions showed that the level of glycated protein was proportional to the weighted mean blood glucose concentration in the preceding period and that the weight function was determined by the metabolic characteristics of each protein. For assessing the usefulness of the present formula, the value calculated for the response of glycated
albumin
(GA) to acute blood glucose change in streptozotocin-diabetic rats was compared with the data obtained under three experimental conditions. The calculated responses of GA showed a little more retardation than the observed data, but showed enough agreement with them.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 1992 Sep
PMID:The response of glycated albumin to blood glucose change in the circulation in streptozotocin-diabetic rats--comparison of theoretical values with experimental data. 1641 29
Our study compared the effects of an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (captopril) versus a calcium antagonist (nifedipine) on proteinuria and renal function in patients with diabetic nephropathy. A randomized follow-up study was designed. Type 2 diabetic patients, with established diabetic nephropathy (proteinuria greater than 0.5 g/24 h), were treated with nifedipine (10 patients, group A) or captopril (10 patients, group B) for 6 months. Arterial blood pressure, metabolic parameters, proteinuria and renal function were measured and compared. Mean percentage differences for glomerular filtration rate, renal plasma flow and filtration fraction between the two groups were calculated. No significant differences were observed in serum glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin (hemoglobin A1c), Na+, K+ or
albumin
in either group or between groups. Blood pressure decreased significantly with both treatments and mean blood pressure was significantly lower in group A compared with group B at 6 months (Mann-Whitney U-test, P = 0.03). Proteinuria was similar in both groups at randomization, but after 3 and 6 months of treatment significant reductions were observed only in the group treated with captopril (P less than 0.01). A significant decrease in filtration fraction was observed in group B with an increase in group A (Mann-Whitney U-test, P = 0.03). Multiple regression analysis identified the therapeutic agent administered as an independent variable for decrease in proteinuria. It is concluded that antihypertensive treatment with captopril, but not with nifedipine, reduced proteinuria in patients with diabetic nephropathy, although a better mean blood pressure was obtained with nifedipine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 1992 Sep
PMID:Comparative effects of captopril versus nifedipine on proteinuria and renal function of type 2 diabetic patients. 142 58
To evaluate the relationship between urinary
albumin
excretion and left ventricular hypertrophy in essential hypertension, we studied, cross-sectionally, 64 subjects with essential hypertension and no
diabetes
. Urinary
albumin
excretion and Sokolow index correlated significantly (r = 0.483; P = 0.0001). Five subjects were positive for microalbuminuria (> 30 mg/24 h) and Sokolow index (> 35 mm); 43 were negative for both, with a concordance rate of 77 percent (chi-squared test 11.1; P = 0.0009). Stepwise multivariate regression analysis indicated two independent determinants for urinary
albumin
excretion: Sokolow index (F = 18.29), and diastolic blood pressure (F = 12.23). The relationships between urinary
albumin
excretion, Sokolow index, and blood pressure were not different in the 18 subjects taking angiotensin I-converting enzyme inhibitors and in the 46 others. The close relationship between urinary
albumin
excretion and Sokolow index observed in this study suggests that left ventricular hypertrophy due to hypertension may account for the increased cardiovascular mortality observed in non diabetic subjects with microalbuminuria.
...
PMID:[Microalbuminuria and left ventricular hypertrophy in essential arterial hypertension. A study in non-diabetic patients]. 143 89
Urine
albumin
excretion was studied by two widely accepted methods in 210 patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and related to the mean of serial glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1) measurements made every 3 months during the previous 6 years. Microalbuminuria (
albumin
excretion rate > 20 micrograms/min) was present in 9.5 per cent of patients when defined by a 24-hour collection and 8.1 per cent of patients when defined by a timed overnight urine sample. Those with microalbuminuria, as estimated from a timed overnight urine sample, had a longer duration of
diabetes
but otherwise did not differ in age, duration of
diabetes
or arterial blood pressure from patients whose
albumin
excretion rate was 20 micrograms/min or less irrespective of the method of urine collection. The mean and the most recent HbA1 levels differed significantly between the normal and the microalbuminuric groups when defined by the 24-hour
albumin
excretion rate (p < 0.001, p < 0.01), but no significant difference between these groups was found when
albumin
excretion rates were calculated from the timed overnight urine sample. Albumin excretion rate, examined in relation to mean HbA1, increased significantly with worsening glycaemic control whether measured over 24 hours or overnight (p < 0.05, p < 0.01). These findings support an association between glycaemic control and microalbuminuria, but the correlation is weak, dependent on the method of urine collection and is just as good for a relatively short-term as for a long-term measure of average blood glucose.
...
