Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lewis rats were treated with streptozotocin to induce hyperglycemia and glycosuria (400-600 mg/dl). Transplantation of approximately 1,000 dissociated islets obtained from collagenase-treated pancreases from 4 donors will promptly correct induced diabetes. Functional survival of islet allografts is related to genetic disparity between donor and recipient strains. In the closely matched Fisher-to-Lewis combination, islets functioned for a mean of 4.2+/-1 days while in the AgB-incompatible Wistar/Furth-to-Lewis combination, islets functioned for a mean of only 2.1+/-0.5 days. Treatment of recipients with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) for 3 days extended islet survival to a mean of 11.8 +/- 1.9 days in the Wistar/Furth-to-Lewis combination and to as long as 184+/-87.5 days in the Fischer-to-Lewis combination. ATG may have a role in trials of clinical islet transplants.
Nephron 1978
PMID:Effect of antithymocyte globulin on islet of Langerhans transplantation. 10 12

Subcutaneous adipose tissue was obtained from 9 patients with untreated diabetes mellitus and from 13 obese nondiabetics. After incubation with isoprenaline or noradrenaline, glycerol release and tissue cyclic AMP (cAMP) were determined. Basal glycerol release was twice as rapid from the diabetic adipose tissue. With isoprenaline, the cAMP concentration and the glycerol production was significantly higher in the diabetic adipose tissue. Noradrenaline did not increase glycerol production or cAMP concentration in the diabetic adipose tissue. Subcutaneous adipose tissue was also removed from the diabetics after antidiabetic treatment. Basal lipolysis was significantly reduced and noradrenaline significantly increased both glycerol release and cAMP production. With isoprenaline, cAMP production and glycerol release were significantly less after antidiabetic treatment than in the untreated state. The data provide evidence for increased alpha- as well as beta-adrenergic receptor sensitivity in human subcutaneous adipose tissue of untreated diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Abnormalities in the adrenergic control and the rate of lipolysis in isolated human subcutaneous adipose tissue in diabetes mellitus. 18 19

The rate of insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin secretion was measured from isolated rat islets maintained in a perifusion system. The effect of norepinephrine (NE) was simultaneously determined on the release rate of all three hormones. Norepinephrine was employed at an acute dose of 10 micrometers and in graded doses from 1 nM to 10 micrometers in the presence of high (22 mM) and low (1.4 mM) glucose conditions, insulin secretion was maximally inhibited at 10 micrometers NE concentration and was significantly depressed at 100 mM NE concentration. Under both high and low glucose conditions, glucagon release was maximally stimulated at 10 micrometers NE concentration and was significantly elevated at 10 nM NE concentration. Under high and low glucose conditions, somatostatin release was inhibited by 10 micrometers NE concentration and was significantly depressed at 100 nM NE concentration. During the initial maximal stimulation of glucagon, NE inhibition of somatostatin and insulin was prevented, possibly by the high level of glucagon released. A paracrine effect of glucagon on beta and delta cells is proposed.
Diabetes 1979 Oct
PMID:Effect of norepinephrine on insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin secretion in isolated perifused rat islets. 38 55

In a group of 48 patients with a renal cadaveric allograft 38 acute rejection episodes were treated by increasing the daily prednisolone doses to 300 mg the first day, 200 mg the second day and 100 mg the third day, gradually tapering down over a matter of weeks. In a second group of 48 patients 39 acute rejections were treated by 1 g of methylprednisolone intravenously on alternate days with a maximum of four injections. Rejection treatment was successful in 26 of 38 in the first group (68%) and in 30 of 38 in the second group (76%). Complications such as gastrointestinal bleeding, aseptic necrosis and diabetes were more frequent in the first series.
Nephron 1976
PMID:High intravenous doses of methylprednisolone for acute cadaveric renal allograft rejection. 76 73

