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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A specific inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation, methyl 2-tetradecylglycidate (McN-3716) has been found to produce a dose dependent hypoglycemic effect when administered orally to rats, mice, and dogs. In addition to being more potent than other inhibitors of fatty acid oxidation, McN-3716 was also found to be 15--20 times more potent than
tolbutamide
in lowering the blood glucose of fasting rats. Furthermore, evidence is presented that McN-3716 produces hypoglycemia by a mechanism which differs from that of other oral hypoglycemic agents, the biguanides and the sulfonylureas. As predicted by the Randle glucose-fatty acid cycle, McN-3716 lowered glucose concentrations only under conditions where fatty acids were being used as the major energy substrates (fasting,
diabetes
, and feeding of high fat diets) but not under conditions where energy was derived mainly from carbohydrate (fed state or following hypophysectomy). Administration of McN-3716 produced a remarkable lowering of the plasma glucose and the glycosuria of depancreatized dogs but did not result in complete normalization of glucose, especially the excursions of blood glucose following feeding. It did, however, produce virtually complete reversal of the ketoacidosis of alloxan diabetic rats and depancreatized dogs without worsening the plasma lipid profile. Thus, McN-3716 may have potential utility as an oral therapeutic agent for the treatment of ketosis-prone juvenile or maturity-onset
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Pharmacologic profile of methyl 2-tetradecylglycidate (McN-3716)--an orally effective hypoglycemic agent. 69 81
A positive fluorescein angiographic (FLAG) finding is a frequent occurrence in ophthalmoscopically negative cases. By repeated FLAG examinations good follow-up of the variability of the finding is possible. After 4--8 years of
diabetes
, ophthalmoscopically diagnosable retinopathy is to be expected in the patients in whom the initial FLAG examination showed signs of angiopathy.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Prognostic value of fluorescein angiography of the funds in diabetic children. 71 67
In order to evaluate the importance of measuring serum lipids in the current care of diabetics, blood triglycerides were measured in 155 diabetics and 59 controls. Comparison with a chemical method confirmed the usefulness of the nephelometric method for the diagnosis and control of hyperlipemia in current practice. The importance of measuring serum lipids was confirmed by a close correlation between lipemia and cardiovascular complications such as coronary insufficiency, high blood pressure, and peripheral arterial insufficiency. It appeared also that glycemia and cholesterol are not sufficient to assess the biological pattern and prognosis of
diabetes
. Thus, lipemia is an essential parameter in the evaluation of any diabetic because of its value regarding prognosis and control therapy.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Usefulness of serum lipid determination in diabetic practice. 71 68
The early time courses of insulin release were studied by injecting insulinotropic substances directly into a dog's pancreatic artery. Blood samples from the pancreatic vein were collected every five seconds continuously over 90 seconds and were assayed for their insulin concentrations. Injections were repeated two to five times, with intervals of 30 minutes. Insulin release was stimulated within one minute after injection of each of tetragastrin,
tolbutamide
, xylitol, and glucose, but the time courses of the release of insulin were different with different stimulants: Tetragastrin and
tolbutamide
increased insulin release faster than did glucose; xylitol produced a slower insulin release than did glucose. The slower insulin-releasing effects of glucose and xylitol than the other agents would be compatible with the theory that their metabolism is required to cause release of insulin, but it is also possible that the glucoreceptor mechanism may require a longer lag time than the other receptor mechanisms for the perception and transfer of the signal to release insulin.
Diabetes
1978 Dec
PMID:Comparison of the early time courses of the release of insulin that follow injections of tetragastrin, tolbutamide, xylitol, and glucose into the pancreatic artery of dogs. 72 Jul 73
The acute insulin responses to intravenous glucose and
tolbutamide
were studied serially in middle aged subjects with a wide spectrum of glucose tolerance. Eighty were of normal weight, 102 frankly obese. In normal weight patients, insulin response to glucose, subnormal in chemical
diabetes
, was almost absent when fasting blood glucose was elevated.
Tolbutamide
evoked a normal response provided that the fasting blood glucose was lower than 125 mg/100 ml. The response decreased dramatically thereafter. In the obese the response decreased dramatically thereafter. In the obese the response to glucose was decreased in chemical diabetics compared to non-diabetics, but failed completely only when the fasting glycemia exceeded 200 mg/100 ml. The response to
tolbutamide
decreased only with fasting glycemia in excess of 200 mg/100 ml. When insulin responses were expressed relative to basal insulin values the differences between non diabetic obese and normal weight subjects disappeared but this was not true of the other categories. These findings demonstrate that the B-cell responses differ not only quantitatively but also in kind between normal weight and obese diabetics. Six cases of incipient juvenile
diabetes
(100 less than fasting blood glucose less than 125 mg/100 ml) showed no insulin response to glucose nor to
tolbutamide
in contrast to the comparable weight group of maturity onset diabetics.
