Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One of the dangers of topical therapy in thermal injuries is absorption of the therapeutic agent with subsequent metabolic and toxic complications. Two patients, one 30 years old with a 75% burn, the second 72 years old with a 35% burn, were treated topically with povidone-
iodine
("Betadine", pH 2.43). In both patients severe metabolic acidosis developed which could not be attributed to sepsis, hypovolaemia, renal failure,
diabetes
, lactic acidaemia, &c. The acidosis associated with the 75% burn required large amounts of sodium bicarbonate to maintain pH at 7.35 and a serum-bicarbonate concentration of 15 mmol/l (meq/l); serum-
iodine
was 48000 mug/dl (normal 4-8.5mug/dl). Acidosis in the second patient was not as severe, and serum-
iodine
concentration reached 17600 mug/dl. The rate of urinary excretion of
iodine
was 50.8 +/- 7.4 mg/dl and seemed to be fixed. Haemodialysis was very effective in reducing serum-
iodine
concentration. Povidone was also systemically absorbed. The persistent acidosis could be caused by absorption of the
iodine
or the acidic povidone-
iodine
. Until the aetiology of the acidosis and renal damage is more clear, iodophors should not be used topically for burns greater than 20% of the body surface or in the presence of renal failure.
...
PMID:Complications of povidone-iodine absorption in topically treated burn patients. 5 90
These studies suggest that the immunologic indicator in the radioimmune assay, 125I-iodoinsulin, selects antibody populations from within the antiserum that interact with determinants distant from the solvent surface on the insulin molecule to which
iodine
is substituted. Evidence is presented that the connecting peptide of proinsulin is in close proximity to regions on the solvent surface of the A-chain of insulin that include the tyrosyl residues at A-14 and A-19. A marked immunologic cross-reaction between derivatives of insulin with perturbations in the regions of tyrosyl A-14 and A-19 was noted in the radioimmune assay employing desalanine-(B-30)-desasparagine-(A-21)-insulin antiserum. This observation is consistent with the presence of a restricted population of antibodies in such antisera that is directed toward immunologic determinants in or near the insulin dimer site. The apparent immunologic activity of insulin derivatives depends on which antibody populations from the antiserum pool can react with the immunologic indicatory employed on the one hand and on the composition of antibodies in that antiserum on the other. These studies indicate that the specificity of antibody populations in a given antiserum can be identified and their levels quantitated with several assay systems, each employing one of a variety of indicators.
Diabetes
1976 May
PMID:Structural studies of insulin and insulin derivatives using various immunologic indicators and antibody populations. 5 91
Methods are described for maintaining hypophysectomized rats (model for panhypopituitarism). Prolactin-secreting pituitary tumors can be induced in rats or mice by administration of estrogens; thyroid stimulating hormone-secreting tumors will occur in some mice after thyroid ablation by radioactive
iodine
. Estrogens in hamsters usually produce intermediate lobe tumors of the pituitary associated with hypothalamic degeneration. Sex hormone-secreting adrenal tumors can follow surgical gonadectomy in mice. Spontaneous corticoid-secreting adrenal tumors may occur spontaneously in Osborne-Mendel rats. Secretory gonadal tumors have been induced by transplantation of a gonad into the spleen of a gonadectomized host. Both secretory and non-secretory ovarian tumors can be produced by irradiation or chemical carcinogens in mice. In some mice, secretory testicular tumors can be produced by estrogen administration. Thyroid tumors can be induced in rodents by various kinds of goitrogens and irradiation. Parathyroid hyperplasia may occur with spontaneous renal disease in rats. A syndrome simulating
diabetes mellitus
can occur in rare strains of mice or can be induced by chemical destruction of the islets of Langerhans with alloxan.
...
