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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Avoidance of saturated fat and cholesterol by 1,210 Mexican Americans and 866 non-Hispanic whites was assessed as part of a population-based survey of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors. Participants ranged in age from 25 to 64 years and resided in three socioeconomically distinct neighborhoods of San Antonio, TX: low income, middle income, and upper income. A scale was constructed to assess the degree to which individuals avoided six dietary sources of saturated fat and cholesterol. Women of both ethnic groups were found to avoid saturated fat and cholesterol to a greater degree than men, scoring higher on five of the six components of the scale. Saturated fat/cholesterol avoidance increased significantly with increased socioeconomic status in both ethnic groups. Although there were no ethnic differences in overall saturated fat/cholesterol avoidance, more non-Hispanic whites recognized milk, eggs, and visible fat on meat as food sources to avoid. The scale described in this paper provides useful information about the specific food components recognized as dietary sources of saturated fat and cholesterol and helps identify those population groups that would benefit from nutrition education programs. Because of its simplicity and ease of administration, the scale may be a useful tool in epidemiological research.
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PMID:A saturated fat/cholesterol avoidance scale: sex and ethnic differences in a biethnic population. 333 3

The records of 47 patients with a perinephric abscess diagnosed from 1975 to 1986 at 8 San Francisco Bay Area hospitals were reviewed. The mean age was 51 years. Fifty-five percent were females and 45%, males. The left kidney was affected in 47% of cases, the right kidney in 40%, both in 4%, and a transplanted pelvic kidney in 9%. Fever (55%), chills or diaphoresis (47%), flank pain (40%), abdominal pain (40%), and nausea or vomiting (32%) were the most common presenting symptoms. About half the patients had symptoms for 1 week or less and 12% had no symptoms. Fever was documented before diagnosis in 88% of patients. Abdominal mass (13%) or tenderness (49%), and flank mass (9%) or tenderness (42%) were seen less frequently, and 11% of patients did not have fever, flank, or abdominal findings. The most frequent underlying conditions included previous urologic surgery (45%), previous urinary tract infection (38%), diabetes mellitus (36%), and urinary tract stones (36%). Cultures of perinephric abscesses yielded gram-negative aerobes in 52% of patients, primarily Escherichia coli. Staphylococcus aureus was isolated in 26% of patients and anaerobes in 17%. A single pathogen was isolated in 71% and multiple isolates in 29%. Of interest and great potential therapeutic importance was culture of anaerobes, primarily Bacteroides spp. in 17%, Enterococcus spp. in 7%, and Candida albicans in 7%. Positive blood and urine cultures identified perinephric abscess organisms exactly in 58% and 37% of cases, respectively. Routine laboratory tests such as the white blood cell count and urinalysis were insensitive and non-specific for perinephric abscess. Leukocytosis and anemia at admission were seen in slightly more than half of the patients. For radiologic diagnosis, computerized tomographic scanning was most helpful. Ultrasound and intravenous pyelography were falsely negative in about one-third of cases. Mortality (13%) was low in this series when compared with earlier studies, and probably reflects modern medical care. Six patients (13%) died during hospitalization, 2 of whom had diagnosis of PNA established only at autopsy. Drainage of the perinephric abscess was carried out by open surgical drainage in 64% of patients, percutaneous drainage in 19%, and both in 13%. The initial procedure, whether open surgical drainage or percutaneous catheter drainage, was usually successful. Late complications included nephrocutaneous fistulas in 3 patients and disseminated candidiasis in 1 patient.
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PMID:Perinephric abscess. Modern diagnosis and treatment in 47 cases. 335 13

The prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) is higher in Mexican Americans than in non-Hispanic white Americans, even after adjustment for the former's greater overall and more centralized adiposity. We postulated that this excess risk of NIDDM could be due to resistance to insulin. We performed oral glucose-tolerance tests with measurements of serum insulin concentrations in 225 Mexican Americans and 180 non-Hispanic whites without diabetes as part of the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of risk factors for diabetes. Changes in serum insulin concentrations in response to the glucose challenge were quantified by the area under the serum insulin curve. Overall adiposity was characterized by body-mass index, and regional body-fat distribution by the ratio of subscapular to triceps skinfolds and the ratio of waist to hip circumference. After adjustment for these indicators of adiposity and also for differences in glucose tolerance, Mexican Americans were found to have significantly greater areas under the serum insulin curve than non-Hispanic whites. These data suggest that, like other populations at high risk for NIDDM such as Pima Indians and Micronesians, Mexican Americans have more hyperinsulinemia than can be accounted for by their adiposity.
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PMID:Hyperinsulinemia in a population at high risk for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 352 46