...
PMID:Defective acute insulin secretion in diabetics. Differences between normal weight and obese subjects. 72 92
Osmotic resistance of leukocytes has been studied with the Storti-Pederzini method in 30 young healthy subjects and in 30 diabetics of the juvenile insulin-dependent type with variable duration of the disease and variable degrees of metabolic control. Reduced osmotic resistance, above all in the polymorphonuclear cells, has been found in diabetics. This finding did not appear to correlate with the duration of
diabetes
or with blood glucose level. This reduced osmotic resistance of polymorphonuclear leukocytes of diabetic patients might contribute to the deficiency in leukocyte migration and phagocytosis observed by some authors in diabetics.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:Osmotic resistance of leukocytes in patients with onset of diabetes before twenty-five years. 78 27
Diabetes mellitus
is more frequently found in pateints with hepatic cirrhosis (about 10%) than in subjects without liver disease. Cirrhosis has been the main subject of interest in this respect. Very few studies have been made in viral hepatitis or steatosis. In about 40% of cases, the
diabetes
is identified before the cirrhosis. More often (in about 60% of cases) the
diabetes
is discovered at the same time as or after the finding of cirrhosis. This "post-cirrhosis diabetes" shows no clinical peculiarity. In about 80% of patients with liver cirrhosis when fasting blood glucose is normal, abnormalities of carbohydrate metabolism are to be found by the oral glucose tolerance test. Approximately 50% show an abnormal response to intravenous glucose and 30% to intravenous
tolbutamide
. The "mechanism" of these metabolic abnormalities in liver cirrhosis is unknown. The following abnormalities are observed: 1) With similar glycaemic response to a glucose challenge, plasma insulin levels are higher than in patients without liver disease, suggesting insulin unresponsiveness. Resistance to exogenous insulin can be demonstrated. 2) Plasma free fatty acid levels are often elevated. 3) Plasma growth hormone levels are often raised. 4) Plasma glucagon levels are high when porto-caval shunting is present. 5) Potassium is often depleted. These metabolic abnormalities, in association with porto-caval shunting and hepatocyte insufficiency may explain the insulin resistance which characterises liver cirrhosis, and the
diabetes
which it may precipitate in predisposed persons.
...
PMID:[Diabetes mellitus secondary to liver diseases. A review (author's transl)]. 79 27
Various parameters of the insulin secretion in man may be appreciated and calculated by studying the insulin response to an intravenous pulse of glucose followed 120 minutes later by one of
tolbutamide
. The relative insensitivity of the B cell to glucose, probable marker of a constitutional pancreatic predisposition to
diabetes
may be assessed in a given individual whatever his age and body weight. The glucose intolerance per se is due to, or accompagnied by various B cell dysfunctions according to its etiology. This is illustrated by the results observed in chronic pancreatitis, liver cirrhosis, aged or obese subjects.
...
PMID:[A method of studying insulin secretion in humans: the glucose stimulation test, followed by tolbutamide]. 79 23
Arteries are not simply conduits for the transport of blood, but consist of metabolically active tissue which has the capacity to synthesize all the components of the atherosclerotic lesion. The smooth muscle cell appears to be the most important metabolically active cell in the arterial wall. There is little information on arterial metabolism in human
diabetes
. Experimental
diabetes
depressed all aspects of arterial lipid metabolism and this effect is reversed by insulin. Insulin promotes changes in arterial metabolism which are similar to those an atherosclerosis. Thus the relationship of human
diabetes
to the metabolism of the arterial wall is complex and little understood.
Acta
Diabetol
Lat
PMID:The lipid metabolism of the arterial wall and its abnormalities in diabetes. 79 61
Oral glucose tolerance tests (100 g glucose) and the intravenous
tolbutamide
test were carried out. The glucose tolerance was seen to be disordered even in acute infectious hepatitis, but returning to normal when cured. If chronic hepatitis develops, however, the proportion of manifest
diabetes
increases to 7.2% in chronic persistent hepatitis and to 16.3% in chronic progressive hepatitis, while 30% each have latent
diabetes
. The glucose tolerance is most impaired in fatty liver (stage III) and in active cirrhosis of the liver with portal hypertension, where more than half of all patients present manifest or latent
diabetes
. Conversely, glucose tolerance improves even in chronic hepatitis and in cirrhosis of the liver as the inflammatory activity subsides. The main cause for the development of "liver diabetes" is therefore likely to be the activity of the inflammatory process, the extent of portal hypertension, disorders of glucose regulation in the liver and the increased insulin inactivation in the cirrhotic liver.
...
PMID:[Disorders of glucose tolerance in 2600 histologically confirmed acute and chronic liver patients (author's transl)]. 81 Jun 95
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