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)

Five IDD patients achieved strict preconception glycemic control and then underwent nine IVF-ET cycles. All patients had high E2 response with an adequate number of preovulatory oocytes retrieved and normal fertilization and cleavage rates; one conceived. Follicular fluid analysis revealed similar E2, P, A, hCG, PRL, and IGF-I levels to non-IDD controls. The source of the insulin detected in the FF of IDD patients was probably from the insulin doses administered intensively during the tight diabetes management; insulin was absent in non-IDD participants. It seems that patients with IDD have conventional responses to gonadotropin stimulation for IVF and their follicular milieu resembles that of non-IDD patients. Nevertheless, in view of the significant advantages of preconceptional diabetes control in regard to pregnancy outcome, they should be allowed to participate in IVF programs only after tight preconception metabolic control has been obtained.
...
PMID:In vitro fertilization and embryo transfer in well-controlled, insulin-dependent diabetics. 163 16

Insulin-dependent diabetes is an autoimmune disease that may be becoming more prevalent. It has a polygenic mode of inheritance with a major gene being present in the HLA DQ locus on chromosome 6. Inferential data suggest that environmental factors may be important to genetic penetrance albeit we still lack proof for involvement of often maligned viruses. Patients with IDD and their families are predisposed to organ-specific autoimmunities which should be routinely screened for. Autoantibodies to insulin, to a beta cell cytoplasmic lipid containing moiety and to a beta cell protein of 64KDa, which is believed to be the GABA forming enzyme GAD, can be used to predict IDD among relatives and probably the general population as well. Immunosuppressive therapy can modify the course of IDD after diagnosis and should be able to delay the clinical onset if given before diagnosis. Rigorous insulin therapy should also be given as needed to control hyperglycemia and avoid glucose toxicity to the islets. Such trials are now underway.
...
PMID:Immunology of diabetes mellitus. 832 19

The effector mechanisms responsible for autoimmune beta cell destruction in insulin dependent (type 1) diabetes (IDD) remain elusive. In order to investigate whether T lymphocytes bearing the gamma-delta T cell receptor (gamma delta+ T cells) could be involved in this process, we measured percentages of peripheral blood gamma delta+ T cells in IDD patients, relatives of IDD probands and controls. High levels of gamma delta+ T cells strongly differentiated 23 relatives at high risk for IDD on the basis of positive islet cell autoantibodies (ICA positive relatives) from 59 controls (P = 0.0013), whereas 26 ICA negative relatives, 14 recent-onset and nine long term IDD patients could not be distinguished from controls on the basis of percentages of gamma delta+ T cells. These data suggest that increased levels of circulating gamma delta+ T cells correlate with the ongoing autoimmune process in pancreatic islets of subjects at high risk for IDD and may thus represent an additional marker for the development of the disease.
...
PMID:Increased T lymphocytes bearing the gamma-delta T cell receptor in subjects at high risk for insulin dependent diabetes. 183 80

The occurrence of autoantibodies to an islet-cell protein of 64,000 Mr (64KA) was examined in relation to development of insulin-dependent diabetes. 64KA were absent in 26 normal controls and present in only 1 of 41 first-degree relatives who lacked islet-cell cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ICA) or insulin autoantibodies (IAA). Among first-degree relatives at high risk for IDD, 64KA were identified in 23 of 28 persons positive for ICA and 4 of 5 with IAA but no ICA. Among 31 patients with newly diagnosed IDD, 64KA were found in 26. 64KA were identified in 23 of 28 persons studied up to 75 months before clinical onset of IDD. Of these 23 64KA-positive prediabetic subjects, 5 were ICA-negative and 10 lacked IAA. 64KA were most predictive in those who became diabetic before age 34 (22/24). In several individuals, 64KA were detected before the other autoantibodies appeared. These findings suggest that 64KA may be an early and useful predictive marker for IDD.
...
PMID:64,000 Mr autoantibodies as predictors of insulin-dependent diabetes. 197 59

Two IDD patients were stimulated with gonadotropins for IVF and ET. Both patients had high E2 response and greater than or equal to 5 preovulatory oocytes retrieved, normal fertilization and cleavage rates, and transfer; neither conceived. Follicular fluid showed levels of E2, P, A, hCG, and PRL similar to non-IDD. Epidermal growth factor could not be detected in FF. Insulin-dependent diabetes patients can undergo gonadotropin stimulation for IVF with customary responses. Their follicular milieu resembles that of non-IDD patients except for a lack of EGF.
...
PMID:Gonadotropin stimulation for in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer in insulin-dependent diabetics: follicular response, oocyte quality, embryo development, and follicular environment. 210 62