PMID:The relationship between long-term glycaemic control and diabetic nephropathy. 143 68
Albumin excretion rate, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and kidney volume in obese patients and normal-weight controls were compared with body mass index (weight (kg)/height2 (m)) in 17 subjects. Body mass index varied from 21.5 to 48.0, the
albumin
excretion rate from 2.8 to 17.8 micrograms/min, and the kidney volume from 238 to 468 ml. Body mass index correlated significantly with
albumin
excretion rate and with kidney volume (p < 0.01), but not with the GFR. Neither the body mass index nor the
albumin
excretion rate showed any correlation with blood pressure. Albumin excretion rate in obese subjects could be as good an early predictor of complications as it is in patients with
diabetes mellitus
, and in the elderly.
...
PMID:Microalbuminuria in obesity. 143 3
Diabetic patients are at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, particularly when proteinuria is present. Lipoprotein(a)[Lp(a)] levels were assessed in 37 patients with insulin dependent (IDDM) and in 75 patients with non-insulin dependent (NIDDM)
diabetes
who showed varying degrees of proteinuria and glycaemic control. Median Lp(a) in 112 diabetic patients was significantly greater than in 116 healthy controls (113 vs 48 mg/L; p less than 0.01). 86 of the patients had first morning urine
albumin
concentration less than 30 mg/L (normoalbuminuria = NA), 16 patients 30-200 mg/L (microalbuminuria = MA) and ten patients greater than 200 mg/L (albuminuria = ALB). There was no significant difference in median Lp(a) concentration between the three groups (NA = 108, MA = 163, ALB = 98 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). No significant difference in median Lp(a) or NIDDM treated with oral agents and/or diet (120, 98, 115 mg/L respectively; p greater than 0.7). When the 86 NA patients were divided on the basis of median fructosamine concentration (357 mumol/L), no significant difference was found in median Lp(a) levels between those grouped below or above this median (98 mg/L vs 118 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). Across all diabetics studied there was no significant correlation present between Lp(a) and urinary protein or glycaemic control. These cross-sectional results suggest that median Lp(a) concentration is increased in both IDDM and NIDDM patients, but this increase is not related to the degree of proteinuria or short-term glycaemic control.
...
PMID:Lipoprotein(a) concentration in diabetes: relationship to proteinuria and diabetes control. 144 18
A quantitative analysis of the molecular weight (MW) profile of urinary protein by SDS-PAGE was performed in streptozotocin (STZ)-injected, non-ketotic diabetic rats (DM group), diabetic rats receiving dipyridamole (DM-DIP group), normal rats (C group) and STZ-injected rats with near-normal glycemia due to insulin treatment (DM-INSULIN group). In the DM group, decrease of a small MW protein (SMWP) (MW 19.5 k) was found at 2.5 weeks, and an increase of larger MW proteins (LMWP) (MW 68 [
albumin
], 55 and 29 k) together with a decrease of SMWPs (MW 19.5 and 15 k) was found at 15 weeks, as compared to the C group: the MW profile of urinary protein in the DM-INSULIN and C groups was indistinguishable. At 15 weeks, creatinine clearance (Ccr) was significantly depressed and an increase in the mesangial matrix with electron dense deposits was evident in the DM group. The urinary protein abnormalities were partially corrected and the reduction of Ccr was absent in the DM-DIP group with no effect on glomerular morphology. STZ-induced
diabetes
in rats is accompanied by a reduction of urinary SMWP, and a subsequent increase of LMWP and depression of Ccr: dipyridamole ameliorates urinary protein abnormalities and prevents the reduction of Ccr.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 1992 Oct
PMID:Abnormal molecular weight profile of urinary protein in rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes. 144 72
Twenty-four hour urinary
albumin
concentrations were measured in 113 (mean age 51.1 years) non-insulin-dependent (NIDDM) Nigerian diabetics (50 males, 63 females). A high prevalence of microalbuminuria (> or = 30 mg/24 hour) was observed in male (54%) as well as female diabetics (59%). Microalbuminuria was also observed in a high proportion of diabetics (52%) with a short duration (< 5 years) of disease. Elevated blood pressure and retinopathy were present in 41% and 16% of patients respectively. Among the 49 patients with normoalbuminuria (< 30 mg/24 hour), six (12%) had retinopathy compared with 12 (18%) in the microalbuminuria group. Diastolic blood pressure levels were significantly higher (P < 0.01) in male diabetics with retinopathy but this was not associated with higher albuminuria. Urinary
albumin
concentrations were not influenced by elevated blood pressure. There were no significant differences in age, duration of
diabetes
, blood pressure or serum creatinine between diabetics with and without microalbuminuria. These results suggest that though there is a high prevalence of microalbuminuria amongst NIDDM Nigerian diabetics it may not predict retinopathy and occurs independently of either glycaemic control or elevated blood pressure levels.
...
PMID:Microalbuminuria in non-insulin-dependent (type 2) Nigerian diabetics: relation to glycaemic control, blood pressure and retinopathy. 144 4
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