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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report unusually high concentrations of free fatty acids and glycerol in sera of patients with adult-onset
diabetes
, and the accompanying alterations in
creatine kinase
isoenzyme MM patterns associated with such patients. The serum samples with increased free fatty acids also showed increased electrophoretic movement of the MM isoenzyme on cellulose acetate membranes. Fatty acid concentrations found in such samples averaged 9.88 +/- 5.65 (SD) meq/L and the average glycerol concentration was 153 +/- 115 (SD) mg/L. The serum glycerol concentrations correlated with those of the free fatty acids (r = 0.886, slope = 0.309, intercept = 4.76).
...
PMID:Increased concentrations of free fatty acids and glycerol and altered creatine kinase MM isoenzyme patterns in certain diabetic patients. 46 58
Myocardial infarct extension after the acute event was defined as a second reise in the myocardial isoenzyme of serum
creatine kinase
(CK-B) after the initial return of CK-B to normal values. In 43 patients with acute myocardial infarcts, CK-B was measured by radioimmunoassay every 12 hours for 14 days. Nineteen patients had anterior transmural myocardial infarcts AMI, 14 had inferior transmural myocardial infarcts (IMI) and 10 had subendocardial myocardial infarcts (SEMI). Infarct extension as detectd by a second rise in serum CK-B occurred in six patients (32%) with AMI, two (14%) with IMI and two (20%) with SEMI; these differences are not statistically significant. Infarct extension for all patients combined was 23%. Four patients with AMI also had infarct extension as determined by recurrent chest pain. ECG alterations and other enzyme changes. In the other six, the infarct extension was undetected clinically. Four patients with AMI and infarct extension died within 3 weeks after hospitalization. We did not note any additional morbidity or mortality in patients with infarct extension who had IMI or SEMI. There was no significant difference in the frequency of previous myocardial infarction, history of hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
or smoking history in patients with and without infarct extension shown by serum CK-B isoenzyme elevations. The measurement of serum CK-B values with a quantitative and sensitive assay suggests that myocardial infarct extension occurs more commonly than clinically recognized, but the frequency of extension may be less than that reported in patients in whom precordial mapping and total serum CK values were measured to identify this phenomenon.
...
PMID:Detection of myocardial infarct extension by CK-B radioimmunoassay. 75 95
Male and female, arteriosclerotic and nonarteriosclerotic rats were subjected to acute myocardial infarction by two, subcutaneous injections (spaced 24 hr apart) of isoproterenol. During the immediate postinfarct repair phase all of the experimental animals were made severely diabetic with alloxan. Two weeks later the animals were sacrificed and their blood and pertinent organs analyzed for biochemical and pathologic changes. Females survived the myocardial infarct with superimposed
diabetes
in significantly greater than males. In addition to marked loss in body weight all of the experimental animals developed marked adrenal hypertrophy and thymus gland involution, cardiac hypertrophy, and unusual increase in ovarian or testicular size and weight. The combined conditions of myocardial infarction +
diabetes
led to substantial increases in serum
creatine phosphokinase
(
CPK
) and glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) whereas the enzymes glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) were reduced. Although serum triglyceride levels were greatly elevated, total cholesterol and free fatty acids were reduced. All of the animals were severely hyperglycemic and had greatly increased B.U.N. levels.
Diabetes
caused hypercalcemia but
diabetes
+ myocardial infarction was associated with a definite reduction of this hypercalcemia. Despite marked adrenal hypertrophy, circulating Cmpd. B levels were subnormal. The diabetic condition and its attendant hyperlipidemia did not alter the morphologic nature of the arterial lesions in the breeder rats but the
diabetes
did cause definite impairment of the usual myocardial repair process observed in these rats with a particularly high incidence of left ventricular aneurysms in males.
...
PMID:Metabolic and histopathologic changes in arteriosclerotic versus nonarteriosclerotic rats following isoproterenol-induced myocardial infarction with superimposed diabetes. 119 29
Case 1, a 60-year-old man and case 2, a 70-year-old man had several year history of chronic renal failure with hypertension and hyperlipidemia due to
diabetes mellitus
. Treatment of hyperlipidemia was started by oral bezafibrate intake 1,200 mg per day in case 1 and 400 mg per day in case 2 respectively. Three to fourteen days later, both patients noticed symmetrical muscle pain and weakness. Then the symptoms worsened and they were hospitalized. At the time of admission, both patients revealed weakness in the proximal muscles of their upper and lower limbs and the serum
creatine kinase
and myoglobin levels were remarkably elevated. Myoglobinuria was also noted. Routine light microscopic examination of biopsied quadriceps femoris muscles of two patients showed scattered necrotic muscle fibers, some of which were under phagocytosis. The symptoms of the patients were immediately resolved after the drug was discontinued. Serum concentration of bezafibrate was remarkably elevated during treatment. Thus the diagnosis was established as having bezafibrate induced myopathy and, as far as we know, this is the first report of bezafibrate induced myopathy in Japan. On the basis of the above description, bezafibrate may induce muscle damage if dose is excess over the renal capacity. Extreme caution is warranted when the patient is placed on bezafibrate and has renal dysfunction. Strict dose adjustment is necessary in taking account of renal function to avoid muscle damage including rhabdomyolysis.