Changes in renal function and structure are frequently observed in patients with diabetes mellitus. In the early phases of the disease, alterations in glomerular filtration rate, renal plasma flow, glomerular permeability and tubular capacity for glucose reabsorption occur. In the late stages of juvenile onset diabetes, renal failure is a common cause of death. For this reason, increasing attention is being paid to the possibility of long-term dialysis and renal transplantation in these patients. The kidneys play an important role in regulating insulin metabolism. The renal arteriovenous difference is approximately 30-45% and a linear relationship exists between the arterial insulin level and the renal arteriovenous concentration difference. The renal extraction of insulin is 200 ml/min in man, and it is estimated that 6-8 U are removed and degraded by the kidney in 24 h. The quantity of insulin in urine is small. However, its clearance is relatively constant over a wide range of serum concentrations and is 0.15-0.5 ml/min. The mean basal insulin excretion is 3.6 muU/mg creatinine, and a fourfold rise occurs following a glucose load. The urinary insulin values in neonates, children and patients with diabetes and renal failure are reviewed. In diabetic patients, progressive renal disease is accompanied by decreasing insulin requirements. In contrast, nondiabetic patients who develop renal failure frequently show abnormalities in carbohydrate metabolism, the commonest of which is a pseudodiabetic state.
Nephron 1975
PMID:Insulin and the kidney. 110 Oct 90

Norepinephrine, epinephrine, and dopamine concentrations were studied in the cardiovscular system of postmortem material obtained from six long-term diabetics and six control subjects. Norepinephrine concentration was considerably reduced in the cardiovascular system of the diabetic patients. The mean norepinephrine concentration in the apex of the heart, the radial artery, the posterior tibial artery, and the femoral artery in the diabetics averaged 6, 9, 12, and 20 per cent, respectively, of the corresponding mean values in the controls. Epinephrine was present in the cardiovascular system in the controls but in small amounts in comparision with norepinephrine. There was no correlation between the epinephrine and the norepinephrine concentrations in the tissue. In the diabetics the epinephrine concentration in the heart and in the arteries did not differ from the values obtained in the controls. The dopamine concentration averaged 11 per cent of the norepinephrine concentration in the cardiovascular system in the controls. There was a strong correlation between tissue concentrations of dopamine and of norepinephrine. In the diabetics the dopamine concentration was reduced, but relatively less than that of norepinephrine, and constituted 53 per cent of the norepinephrine concentration. It is suggested that the depletion of the norepinephrine stores in the heart in diabetic patients may in part be responsible for their reduced survival rate in acute myocardial infarction.
Diabetes 1976 Jan
PMID:Norepinephrine, epinephrine, and dopamine contents of the cardiovascular system in long-term diabetics. 124 67

The aim of this study was to clarify whether or not arachidonic acid metabolic disorders are caused by a substrate inavailability and whether such disorders might contribute to circulatory disturbances in the diabetic myocardium. Norepinephrine induced a decrease in the conductivity of both coronary arterial bed and myocardial microcirculation in alloxan-diabetic dogs. It was markedly (p less than 0.05) attenuated both by indomethacin and acetylsalicylic acid pretreatments indicating an imbalance among the vasoactive prostanoids in diabetes. TXA2 release from the diabetic coronary rings was found to be elevated and could be normalized after the blockade of vascular adrenoceptors by phentolamine (p less than 0.05). PGI2 synthesis was also enhanced by adrenergic blockade in the diabetic arterial rings. After pretreatment with 14C arachidonic acid, in order to measure substrate availability, the arachidonic acid metabolic rate was less in the diabetic coronary arteries than in healty vessels (p less than 0.05). Ten mumol/l norepinephrine decreased arachidonic acid metabolism in the presence of prelabelled substrate in the diabetic animals, compared to an increase observed in metabolically healthy dogs. Therefore diabetes appears to diminish arachidonic acid metabolism and uptake independent of adrenoceptors and to induce an imbalance between vasoconstrictor and vasodilator cyclooxygenase products, resulting in elevated TXA2 release controlled by adrenergic mechanisms which may contribute to an impairment in myocardial microcirculation.
...
PMID:Disturbed lipid metabolism in diabetic coronary vessels. 132 Jul 34