PMID:Experimental endocrinopathies. 17 62
125I-insulins, prepared by iodination with chloramine T in marked excess or by stepwise, stoichiometric addition of the oxidizing agent, were compared with respect both to their molecular distribution of
iodine
and to their suitability for use in a cultured lymphocyte receptor assay. Iodination of insulin in aqueous solution results in the same distribution of
iodine
atoms, independent of experimental method and dependent only on the average
iodine
number. This distribution can be calculated on the basis of a Monte Carlo simulation, For insulin iodinated at an average of 0.8 I atoms per molecule, approximately 50 per cent of the radioactivity is in other than monoiodoninsulin. Purification methods that separate on the basis of charge, such as starch-gel electrophoresis, are then required, to obtain monoiodoinsulin. More highly iodinated insulin do bind to the lymphocyte receptor, although, as in radioimmunoassay, the overiodinated species are less satisfactory for use as tracers. The shelf life of iodinated insulin appears to be related better to the average
iodine
content than to any other factor, presumably because of decay catastrophe. There is no evidence to suggest that exposure to chloramine T in marked excess for a few seconds is deleterious to insulin.
Diabetes
1976 Apr
PMID:Some considerations in the preparation of raioiodoinsulin for radioimmunoassay and receptor assay. 17 56
The combination of the TRH stimulation of TSH release with the plasma
iodide
(PII) increase test, which gives a physiological measure of TSH basal activity, allows characterization of a syndrome we have called a low pituitary TSH reserve. These patients were euthyroid, had a normal PII increase test but a mild or no response to TRH. It was chiefly found in acromegaly and
diabetes mellitus
, after prolonged high levels of thyroid hormones or hypophysectomy. It appears to be a transient state between normal and abnormal thyrotropin function. So the absence of TSH increase after TRH injection can be of diagnostic value only when other tests of thyrotropin function are performed.
...
PMID:[Low thyrotrope hormone: a new entity]. 18 93
Specific
iodine
-125-labeled prolactin binding was measured in membrane particles prepared from R3230AC mammary carcinoma and liver of tumor-bearing Fischer rats after either prolactin, estrogen, or lergotrile mesylate treatment, or after the induction of
diabetes
by streptozotocin. Hormone binding to tumors was decreased by treatment with prolactin (.5 or 1 mg/day) or estradiol valerate (7.5 mg/kg/week). In contrast, prolactin treatment was without affect on prolactin binding to liver membrane particles, but estradiol valerate treatment resulted in a 4-fold increase in prolactin binding to this tissue. Lergotrile mesylate, which lowers plasma prolactin levels, had no affect on tumor growth or prolactin binding to either tumor or liver. Prolactin binding to both tumor and liver was significantly reduced in diabetic rats, suggesting that insulin may play an important role in controlling tissue sensitivity to prolactin. Specific binding of
iodine
-labeled prolactin to enzymatically dissociated cells from R3230AC tumors was demonstrated in vitro. The binding capacity of the cells was found to be of the same order of magnitude as the binding capacity in membrane preparations when appropriate corrections were applied for yields of cells and membranes. R3230AC tumor, which is responsive to prolactin, appears therefore to be a useful model system for further study aimed at elucidation of growth and metabolic response to the hormone prolactin in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Prolactin binding to R3230AC mammary carcinoma and liver in hormone-treated and diabetic rats. 18 51
As judged from both paper and column chromatography, slices or homogenates of liver from rats fasted for 48 h displayed a lesser rate of generation of (125)I-labeled 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T(3)) from (125)I-labeled thyroxine (T(4)) added to incubation media than did preparations from normal chow-fed animals. A similar defect in the conversion of T(4) to T(3) in the livers of fasted animals was observed when preparations were incubated with substrate concentrations of T(4) so that T(3) generation could be assessed by radioimmunoassay. The effect of fasting could be prevented, wholly or in part, by administration of glucose in the drinking water to otherwise fasted animals, and the degree of prevention appeared to be proportional to the concentration of glucose employed. Diminished generation of T(3) from T(4) was similarly evident in the livers of animals with streptozotocin-induced
diabetes mellitus
, and this defect was overcome by the provision of insulin in vivo, but not in vitro. Decreased formation of T(3) from T(4) was also observed in preparations of liver from animals given dexamethasone, amiodarone, and propylthiouracil. In no case could these effects on the net formation of T(3) from T(4) be explained by effects of the experimental conditions on the degradation of the T(3) generated, as judged from the rate of degradation of exogenous (125)I-T(3) measured in parallel incubates. An analysis of the rate of disappearance of (125)I-T(4) from reaction mixtures in relation to the rate of appearance of (125)I-T(3) and (125)I-
iodide
was employed to estimate the activity of the 5-monodeiodinating pathway of T(4) metabolism that leads to the formation of 3,3',5'-triiodothyronine (reverse T(3)). Such estimates indicated that reverse T(3) formation was actively proceeding in the preparations studied, was slightly enhanced by fasting, was unaffected by dexamethasone and amiodarone, and was markedly inhibited by propylthiouracil. In view of the similarities between the effect of these experimental manipulations on the generation of T(3) from T(4) by rat liver in vitro to their effects on the production rates and serum concentrations of T(3) in man, it is concluded that the rat liver system provides a suitable model for the study of factors that influence the conversion of T(4) to T(3) in man. In addition, the findings strongly indicate that this process, at least in the liver, is closely linked to the utilization of carbohydrate.
