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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Spontaneous
diabetes mellitus
has been documented in a colony of guinea pigs. The contagious nature of the disease has been verified, but the nature of the infectious agent is not known. Animals from the original colony or animals exposed to the colony with normal glucose tolerance tests (GTT) became diabetic, as evidenced by elevated one- and four-hour GTT values, and in most cases have significant glycosuria. The severity of pathologic changes in the pancreatic islets parallel, in general, the severity of the clinical symptoms (glycosuria and abnormal GTT). Those animals with severe glycosuria and elevated
FBS
as well as one- and four-hour GTT values had the most pronounced degranulation and most prominent cytoplasmic inclusions in islet B cells. The severity of scarring in the islets can be correlated with the duration of the overt diabetic state. The other clinical parameters of note were elevated serum triglycerides, normal serum but elevated aortic cholesterol, and absence of ketonemia or ketonuria. The reproductive capacity of diabetic females was compromised. While the clinical manifestations are mild or variable, the presence of significant islet pathology is reminiscent of human juvenile diabetes mellitus. These findings lend support to the concept that infectious and/or immune mechanisms could be operative in the etiology and pathogenesis of human
diabetes mellitus
.
Diabetes
1976 May
PMID:Diabetes mellitus in the guinea pig. 17 57
The relationship between diagnosis and abnormally high fasting blood sugar levels was reviewed for 4,994 patients in a mental hygiene clinic. Fifty-four patients exceeded the criterion level of fasting blood sugar abnormality,
FBS
greater than or equal to 145 mg%. There was no evidence of relationship between psychiatric diagnosis and the presence of an abnormally high fasting blood sugar level. This held true for the diagnosis of depression despite observations made elsewhere that a significant association exists between the depressions and
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Relationship between high fasting blood sugar and depression in a mental hygiene clinic population. 42 99
Using a constant intravenous infusion technique we have measured in vivo insulin resistance in 17 normal subjects, five patients with chemical
diabetes
, and 13 non-ketotic diabetic patients with fasting hyperglycaemia (
FBS
greater than 120 mg/100 ml). All of the diabetic patients were non-obese. The results demonstrated that the diabetic patients were insulin resistant compared to normals and that the degree of insulin resistance was greater the more severe the
diabetes
. No differences in plasma glucagon levels were found among the different groups during the infusion studies. These results demonstrate that non-obese, non-ketotic diabetic patients are insulin resistant and that abnormalities in plasma glucagon concentrations do not account for this insulin resistance.
...
PMID:Does glucagon play a role in the insulin resistance of patients with adult non-ketotic diabetes? 91 24
We experienced a chronic alcoholic patient in whom a large intake of alcohol led to the development of frank clinical
diabetes
, and glucose intolerance and insulin deficiency improved perfectly following abstinence from alcohol. The patient was a 31-year-old male with no
diabetes
among his relatives. He was a heavy drinker since 12 years, and especially had a large intake of alcohol from Dec. 25 '84 to Jan. 3 '85. From the end of Jan. 1985 he complained of thirst, polydipsia, polyuria and body weight loss from 94 to 69 Kg. On June 25 1985 he admitted for the treatment of
diabetes
and had abstinence from alcohol. The blood glucose and HbA1 levels were 291 mg/dl and 14.7%, respectively on admission. His 75 g OGTT was diabetic in type and serum insulin response to glucose decreased markedly. Liver function tests were normal, and islet cell antibody was negative. Blood adrenaline, noradrenaline, growth hormone, glucagon, cortisol, T3 and T4 levels were normal.
FBS
, HbA1 and 75 g OGTT recovered to normal by dietary treatment (1800 kcal) with oral hypoglycemic agents for 8 weeks. This case report suggests that the cause of alcohol-induced
diabetes
is probably due to impairment of insulin secretion by either alcohol itself or alcohol metabolites.
...
