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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
IgG and
IgA
heavy chain allotypes were determined in the sera of 483 Caucasian Type 1
diabetes
patients and 503 Caucasian healthy controls. There was no significant difference between patients and controls neither on the level of Gm phenotype frequencies nor on the level of Gm three-locus and two-locus haplotype frequencies. A selective IgA deficiency was found in 14 patients (2.9%) but in none of the control individuals (P less than 10(-4].
...
PMID:IgG and IgA heavy chain allotypes in Type 1 diabetes. 661 55
Serum immunoglobulin (G, A, M) levels were performed on 66 patients with non-insulin-dependent (type II)
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM). When compared with 30 age-matched normal controls and 32 hospitalized controls there was no significant difference between the mean IgG and IgM levels. The
IgA
levels were significantly higher (P less than 0.005) in the diabetic group when compared with both control groups. This is true regardless of age, sex, duration of disease, and type of treatment (insulin/diet or oral hypoglycemic agents and/or diet). Thirty-six percent of the diabetic patients'
IgA
levels exceeded the mean +/- 2 SD of the normal control group. There were no significant differences in immunoglobulin levels between insulin-treated and non-insulin-treated diabetic groups. Since diabetic patients may have a number of secondary diseases, attempts were made to correlate the most common of these (acute and/or chronic bacterial infections, hypertension, arteriosclerotic heart disease, and diabetic neuropathy) with elevated
IgA
levels. Only
IgA
levels of diabetic patients with infections versus diabetic patients without infections were significantly different (P less than 0.05). However,
IgA
levels of uninfected diabetic patients remained significantly higher than those of normal controls (P less than 0.005), hospitalized controls (P less than 0.01), and hospitalized controls with bacterial infections (P less than 0.005). Possible reasons for the isolated elevations of
IgA
are discussed.
Diabetes
Care
PMID:Elevation of IgA levels in the non-insulin-dependent (type II) diabetic patient. 675 40
The lymphocyte subpopulations of 26 insulin-dependent diabetics were studied. Thirteen of them had persistent pancreatic islet-cell serum antibodies (ICA) (mean (+/- SD) duration of
diabetes
11 +/- 8 years). The others were ICA-negative (mean duration of
diabetes
10 +/- 8 years). The mean fasting blood glucose in the week before the lymphocyte count was 1..37 +/- 0.45 g/l (two specimens for every patient). As controls 19 healthy volunteers, sex and age matched, were investigated. The T-lymphocyte count was no different in diabetics compared to controls. B-cells were significantly raised (p less than 0.01) in the ICA-positive group, when tested with anti-human gammaglobulin sera (IgG +
IgA
+ IgM), anti-human IgM, while no difference was observed between ICA-negative patients and normal subjects.
IgA
-bearing lymphocytes were equally raised in both diabetic groups (p less than 0.05). These data show an altered immunological balance in type IB (autoimmune)
diabetes
, characterized by an increased number of B-lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte subpopulations in insulin-dependent diabetics with and without serum islet-cell autoantibodies. 700 84
Aspects of humoral, secretory and cell-mediated immunologic status were studied in a group of 22 adults with severe, uncomplicated obesity. Normal concentrations of serum immunoglobulins (IgG,
IgA
, IgM, IgD) and complement components (C3, C4) were found. Levels of secretory
IgA
and lysozyme in the tears of obese patients did not differ from normal weight controls. The obese individuals had circulating sub-populations of T and B lymphocytes which were the same as controls. No effect of obesity was detected on the response of lymphocytes to stimulation in vitro with polyclonal T and B cell mitogens. All but two of the obese patients responded to one or more of the recall skin test antigens employed. We conclude that severe overweight alone, uncomplicated by
diabetes
or hyperlipidemia, is not associated with significant immunologic dysfunction.
...
PMID:Immunologic status in severe obesity. 706 16
A recently developed gel-filtration technique allows protein-bound calcium fractions to be separated and quantitated; the protein is separated under physiological conditions of pH, temperature, and concentrations of Na, Mg, and Ca to assure that the calcium-proteinate equilibrium is not disturbed. We used this gel-filtration technique to study the protein-bound calcium fractions in 18 patients with hyperparathyroidism, multiple myeloma,
diabetes
, osteoporosis, or liver cirrhosis. We calculated the amount of calcium bound per gram of protein for each of the three protein peaks and the intrinsic association constant (Ka) for calcium/albumin. Results with the multiple myeloma patients (three IgG, one
IgA
) indicated that IgG did not bind calcium appreciably, that
IgA
had about the same affinity as albumin for Ca, and that Ka was slightly low for one patient of the IgG type (79 L/mol) and normal for the other three myeloma patients (106, 90, and 91 L/mol). Results for patients with the other diseases were also essentially normal, except for the osteoporesis patients (two men, one woman), whose Ka values (69, 75, and 73 L/mol) were lower than normal.