...
PMID:The influence of fasting, diabetes, and several pharmacological agents on the pathways of thyroxine metabolism in rat liver. 67 Apr 1
A preparation of plasma membranes isolated from human omental lipocytes is composed of about 15 major polypeptide components including three major glycoproteins with an apparent molecular weight range from 100000 to 23 000, as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate - polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Extraction of this membrane preparation with sodium
iodide
or 2,3-dimethylmaleic anhydride solubilized 50 and 70% of the membrane protein, respectively, resulting from the extensive extraction of protein from all but two of the major membrane polypeptide components. This removal of protein did not affect the membrane's stereospecific D-glucose-uptake activity but did reduce its total specific [125I]insulin-binding activity by 46-67%. The binding of [125I]insulin to its specific receptor on lipocyte plasma membranes was detected at physiologic concentrations of the hormone and could be competitively displaced by increasing concentrations of native insulin. The kinetic behaviour of this reaction was approximated by Scatchard analysis, and both the affinity and binding capacity of the plasma membrane for insulin were increased at lower temperatures. These results suggest that D-glucose transport in human adipose tissue is mediated by an intrinsic component of the hydrophobic structure of the lipocyte plasma membrane, and represent a partial purification of this component. In addition, these studies demonstrate and characterize the binding of insulin to the plasma membrane isolated from human lipocytes. A quantitative study of this binding reaction may provide further understanding of the mechanisms underlying the decreased insulin responsiveness characteristic of human
diabetes
.
...
PMID:D-Glucose uptake and insulin binding by the human adipose cell plasma membrane as a function of its polypeptide composition. 84 81
In 42 non-selected patients with a clinically, biochemically and radio-
iodine
proved hyperthyreosis, previously untreated, a Menghini liver needle biopsy was carried out for evaluation of histomorphologic changes of the liver. As a result, "reactive hepatitis" was found in 8 patients. Moreover, in about 40% of the cases vacuolated nuclei of hepatocytes were observed in such a great number, as has been found so far only in
diabetes mellitus
. The microscopic findings, however, are in general unspecific and without particular pathologic value, showing no positive correlation to the biochemical findings.
...
PMID:Bioptical liver changes in florid hyperthyreosis. 111 99
A demand pacemaker was implanted into a 74-year-old listless woman who was in congestive heart failure, obese and had
diabetes mellitus
. The ECG indicated a 2 : 1 A-V block (ventricular rate 40/min). Two days after implantation a sinus tachycardia of 98/min occurred and the diabetic metabolic state deteriorated. This was probably due to hyperthyroidism in a thyroid gland of normal size but varying uptake, and was possibly precipitated by the administration of
iodine
contained in an anti-asthmatic medication.
...
PMID:[Sinus tachycardia after implantation of a pacemaker for 2 : 1 A-V block with bradycardia (author's transl)]. 124 55
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>