PMID:[A chronic alcoholic patient with the development of frank diabetes after heavy drinking and perfect improvement following abstinence from alcohol]. 152 26
Twenty-three subjects with noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) and 23 age- and sex-matched controls were tested for sympathetic denervation of the iris dilator by comparing the mydriatic effect of the combination of 1% phenylephrine and 1% tropicamide with that of 1% tropicamide alone. Most of the diabetic subjects had no clinical signs of severe diabetic complications. Nine diabetics and two controls showed sympathetic denervation, defined as a 1 mm or greater dilation due the addition of 1% phenylephrine. One of those two controls had a recent history of vascular headache. The diabetics with pupillary neuropathy had higher glycosylated hemoglobin percentages and a history of higher fasting blood sugars (
FBS
's) than the diabetics with normal pupils. Our results show that pupillary neuropathy can develop in persons with
diabetes
, often before the other complications of
diabetes
become manifest.
...
PMID:Sympathetic denervation of the iris dilator in noninsulin-dependent diabetes. 178 54
Diabetes mellitus
is associated with alterations in hepatic drug metabolizing enzyme activities in experimental animals. To determine whether Type II
diabetes
or glyburide affect hepatic drug metabolism, the authors used 13C-labeled aminopyrine and caffeine breath tests as in vivo probes of the hepatic cytochrome P450 and P(1)450 enzyme activities respectively in six subjects with Type II
diabetes
(4 women, 2 men). These subjects had been treated previously with diet, had an age range of 41-63 years, had a body mass index range of 24.1-43.3 kg/m2 and had a mean fasting plasma glucose of 14.6 +/- 1.2 mM and a mean hemoglobin A1c of 12.2 +/- 0.7%. These subjects did not drink alcohol or take drugs known to affect hepatic drug metabolism. The caffeine and aminopyrine breath tests (CBT, ABT) were performed sequentially while fasting before the start of glyburide treatment (5 mg daily) and at weekly intervals for 4 weeks. ABT and CBT values are expressed as cumulative percentage of dose exhaled through 2 hours. Before beginning glyburide, the mean ABT and CBT results were 10.2 +/- 0.7% and 4.2 +/- 0.7% respectively, well within the normal ranges for these tests (ABT 6.5-15%; CBT 2.5-10%). The ABT and CBT values remained unaltered during 4 weeks of glyburide therapy. However,
FBS
decreased to 10.2 +/- 1.1 mM and HbA1C to 10.1 +/- 0.8% by the end of drug treatment. Type II
diabetes
that is poorly controlled by diet alone is not associated with alterations of the hepatic drug metabolizing enzymes as judged by the caffeine and aminopyrine breath tests. Furthermore, glyburide does not induce or inhibit the drug metabolizing enzyme systems in the liver, thereby precluding drug-drug interactions of this type.
...
PMID:Unaltered drug metabolizing enzyme systems in type II diabetes mellitus before and during glyburide therapy. 212 1
Impairment of thyrotropin (TSH) response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) has been documented in patients with uncontrolled
diabetes mellitus
(DM). In acromegalic patients, however, there have been no data regarding TSH secretion studied taking the existence of DM into consideration. Therefore, we investigated the TSH response to TRH [expressed as TSH increment (delta TSH)] in 14 untreated acromegalic patients, who did not show the suprasellar extension of adenoma, divided into two groups on the basis of either presence or absence of uncontrolled DM, and in 28 normal subjects. The mean max delta TSH was significantly reduced (p less than 0.02) in acromegalic patients despite similar mean serum T4 and free T4 index (FT4l) levels. Furthermore, the mean basal and max delta TSH in 7 patients with DM (
FBS
, 120-300 mg/dl; HbA1, 8.8-15.2%) were significantly lower than those in 7 patients without DM (p less than 0.05 and p less than 0.02, respectively) despite similar the mean serum T3, T4, FT4l, growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) levels and sellar volume. In 4 patients with DM the TSH response to TRH 6-8 weeks after insulin therapy, when their HbA1 levels were normal, increased compared to that before insulin therapy. The mean max delta TSH after selective adenomectomy in 8 patients (3 in DM group and 5 in non-DM group), whose fasting basal GH fell to less than 5 ng/ml, was almost identical to that in normal subjects. In conclusion, the present study suggests that the abnormality in TSH secretion in acromegalic patients may be increased by the existence of uncontrolled DM.