...
PMID:Clinical studies of protein-bound calcium in various diseases. 707 38
In 129 patients with Type 1 (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
, 100 healthy control subjects and 91 non-diabetic first degree relatives of Type 1 patients, we investigated variation in serum
IgA
, IgG and IgM concentrations with sex and HLA-B phenotype. Two patients with onset before the age of 15 years were completely
IgA
-deficient. One additional patient was completely IgG-deficient. Excluding these three cases, diabetic patients had serum
IgA
and IgM concentrations comparable to control subjects. IgG levels of patients were, however, significantly lower than those of control subjects (11.66 versus 12.69 g/l, p = 0.003). Non-diabetic first degree relatives of patients had IgG levels intermediate between those of diabetic patients and control subjects. There was some indication that
IgA
concentrations were lower in the 53 patients with HLA-B8 (1.91 versus 2.21 g/l, p = 0.038). No association was found between IgM or IgG levels and HLA phenotypes.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulin levels, immunodeficiency and HLA in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 714 Nov 66
Report on a diabetic patient with IgA nephropathy whose kidneys were examined by biopsy four times during a period of four years. Morphologically the typical findings were observed: Outstanding deposits of
IgA
, hypercellularity and increase of matrix within the mesangium. The findings persisted during the period of observation. The differential diagnosis between IgA nephropathy and a slight diffuse glomerulosclerosis in
diabetes mellitus
is discussed. IgA nephropathy is diagnosed with certainty only by the aid of immunohistology.
...
PMID:[IgA nephropathy in diabetes mellitus (author's transl)]. 721 Sep 32
With a view to studying the eventual alterations of protein metabolism, some serum protein fractions such as: immunoglobulins (IgG,
IgA
, IgM), transferrin and ceruloplasmin were determined in 100 diabetics (52 males, 48 females) in comparison with a control group of 26 healthy subjects. Significant differences were found between
IgA
and transferrin values both in diabetics and in controls.
IgA
tended to increase with the length of disease, whereas IgG, IgM and transferrin showed a contrary trend.
IgA
and transferrin values were higher in the patients with juvenile and young adult
diabetes
, as compared to maturity onset and senile
diabetes
. Other immunoglobulin and transferrin changes were related to sex, age, type of treatment, degree of stability, presence of chronic complications. No significant anomalies were found for ceruloplasmin. The results confirm the presence of serum protein alterations in
diabetes mellitus
, whose significance may be correlated with the clinical particularities of the disease.
...
PMID:Study of some serum protein fractions in various clinical forms of diabetes mellitus. 723 48
The activity of non-specific protection factors (complement titer, lysozyme level, completed phagocytosis index and serum immunoglobulin (IG) concentration) was studied in 100 children, aged 3 to 14 years: 70 with
diabetes mellitus
and 30 normal subjects. The results obtained indicate a decreased reactivity of the child organism in
diabetes mellitus
, the reduction degree being directly proportional to the main process severity and decompensation extent. Serum IG level in children, suffering from
diabetes mellitus
, is disturbed, i.e. high
IgA
concentration is often seen in the presence of normal IgM level and normal or decreased IgG content. Disimmunoglobulinemia is intensified within decompensation phase, depending on the pathological process duration and severity. The reduced IgG level in patients with severe
diabetes
apart from lower indices of non-specific immunity, stipulates pred disposition of children with
diabetes mellitus
to the secondary infection development. The indices studied may be used not only for characterizing the body immunobiological reactivity and protective mechanisms, but also for determining the disease severity and form.
...
PMID:[Activity of nonspecific immunological factors and serum immunoglobulin levels in children with diabetes mellitus]. 732 31
In 1974 and 1975 7000 patients' sera were tested for levels of IgG,
IgA
and IgM. In 330 patients at least one of the three Ig classes was low. In most instances secondary immunodeficiency was present in association with myeloma, etc. However, 81 patients above 8 years of age fulfilled the criteria of idiopathic late onset Ig deficiency. In 44 of these patients clinical follow-up and repeated measurements of Ig levels were possible 1--8 years after the initial diagnosis. Selective IgA deficiency was present initially (15 patients) most frequently and persisted most often (14 patients). 4 patients had initially low IgG and 6 patients low IgM, findings which were only rarely confirmed later on. In 19 patients 2 or 3 Ig classes were initially low, with persistence of Ig deficiency in 12 individuals. In no instance had clinical symptoms appeared in the first two years of life. The following diseases were documented in the 44 patients studied (28 individuals with persistent and 16 with transitory Ig deficiency): recurrent infections (16 patients), atopic disease (8 times), rheumatoid arthritis (6 times), epilepsy (4 times), SLE (3 times) and enteropathies (twice). Seven patients also had a malignancy, 4
diabetes
, and 2 hyperthyroidism.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic immunoglobulin deficiency in juveniles and adults. Catamnestic studies]. 739 75
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