...
PMID:[Bezafibrate myopathy in two patients with chronic renal failure]. 129 Nov 64
The occurrence of rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure associated with cytomegaloviral infection is rare. A 27-year-old housewife was admitted to our hospital with complaints of thirst, muscle weakness, abdominal pain and oliguria. There was no past history of
diabetes
, drinking, fever or drug habituation and a negative family history. Laboratory tests revealed myoglobinuria, hyper-pancreatic type amylaseuria, hyperglycemia, azotemia and highly increased
creatine phosphokinase
in the plasma. She was treated with hemodialysis and insulin therapy. Serological studies showed a 4-fold increase in cytomegalovirus antibody titers 4 weeks after admission. Muscle biopsy specimens showed hyaline degeneration and infiltration of T cell lymphocytes in the muscle. Renal biopsy specimens showed acute tubular necrosis and some myoglobin casts. No cytomegalovirus antigen was found in renal specimens by immunofluorescence study. From these results, it was determined that a systemic cytomegalovirus infection triggered pancreatitis which caused diabetic ketoacidosis, rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus infection associated with acute pancreatitis, rhabdomyolysis and renal failure. 131 48
The effect of physical training on total
creatine kinase
(CK),
CK-MM
, and
CK-MB
isoenzyme activity was studied in hearts of diabetic and control rats.
Diabetes
was induced with streptozotocin (50 mg/kg), and only rats with blood glucose levels between 14 and 22 mmol/L 1 week later were kept in the protocol. Exercise training was performed on a treadmill in a progressive 10-week program. Physical training did not induce any significant changes in plasma glucose or insulin levels in diabetic rats. Total CK,
CK-MM
, and
CK-MB
activity was decreased in diabetic rat heart by 27%, 22%, and 56%, respectively. Physical training did not induce any important changes in CK activity in heart of nondiabetic rats. However, in diabetic rat heart, training increased total CK activity by 13%,
CK-MM
activity by 12%, and
CK-MB
activity by 31%. We conclude that the decrease in cardiac CK activity observed in chronic experimental
diabetes mellitus
can be partly alleviated by a program of physical training. This may be one of the mechanisms whereby physical conditioning improves cardiac function in experimental
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Partial correction of impaired creatine kinase activity in diabetic rat heart by physical training. 848 78
In 386 patients with acute inferior myocardial infarction (AIMI) who were admitted to our institution from 1984 to 1990, temporary pacemaker (TP) was required in 34 patients (9%) due to disturbances in the genesis and/or conduction of the electric stimulus (Group I). The remainder, 352 AIMI, conform the Group II. Each group was divided into groups depending on the presence (Groups Ia and IIa) or absence (Groups Ib and IIb) of right ventricular necrosis (ECG criteria: ST elevation greater than 0.1 mV in a V3r and V4R). Clinical data (cardiovascular risk factors, history of myocardial infarction or angina, CPK and
CK-MB
peak, Killip class, atrioventricular block and right ventricular infarction) and hospital mortality rate and its cause were analyzed. The Group I patients related to Group II had significantly higher
diabetes
rate (p less than 0.01), CPK and
CK-MB
peak (p less than 0.001), Killip class (p less than 0.001), right ventricular involvement and atrioventricular block (p less than 0.001), the mortality rate equally was statistically higher (Group I, 11 patients, 31%, versus group II, 38 patients, 11%) (p less than 0.001). The Group Ia patients related to Group Ib had a higher CPK and
CK-MB
peak (p less than 0.001), Killip class and atrioventricular block (p less than 0.001). The mortality rate was statistically equal. The group IIb patients related to Group IIb patients had a higher CPK and
CK-MB
peak (p less than 0.001), without differences in the mortality rates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Temporal electric stimulation and right ventricular extension in acute postero-inferior myocardial infarction. Influence on clinical characteristics and prognosis]. 180 97
Decreased cardiac performance is a known complication of
diabetes mellitus
, but the detailed molecular mechanisms that are responsible for this contractile abnormality are only incompletely explored, and cardiac gene products of known function, which are markedly and actively insulin responsive, have not been described. Recently, we found that
creatine kinase
(CK) enzyme activity and CK-M subunit mRNA levels are decreased in the heart of rats with experimental
diabetes mellitus
. These abnormalities could be restored to normal with chronic insulin administration. The CK-M and CK-B genes are expressed in the heart, and we wanted to determine whether
