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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The molecular localization of maternal and fetal zinc and copper metalloproteins in diabetic and control rats was studied. Compared to controls, liver and kidneys of diabetic dams showed an increased concentration of zinc and copper that was associated with metallothionein. In contrast, fetuses of diabetic dams had lower zinc and metallothionein levels than fetuses from controls. The abnormal maternal trace element metabolism seen with diabetes resulted in alterations of zinc uptake and/or retention of their fetuses.
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PMID:The effect of diabetes on the molecular localization of maternal and fetal zinc and copper metalloprotein in the rat. 248 70

Thirty-nine patients with noninsulin-dependent diabetes on oral drug treatment were randomly allocated to either guar gum or placebo treatments for 3 mo. After 3 mo the placebo group was switched to guar gum treatment and both groups were followed for 10 mo (open trial). No significant difference occurred in the fasting blood glucose or glycosylated hemoglobin A1 levels between the two groups at 3 mo. Serum total cholesterol level decreased in the guar gum group from 6.55 +/- 1.45 to 5.69 +/- 1.2 mmol/L (p less than 0.001) but no changes were observed in the placebo group (6.55 +/- 1.2 vs 6.26 +/- 1.4 mmol/L, NS) during 3 mo. At the end of the open trial (n = 33), serum cholesterol was still approximately 7% lower than before guar gum treatment. No consistent changes occurred in serum HDL-cholesterol or triglycerides. Serum vitamin A level was slightly lowered and plasma zinc level elevated during the open trial. Serum vitamin E level was decreased only in the group switched to guar gum at 3 mo.
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PMID:Metabolic and nutritional effects of long-term use of guar gum in the treatment of noninsulin-dependent diabetes of poor metabolic control. 253 3

The self-selected diet of 16 subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) was supplemented for 6 mo with either a granolalike bar containing 35.5 g carbohydrate and 6.6 g guar gum/bar or a placebo bar containing carbohydrate but no guar gum. Subjects consumed a mean of 4.8 bars/day. Average guar gum consumption at the end of the study was 31.7 g/day. One week before and at the end of the study, subjects were admitted to a metabolic ward and fed a controlled diet similar to their self-selected diet. Food, feces, and urine were composited for analysis of iron, zinc, copper, calcium, magnesium, and manganese. Eight subjects consuming the guar gum supplement and 6 subjects consuming the placebo bar completed collections for mineral balance. Neither consumption of guar gum nor placebo bar significantly changed apparent mineral balance for iron, copper, zinc, calcium, manganese, or magnesium from prestudy levels to 6-mo levels, and no significant differences were observed between the two groups. With the exception of copper, men consumed significantly more minerals than women. We conclude that consumption of guar gum by patients with NIDDM does not adversely affect apparent mineral balance.
Diabetes Care 1989 May
PMID:Effect of guar gum on mineral balances in NIDDM adults. 254 85

Dithizone, a zinc chelating agent, is known to selectively stain the islets of Langerhans in the pancreas. In the present study, we have used this stain to aid the identification of islets in material obtained by collagenase digestion of human pancreas. Islets were shown to rapidly and reversibly stain red on incubation with dithizone solution. Tissue selected on the basis of dithizone staining was shown to contain insulin-positive cells and to accumulate insulin in the medium during a subsequent period in tissue culture. Experiments with rat islets indicated that the dithizone treatment had no effect on insulin release in tissue culture, on acute responses to stimulatory glucose concentrations or on the insulin content of cells. These results suggest that dithizone staining can assist in the identification of islets from the human pancreas and may prove to be a useful tool in developing techniques for the large scale isolation of functionally intact human islets.
Diabetes Res 1989 Feb
PMID:Supravital dithizone staining in the isolation of human and rat pancreatic islets. 254 5

Porphyrin metabolism was investigated in a 63-year-old male patient who developed a subacute onset polyneuropathy with predominance of motor signs in the upper limb. The screening for lead, cadmium, mercury, aluminum and thallium was negative. The study of porphyrin metabolism showed remarkable abnormalities, particularly a very high level of plasmatic 5-aminolaevulinic acid contrasting with a normal level of porphobilinogen and a nearly complete loss of activity of aminolaevulinic acid dehydratase with no regenerative response to dithiothreitol or zinc ions. The other causes of aminolaevulinic acid dehydratase deficiency (tyrosinaemia, alcoholism, smoking, cirrhosis, renal insufficiency, diabetes mellitus) were ruled out. The diagnosis of primary aminolaevulinic acid dehydratase deficiency was proposed and confirmed by the familial study, which revealed the existence of several heterozygous members in this family.
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PMID:Biochemical diagnosis of an hereditary aminolaevulinate dehydratase deficiency in a 63-year-old man. 260 May 50