...
PMID:The influence of diabetes mellitus on thyrotropin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone in untreated acromegalic patients. 313 52
To investigate the significance of perfusion defects in asymptomatic diabetics, 40 mildly diabetic men, mean age 49 +/- 9.7 years, without clinical or exercise electrocardiographic evidence of ischemic cardiac disease, were evaluated: 1) sixteen (40%) showed no filling defect (G1). Mild defects (G2) and moderate defects (G3) were observed in 12 and 12, respectively; 2) the percent washout ratio was diminished in none of G1, in 3 of G2 and in 11 of G3; 3) there were no differences in age, duration of
diabetes
,
FBS
, HbA1c, serum cholesterol, smoking or BP. Obesity index was greater in G3 (121 +/- 15%, p less than 0.01) compared to G1 and 2 (103 +/- 9%, 108 +/- 9%); 4) the percent fractional shortening by echo was decreased in G2 and G3 (35 +/- 6%, 33 +/- 8%, p less than 0.01) compared to G1 (42 +/- 5%). The systolic time interval was higher in G3 (0.42 +/- 0.09, p less than 0.05) compared to G1 and G2 (0.35 +/- 0.05, 0.36 +/- 0.06); 5) radionuclide ventriculographic studies showed a lower peak filling rate at rest in G2 (2.4 +/- 0.5 EDV/sec, p less than 0.025) compared to G3 and G1 (2.9 +/- 0.6 EDV/sec, 3.2 +/- 0.7 EDV/sec). The rate of increase in cardiac output was significantly lower in G3 compared to G1 and G2 (59 +/- 28%, 96 +/- 49%, 97 +/- 31%, p less than 0.05). These results suggest the possibility of detecting metabolic derangements was myocardial scintigraphic perfusion abnormalities which might be a causal factor of myocardial dysfunction in diabetics.
...
PMID:Diabetic cardiomyopathy: the relationship between 201-thallium myocardial scintigraphic perfusion defect and left ventricular function in asymptomatic diabetics. 325 81
To elucidate the mechanism of glucose intolerance in chronic liver disease (CLD), the kinetics of plasma glucose, insulin and C-peptide were studied after intravenous glucose loading in patients with CLD. Fasting plasma insulin levels were higher in patients with CLD than in normal subjects. This hyperinsulinemia was attributed primarily to an increased pancreatic secretion of insulin. Patients with CLD were divided into two groups, one with normal fasting plasma glucose (
FBS
less than 100 mg/dl (Group I) and the other with higher
FBS
(Group II). In Group I, the glucose disappearance rate was normal and a brisk acute insulin response (AIR) to glucose was noted. The glucose disappearance rate in Group II was lower than that in normal subjects, and AIR to glucose was blunted. It is suggested that normal glucose tolerance in Group I patients could be interpreted as a state of compensation by hypersecretion of insulin. On the other hand, the glucose intolerance in Group II patients could be due to inadequate insulin secretion to overcome insulin resistance of CLD.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract
PMID:Glucose, insulin and C-peptide kinetics during intravenous glucose tolerance test in chronic liver disease. 329 92
Twenty young asymptomatic diabetic patients were evaluated for left ventricular dysfunction by determining the radionuclide ejection fraction response to supine bicycle ergometry. The double product at peak exercise (28,743 +/- 3,314 vs 29,007 +/- 3,625, p greater than .05) was not significantly different between the two groups. Seven of 20 diabetics had either no change or a drop in their ejection fraction during exercise while 1 of 20 control subjects had no change in ejection fraction. There was no correlation between the
FBS
(r = .26) and HbA1c (r = .32) and ejection fraction change during exercise, although those diabetics with LV dysfunction tended to have a higher HbA1c level as compared to diabetics with a normal response (16.8 +/- 3.1 percent vs 12.5 +/- 3.8 percent respectively, p greater than .05). The LV systolic dysfunction in young asymptomatic diabetic subjects does not appear to correlate with the degree of acute or chronic hyperglycemia, and therefore, is not a direct function of the dynamic metabolic state of
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Subclinical left ventricular abnormalities in young diabetics. 335 22
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