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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The functional properties of granulocytes in a diabetic patient deficient in
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) were compared with those of granulocytes in healthy subjects. The granulocytes of this patient had normal phagocytic activity. The microbicidal activity of the granulocytes was partially diminished with regard to Staphylococcus aureus and was almost nil with regard to Candida albicans. Fungicidal activity of normal granulocytes was shown to be impaired during the in vitro artificial hyperglycemic condition. The relationship among
diabetes mellitus
,
MPO
deficiency, and serious C. albicans infection was examined. Genetic investigation was carried out in 28 members of the proband's family. In close relatives of the patient,
MPO
values were found to be diminshed to a greater or lesser degree, thus suggesting variable expressivity of the heterozygote state of
MPO
deficiency.
...
PMID:Hereditary myeloperoxidase deficiency. 21 38
Data on the function of neutrophils in
diabetes mellitus
not infrequently accompanied by inflammatory complications are scarce. The aim of this work is to investigate the state of some components of neutrophil granules (cationic proteins, activity of
myeloperoxidase
, alkaline phosphatase) that play a major role in the mechanisms of destruction of microorganisms in phagocytosis.
...
PMID:[The activity of cationic proteins, peroxidase and alkaline phosphatase in the blood neutrophils of diabetics]. 255 45
Cytochemical indices of leukocytes were determined in 16 patients with
diabetes mellitus
in the period of unbalancing and balancing. The following tests were made: content of glycogen and lipids, acid phosphatase (AP), alkaline phosphatase (AIP),
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) and nonspecific alpha-naphtol acetate esterase (NANAE) activity. In unbalanced diabetics an evident decrease in the activity of AP and
MPO
could be noted as well as a decrease of glycogen content and an increase of lipid content. An insignificant decrease could be observed in the activity of ALP and NANAE in granulocytes. A slight increase in the activity of NANAE in monocytes would be found. Balancing this disease induced the increase of all parameters in granulocytes except
MPO
activity. It is interesting to note that balancing
diabetes mellitus
deepened the observed changes in the decrease or increase of tested parameters. The presented findings clearly indicate the role of metabolic disorders in
diabetes mellitus
on the activity of some neutrophilic enzymes and the glycogen and the content of lipids in neutrophils.
...
PMID:Cytochemical indices of leukocytes in patients with diabetes mellitus. 258 66
MPO
activity is critical for optimal microbicidal activity of normal PMNs. In the absence of
MPO
, auxiliary mechanisms protect most
MPO
-deficient hosts from clinically significant sequelae, except for some persons with
diabetes mellitus
who suffer severe candidal disease. However, given our limited knowledge of the clinical impact of
MPO
deficiency, histochemical staining of peripheral blood smears or
MPO
activity of isolated leukocytes should be assessed in patients with unexplained fungal disease or with suspected impaired host defenses. Recently isolated cDNA probes provide important tools for dissecting the molecular and cell biology underlying hereditary
MPO
deficiency and the link between
MPO
gene expression and myeloid differentiation.
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase deficiency. 283 Nov 85
Although inherited forms of phagocyte defects affect a small proportion of the general population, their clinical course can be altered dramatically by a physician's awareness of these diseases and modifications of the approach to and treatment of affected patients. The most common syndromes are chronic granulomatous disease of childhood (CGD), the Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS), the hyperimmunoglobulin-E-recurrent infection (Job's) syndrome (HIE), and
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) deficiency. CGD patients have defects in the oxidative metabolism involved in killing catalase-positive organisms. CHS patients have giant granules defective in fusing with phagosomes and subsequent killing of ingested organisms. HIE patients have abnormal chemotaxis and elevated IgE levels and are susceptible to skin infections with Staphylococcus aureus and recurrent sinopulmonary infections.
MPO
-deficient patients often go undetected since they rarely have recurrent infections unless they have a concomitant disease such as
diabetes mellitus
. Patients with a recently described syndrome, C3bi receptor deficiency, have recurrent bacterial infections and persistent leukocytosis, and their neutrophils have abnormal adherence and phagocytosis. The absence of specific granules is a more rare entity but these patients also have recurrent infections thought to be secondary to a chemotactic defect and a minor abnormality of microbial killing exhibited by their neutrophils. This review will focus on the clinical presentation and management of these patients.
...