To elucidate the possible role of hyperinsulinism in the etiology of diabetic macroangiopathy, we studied the long-term effects of insulin injection on the arterial wall of the rat both biochemically and histologically. Fifty male Wistar rats were divided into two groups. One group was subjected to daily injection of insulin-zinc suspension (20 U/kg), and the other group was treated with saline. After 1 yr, all the animals were killed, and the lipid contents in the intimal media of their aortas were determined. Parts of the ascending aortic tissues were further examined by use of either light or electron microscopy. The triglyceride content of the insulin-treated rat aortas was significantly (P less than .05) increased compared with that of the saline-treated rat aortas. As determined by light microscopy, the intimas of the aortas from the insulin-treated rats were significantly (P less than .001) thickened, and the subendothelial tissues consisted of eosinophilic fiber bundles, amorphous ground substances, and irregularly arranged cells. These cells were identified by electron microscopy as having smooth muscle cell origin. All these findings suggest that atherosclerosis-like lesions could be induced by long-term insulin injection in the aortas of the rat and that hyperinsulinism plays a certain role in the development of diabetic macroangiopathy.
Diabetes 1989 Jan
PMID:Experimental atherosclerosis-like lesions induced by hyperinsulinism in Wistar rats. 264 37

Studies of zinc status in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) have shown contradictory results. Zinc is essential for many enzymes involved in the human metabolism and may play a role in the biosynthesis and storage of insulin in the B-cell. We therefore prospectively followed 26 patients (14 males and 12 females) with newly diagnosed IDDM in order to determine the plasma zinc variation at the time of diagnosis and after 1, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months. Seventy-two healthy persons (36 males and 36 females) served as controls. Only minor differences in plasma zinc were demonstrated during the first 2 years of IDDM. A sex difference was found in healthy controls but only after 24 months in the diabetics. Quantitative changes of the B-cell function, development of insulin antibodies, age, body weight and serum albumin did not correlate with the course of plasma zinc.
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PMID:Plasma zinc concentrations during the first 2 years after diagnosis of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: a prospective study. 266 60

Marked weight loss is the major nutritional defect in chronic pancreatitis. Inadequate food intake owing to recurrent or near continuous pain usually accounts for the initial 10 to 20 per cent of loss of body weight, which decreases again with the onset of diabetes and is often precipitous with the development of steatorrhea. Treatment of pain, control of diabetes, and intensive pancreatic replacement therapy for steatorrhea usually causes weight gain, but seldom to ideal weight. It appears that the patient's body weight gets set at a new "weight-stat." Although isolated abnormalities of small bowel function tests can be elicited and deficiencies of fat-soluble vitamins, calcium, zinc, selenium, and so forth may be demonstrated, these rarely lead to clinical syndromes, as with demonstrable low B12 uptake in some 10 to 15 per cent of patients. In the late stage of the disease and particularly in NATP, extreme protein-calorie malnutrition may occur, which may not be correctable even by hyperalimentation. Although the mortality of the disease was reportedly higher in areas of socioeconomic deprivation, it appears from recent studies in Switzerland and other developed countries that mortality during a 12-year period may be in the region of 50 per cent worldwide.
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PMID:Nutritional deficiencies in chronic pancreatitis. 268 Sep 66

Decreased serum zinc levels and hyperzincuria occur in some non-insulin dependent diabetic subjects (NIDDM). Zinc deficiency was demonstrated in various tissues of animal models for NIDDM. Serum zinc and 24-hr urine zinc of subjects with NIDDM were compared with that of age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers. Zincuria was significantly increased in the diabetic group. Thirteen diabetic subjects with hyperzincuria and hypozincemia were supplemented with zinc sulfate 220 mg x 3/day for 7-8 weeks. At the end of the study, glucose disposal (evaluated by kg) decreased significantly from 0.562 +/- 0.03 to 0.414 +/- 0.05 (p less than 0.05) and fasting glucose and fructosamine were significantly increased from 177 +/- 10 mg/dl to 207 +/- 15 mg/dl (p less than 0.05) and from 2.7 +/- 0.2% to 3.2 +/- 0.28% (p less than 0.05), respectively. T-lymphocyte response to phytohemagglutinin was increased significantly. We conclude that zinc supplementation to NIDD patients with hypozincemia and hyperzincemia might aggravate their glucose intolerance. More accurate methods to assess zinc deficiency in NIDD patients is needed to justify the supplementation of zinc in these patients.
Diabetes Res 1989 Jun
PMID:The influence of zinc supplementation on glucose homeostasis in NIDDM. 269 82

Urinary and serum zinc levels were determined in 51 patients with chronic pancreatitis. Urinary zinc excretion in patients with chronic calcified pancreatitis (832 +/- 111 micrograms/day) (mean +/- SE) but not in noncalcified pancreatitis (684 +/- 65 micrograms/day) was significantly higher than in normal controls (418 +/- 46 micrograms/day). The urinary zinc excretion increased with deterioration of exocrine pancreatic function. Serum zinc levels in advanced pancreatitis (105.9 +/- 4.5 micrograms/100 ml) were significantly higher when compared to the pancreatitis with normal exocrine pancreatic function (91.6 +/- 3.0 micrograms/100 ml), but the difference was less pronounced than for urinary zinc excretion. This may be due to complicating diabetes, which usually lowers serum zinc. Serum zinc and urinary zinc excretion were low in a patient with chronic calcified pancreatitis complicated with a pulmonary abscess and hypoalbuminemia. In conclusion, urinary and serum zinc levels in chronic pancreatitis were increased as a result of exocrine pancreatic dysfunction. Association of diabetes may lower serum zinc, and associated malnutrition depresses both urinary and serum zinc levels.
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PMID:Urinary and serum zinc levels in chronic pancreatitis. 271 4


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