The sympathetic nervous system may contribute to excessive hepatic glucose output in Type 2 (non-insulin dependent) diabetes mellitus and could be implicated in the interrelated problem of hypertension. The aim of these studies was to determine whether subjects with Type 2 diabetes had normal sensitivity (compared with age- and weight-matched non-diabetic subjects) to noradrenaline infusion (60 ng.kg-1.min-1 for 60 min) and to compare the responses with oral tyramine administration (800 mg), and psychological stress (using competitive computer games). Noradrenaline infusion caused significantly greater plasma glucose (mean increment 2.1 +/- 0.4 vs 0.6 +/- 0.1 mmol/l, p less than 0.005) and pressor responses (mean systolic increment 21 +/- 3 vs 11 +/- 1 mmHg, p less than 0.02) in the diabetic subjects. The excessive glycaemia was due to increased hepatic glucose output rather than reduced glucose disposal. Tyramine administration caused significantly increased hepatic glucose output and plasma glucose levels, but with similar responses in the diabetic and non-diabetic subjects; the pulse and pressor responses were also similar between the groups. The psychological stressor induced significant increases in pulse, blood pressure and non-esterified fatty acid levels in the combined group of subjects (p less than 0.01) but did not influence plasma glucose levels in either diabetic or non-diabetic subjects. We conclude that pharmacologically-induced sympathetic nervous stimulation can induce hyperglycaemia. Subjects with uncomplicated Type 2 diabetes have increased sensitivity to exogenous noradrenaline but may not hyperrespond to endogenous sympathetic activation.
...
PMID:The effects of sympathetic nervous system activation and psychological stress on glucose metabolism and blood pressure in subjects with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 139 78

A 66-year-old white man presented with severe chronic renal failure. He had no past or present symptomatic glucose intolerance nor a family history of diabetes mellitus. Several fasting plasma glucose determinations, hemoglobin Alc and an oral glucose tolerance test were normal. Funduscopic ophthalmoscopy and retinal fluorescein angiography did not demonstrate diabetic retinopathy. The kidney biopsy showed nodular diabetic nephropathy, with increased mesangial matrix, thickened glomerular basement membrane, and afferent and efferent glomerular arteriolar hyalinization. The diagnosis of nodular diabetic nephropathy was made in this patient in the absence of past or present or familial evidence of diabetes mellitus.
Nephron 1992
PMID:Nodular diabetic glomerulosclerosis without diabetes mellitus. 143 40

Patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus have an increased mortality and morbidity due to vascular complications. Nitric oxide from the vascular endothelium contributes to the control of normal vascular tone, and endothelial dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic vascular disease. In this study we have examined basal and stimulated nitric oxide-mediated vasodilatation in insulin-dependent diabetics and age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Drugs were infused locally into the brachial artery and forearm blood flow measured using venous occlusion plethysmography. Noradrenaline and NG-monomethyl-L-arginine produced similar reductions in resting forearm blood flow in healthy controls. However, in the diabetics, NG-monomethyl-L-arginine was significantly less effective than noradrenaline. Comparing between groups, the response to NG-monomethyl-L-arginine was also significantly less in the diabetics compared with the healthy controls. The response to sodium nitroprusside was significantly less in the diabetics compared with the healthy controls, whereas the responses to both acetylcholine and verapamil were the same in the two groups. The results provide evidence for an abnormality of basal nitric oxide-mediated dilatation in the forearm arterial bed of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and suggest that the vascular smooth muscle is less sensitive to nitric oxide.
...
PMID:Inhibition and stimulation of nitric oxide synthesis in the human forearm arterial bed of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. 146 3


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>