PMID:Phagocyte defects. 294 Nov 93
Reduced bacterial killing by polymorphonuclear leucocytes has been reported in patients with
diabetes mellitus
. Whether this is due to reduced content of bactericidal granular proteins has not been determined. We therefore immunochemically measured the content of
myeloperoxidase
, lactoferrin, lysozyme, cathepsin G and elastase in polymorphonuclear leucocytes from 50 insulin-treated diabetic patients. The peroxidase activity was also measured. Normal contents of
myeloperoxidase
and lactoferrin as well as normal peroxidase activity were found. The average contents of cathepsin G, elastase and lysozyme were 2.5, 3.2 and 2.6 micrograms/10(6) polymorphonuclear leucocytes, respectively, and thus 14, 45 and 18% higher than the contents of normal polymorphonuclear leucocytes. The results indicate that reduced intracellular killing of bacteria demonstrated in previous studies in diabetic patients does not appear to be related to a reduction in the content of bactericidal proteins.
...
PMID:Bactericidal proteins and neutral proteases in diabetes neutrophils. 301 98
We analyzed the flow rate and composition of paraffin-stimulated whole saliva samples from 35 adult diabetic patients and their age- and sex-matched, non-diabetic, clinically healthy controls. All patients had insulin-dependent
diabetes
(IDDM) with a mean (+/- S.D.) duration of 14.0 +/- 9.1 years. The saliva analysis included the quantitation of total protein, amylase, immunoglobulins (isotypes A, G, and M), and the non-antibody, innate antimicrobial factors (lysozyme, lactoferrin, salivary peroxidase,
myeloperoxidase
, thiocyanate, and hypothiocyanite). The whole saliva samples from diabetic patients had significantly higher amounts of IgA (p less than 0.001) and IgG (p less than 0.05) than did the controls. No differences between the study groups were observed in flow rate, protein content, amylase activity, or IgM. The levels of innate defense factors were similar in both study groups except for salivary peroxidase, which was higher (p less than 0.02) among diabetics than among controls. Our results indicate that the antimicrobial defense capacity of whole saliva is not impaired in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulins and innate antimicrobial factors in whole saliva of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 345
Neutrophil
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) activity was analyzed by a semi-quantitative cytochemical method in 268 subjects divided into several groups. 17 subjects with significantly reduced
MPO
activity were found: 11 of 23 in the preleukemia group, 2/14 AMLs, 1/20 myeloproliferative syndrome, 1/7 carcinoma with bone marrow metastases, 1/33
diabetes mellitus
and 1/50 normals. Only in the preleukemia group, was
MPO
significantly reduced in comparison to the normal group (p less than 0.005). The high frequency of acquired
MPO
deficiency in preleukemia represents a useful criterium for this diagnosis. Furthermore, in these patients, as well as in the other subjects studied, no apparent correlation between
MPO
level and infection could be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Partial myeloperoxidase deficiency. 628 28
The
myeloperoxidase
system is presented by most immunology textbooks as a major microbicidal system of phagocytic cells. This theory, however, has not bee subjected to vigorous testing in the clinical arena. Of 14 patients with primary
myeloperoxidase
deficiency, only 3 had infectious complication. All 3 patients have more plausible explanation than
myeloperoxidase
deficiency for their infectious complications. Two of these patients were healthy until middle age when they developed systemic candidiasis after the onset of
diabetes mellitus
. The third patient was an infant with a maturational defect in neutrophil chemotaxis whose infectious complications ceased after the normalization of the chemotactic defect. The results of these "experiments of nature" indicate that the meyloperoxidase system is not a major microbicidal mechanism of phagocytic cells.
...
PMID:How important is the myeloperoxidase microbicidal system of phagocytic cells? 628 26
In seven subjects with partial and apparently acquired form of
myeloperoxidase
(
MPO
) deficiency, some functional properties of neutrophils (PMNs) were studied. Five patients suffered from preleukemia, one from
diabetes mellitus
and one from carcinoma of the breast with bone marrow metastases. Intracellular bactericidal activity, oxygen consumption and superoxide radical production were within normal limits. In three patients with preleukemia, the serum opsonic activity was markedly reduced (less than m-3SD) in an autologous system, but normal in the presence of pooled normal serum. Decreased opsonic activity was also found when these patient's sera were assayed in the presence of normal PMNs. Since the levels of IgG and C3 were comparable in the patients' sera and the pooled serum, a deficiency of another unknown opsonin or the presence of an opsonization inhibitor has to be postulated. The partial
MPO
defect apparently doesn't decrease the intracellular killing of Staphylococcus aureus by PMNs. The known susceptibility to bacterial infections in preleukemia may be explained by the reduction of serum opsonization conducing to a secondary decrease of the ingestion and killing of bacteria by the PMNs.
...
PMID:Partial myeloperoxidase deficiency in preleukemia. 630 46
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