The education of diabetics often affects the patient's life-style and habits, and the beliefs of his socio-professional and socio-cultural environment. The patient's knowledge is often satisfactory, while his behavior is inadequate. In this study, a sociologist conducted a semi-structured interview for 40 non-obese diabetic patients: 35 IDD and 5 NIDD, who had a knowledge/behavior gap. Emphasis was placed on the study of their subjective etiological beliefs. Four categories beliefs were found: stress, heredity, food and drink transgression, and fatality. Stress, which can lead to deresponsabilization, was the most frequently mentioned etiology (24 patients). Europeans cited several etiological beliefs. North-Africans, in contrast, cited only one, either stress or fatality, but never heredity or food and drink transgression, probably because genetics and genealogy are not superimposable realities and because of their belief in the symbolic benefits of sugar. In conclusion, the patient's etiological beliefs may contribute to the knowledge/behavior gap. Correct information about a more rational etiology for diabetes could improve patient compliance.
...
PMID:[Beliefs in diabetics about the etiology of their disease. Influence of ethnicity]. 221 15

It is well known that growth hormone (GE) secretion and regulation in diabetics are abnormal. In order to evaluate the response of GH to nonphysiological stimuli in diabetics, a thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) test (500 micrograms by IV bolus injection) was carried out in 12 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes (IDD, 6 males and 6 females). 11 noninsulin-dependent diabetes (NIDD, 5 males and 6 females), and 10 normal controls (6 males and 4 females). The results showed that the basal serum GH levels in diabetics were higher than that in normal controls and it was even higher in IDD than in NIDD. Following the TRH stimulus, the mean peak level of GH in IDD was the highest among the three groups, the differences being statistically significant (F = 9.323, P less than 0.01). It was concluded that a nonspecific response to TRH of GH did occur in IDD, and the peak values were even higher in female than in male subjects. A negative correlation existed between the GH peak values and the age of the patients as well as in the controls. This supported the view that GH responsiveness to TRH has a tendency of progressive decline with age. However, no significant correlation was found between the peak value of GH and the blood glucose level or the microangiopathic complications. The mechanism of TRH stimulation on GH release in diabetics is discussed.
...
PMID:Non-specific response of serum growth hormone to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in diabetics. 250 51

We evaluated the effect of a diet rich in natural (NF) or extractive fibres (guar gum) on 12 male IDD (insulin-dependent diabetes) out-patients. The treatment lasted for 2 months. During the first month the patients were on an isocaloric diet containing 30 g of fibres and then they were randomly subdivided into two groups. One group followed an isocaloric diet rich in fibres (70 g/day), the second group an isocaloric diet enriched by guar (9 g of guar added to 30 g of natural fibres/day). Reduced serum levels of HbA1c and several amino acids showed that metabolic control significantly improved under each dietary regimen.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1989 Feb 15
PMID:The medium-term effect of natural or extractive dietary fibres on plasma amino acids and lipids in type 1 diabetics. 253

In the present study bone mineral content (BMC) was measured at 1/3 and 1/10 the length of the radius from the distal end in 100 adult diabetic subjects (55 females, 45 males, 54 insulin-dependent [IDD], 46 non-insulin-dependent [NIDD]), using single photon absorptiometry. Each individual BMC value in the diabetics was first compared to normal BMC values for age obtained in our laboratory from 500 non-diabetic subjects. BMC in the diabetics was within the normal range (M +/- 2 SD) with respect to sex and age. Data from IDD and NIDD males, under and over 50 years of age, and of IDD and NIDD females, pre- and postmenopausal, were compared with the respective control group data after matching each diabetic subject to a non-diabetic one of identical age and menstrual history and of comparable body mass index. In each group BMC in the diabetic subjects was found not to be statistically different from BMC in the control ones. Correlation analysis was carried out between BMC and endocrine or metabolic parameters obtained in 52 of the diabetic patients. BMC in diabetic subjects was not correlated with plasma levels of hormones (thyroid hormones, cortisol, 17-beta-estradiol, testosterone), Ca, P or alkaline phosphatase activity. It was inversely correlated with urinary Ca and P in NIDD women and with urinary Ca in NIDD men. No relationship was found between BMC and the metabolic control of diabetes (evaluated by basal glycemia, 2h-post-prandial glycemia and glycosylated hemoglobin).
...
PMID:Bone mineral density in diabetes mellitus. 325 88

The relative risks (RR) of the immunogenetic markers of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) have been calculated in a population of 235 IDDM patients compared with a control population. The highest relative risk was that of subjects heterozygous DR3/DR4 (RR = 47, P less than 0.001) which was still more increased in those who carry this combination associated with the RFLP cluster DQR4 (RR = 72). Further, a sample of 51 secondary affected siblings of IDD index cases has been compared with 265 non affected siblings (one child of each family, excluding index cases). The highest risks have been found in addition to DR3/DR4, for DR3 alone and particularly for the combination C4BQ0, DR3 (RR = 9, p less than 0.001) suggesting a role for this peculiar association in the familial penetrance. In the group of siblings HLA-identical with the index case, only two factors showed some capacity of discriminating between affected and non affected siblings: HLA-DR3 and age (less than or equal to 10 years old at onset of IDDM in the index case) (p less than 0.01). In the group of haploidentical siblings, the combination DR3/DR4 and the associations C4BQ0, DR3 and BfF1, DR3 significantly increased the susceptibility for higher familial occurrence of the disease. If confirmed by additional family series, this scale of risk factors could be helpful in predicting risk of IDDM to siblings of diabetic children.
...
PMID:[Risk factors in insulin-dependent diabetes]. 353 93


1 2 3 4 Next >>