diabetes
also induces a change in CK-B mRNA levels. Quantitation of CK-M and CK-B mRNA levels on Northern blots with specific cDNA probes showed that, in diabetic hearts, CK-B mRNA levels represent only 19.8% of control levels and are more markedly depressed than CK-M mRNA levels, which are 46.5% of control values. Acute injection of insulin led to a significant 1.6-fold increase in CK-M mRNA and a 2.2-fold increase of CK-B mRNA 5 h after insulin injection. CK-M mRNA levels were restored to normal within 12 h, but 48 h were required to restore CK-B mRNA levels to normal values. After 1 mo of insulin therapy, CK-B mRNA levels had risen 9.7-fold, exceeding normal values by 90%, whereas CK-M mRNA levels were at the normal level as previously shown. CK enzyme activity showed only a small response to insulin administration 48 h postinjection.
Diabetes
leads therefore to a marked lowering of CK-M and CK-B mRNA levels in the rat heart.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Insulin responsiveness of CK-M and CK-B mRNA in the diabetic rat heart. 188 84
Changes in high-energy phosphate content and cardiac contractile function of isolated rat hearts as well as changes in Ca2+ sensitivity and mitochondrial respiration of myocardial skinned fibers were assessed in hereditary cardiomyopathies and in cardiomyopathies induced by chronic treatment with adriamycin or norepinephrine, by autoimmunization, by
diabetes
, or by creatine deficiency. The sum of ATP and phosphocreatine contents as well as cardiac output at standard load conditions was substantially lower in almost all groups. The common features of cardiac pump failure were mild bradycardia, elevated left ventricular (LV) diastolic pressure, and stiffness that limited cardiac contractile adaptation to volume or resistance loads. The LV diastolic stiffness at maximal functional load was inversely correlated with high-energy phosphate content. Increased myofibrillar sensitivity to Ca2+ and defective function of mitochondrial
creatine kinase
were found in skinned myocardial fibers. These results suggested that both increased myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity and energy deficiency within myofibrils may contribute to increased myocardial stiffness. Increased stiffness limits LV filling but facilitates pressure development, which partly compensates for decreased contractility of cardiomyopathic hearts.
...
PMID:Energy-linked functional alterations in experimental cardiomyopathies. 192 52
To assess the impact of patient age on the use of diagnostic testing in the management of acute myocardial infarction, the authors reviewed the hospital charts of 4,109 patients hospitalized for validated acute myocardial infarction in the Worcester, Massachusetts, metropolitan area during selected years between 1975 and 1986. Older patients were more likely to be female and to have a prior history of angina, hypertension, and
diabetes mellitus
(p less than 0.001). Acute myocardial infarctions among older patients were more likely to be recurrent, anterior in location, non-Q wave, smaller as reflected by peak
creatine kinase
levels, and complicated by congestive heart failure, cardiogenic shock, and atrial fibrillation (p less than 0.001). In-hospital mortality was directly related to increasing patient age (p less than 0.001). Patterns of utilization of the following diagnostic tests were examined: Holter monitoring, radionuclide ventriculography, echocardiography, exercise testing, pulmonary artery catheterization, and coronary arteriography. After adjustment for differences in demographic and clinical characteristics and in-hospital mortality, patients aged 65 years and older were significantly less likely to undergo exercise testing than were patients less than age 55. Patients older than age 75 were significantly less likely to undergo radionuclide ventriculography, pulmonary artery catheterization, and coronary arteriography than were younger patients. Sex-specific analyses did not produce results substantially different from those for the overall study population. The results of this community-wide study suggest that among patients hospitalized for acute myocardial infarction, chronologic age may be an independent determinant of utilization patterns of diagnostic testing. These findings suggest the need for a prospective evaluation of this issue, with an additional emphasis placed on the contributions of functional status and noncardiovascular illness to decision-making in the clinical management of acute myocardial infarction patients.
...
PMID:Diagnostic testing in acute myocardial infarction: does patient age influence utilization patterns? The Worcester Heart Attack Study. 195 Dec 92
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