Recent data have suggested that central obesity is related positively to the prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). We examined whether central obesity (measured by the ratio of subscapular to triceps skinfold) was predictive of NIDDM prevalence independently of overall obesity (measured by body mass index, BMI) in 1231 Mexican Americans and 939 non-Hispanic whites who participated in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based survey of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors. Mexican Americans are characterized by higher rates of NIDDM, greater overall obesity, and more central body fat distribution than age-matched non-Hispanic whites. Using multiple logistic regression with age, ethnicity, BMI, and central obesity as covariates, overall obesity was positively associated with NIDDM prevalence in both sexes (P less than 0.001) but central obesity was related to NIDDM prevalence only in women. Our data suggest that the effect of centrality decreases at higher levels of centrality. While both BMI and centrality narrow the ethnic difference in NIDDM prevalence, Mexican Americans still have an increased risk of NIDDM (odds ratio = 2.33 in men and 1.80 in women), suggesting that other factors, possibly genetic, may also be important determinants of the ethnic differences in NIDDM prevalence.
Diabetes Care
PMID:Role of obesity and fat distribution in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites. 369 81

Both central and upper-body adiposity are associated with high rates of type II non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), high triglyceride levels, and low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels. Previous data have also suggested that central and upper-body adiposity are relatively uncorrelated and hence may measure different aspects of regional body fat distribution. We assessed body mass index (BMI), the ratio of subscapular-to-triceps skinfold (STR), the ratio of waist-to-hip circumference (WHR), lipids, lipoproteins, and glucose tolerance in 738 Mexican Americans (ages 25-64 yr), who participated in the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors. NIDDM was diagnosed according to National Diabetes Data Group criteria. In general, STR and WHR were associated with high NIDDM rates, low HDL cholesterol levels, and high triglyceride levels, although WHR was somewhat more predictive of these than STR. In females, BMI, WHR, and STR all made independent contributions to prediction of NIDDM and HDL cholesterol; in males, WHR and STR both made independent contributions to prediction of triglyceride levels. This suggests that both indices may measure different aspects of body-fat distribution. Investigators should consider measuring both of these indicators of body-fat distribution in studies of diabetes and other cardiovascular risk factors, although if only a single measure is feasible, WHR appears to be preferable.
Diabetes 1987 Jan
PMID:Do upper-body and centralized adiposity measure different aspects of regional body-fat distribution? Relationship to non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, lipids, and lipoproteins. 379 64

A genetic and epidemiological survey of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) was conducted among the Mexican Americans residing in three socioeconomically distinct areas of San Antonio, Texas: a low socioeconomic (SES) traditional area (barrio), a middle SES, ethnically balanced area (transitional), and a high SES, predominantly Anglo area (suburb). Seventeen polymorphic markers were used to relate the prevalences of NIDDM with the extent of Amerindian ancestry of 1,237 Mexican Americans of these three residential areas. While only the RH and haptoglobin loci showed evidence of association with NIDDM, an admixture analysis of the combined allele frequency data revealed a pattern of decreasing NIDDM prevalence with increasing socioeconomic status (as approximated by neighborhood of residence) and a parallel decrease in Amerindian ancestry. The rank-order correlation between NIDDM prevalence and Amerindian admixture is 0.943 (P less than .001) for the crude prevalence rate and 0.829 (P less than .02) for the age-adjusted rate. Nested gene diversity analysis revealed that the heterogeneity of allele frequencies is more pronounced when individuals were classified by their NIDDM disease status as compared to the classification by neighborhood. Estimation of Amerindian ancestry of each individual did not reveal any significant change in the shape of the distributions of individual admixture proportions in diabetics as compared to the controls. Nevertheless, the results suggest that genetic factors partially explain the differences in NIDDM prevalence observed between the Mexican American and Anglo populations in the southwestern United States.
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PMID:Relationship of prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus to Amerindian admixture in the Mexican Americans of San Antonio, Texas. 380 13

Mexican Americans have a higher prevalence of NIDDM, more overall obesity and more centralized adiposity than non-Hispanic whites, but have thus far not been characterized as to whether they have greater upper body adiposity. Waist-to-hip circumferences (WHR, a measure of upper body adiposity) and subscapular-to-triceps skinfold ratios (centrality index, a measure of centralized adiposity) were determined in 725 Mexican Americans and 226 non-Hispanic whites as part of the San Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors. Mexican American females had higher centrality indices and WHRs than non-Hispanic white females, even after adjustment for demographic (age, menopausal status) and behavioral variables (body mass index, parity, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, exercise, and oral contraceptive and estrogen use). Mexican American males had higher centrality indices than non-Hispanic white males, but differences in WHR disappeared after adjustment for overall adiposity (body mass index). Of the demographic and behavioral variables, only age and body mass index were consistently related to regional body fat distribution. The lack of an association between body fat distribution and behavioral variables suggests that genetic factors may play the principal role in determining body fat distribution. Surprisingly, the distributions of centrality index and WHR were relatively independent of one another suggesting that they may be used as distinct, independent predictors of metabolic diseases.
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PMID:Upper body and centralized adiposity in Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites: relationship to body mass index and other behavioral and demographic variables. 380 66

A polymorphic region 5' to the human insulin gene has been associated with diabetes in earlier studies. This polymorphic region is composed of tandem repeats that fall into 3 general size classes, designated class 1 (600 base pairs), class 2 (1300 base pairs), and class 3 (2500 base pairs). Frequencies of these classes of alleles vary among racial groups. American Blacks have been underrepresented in published studies of insulin gene polymorphism and diabetes. We undertook a cooperative study between two centers (San Francisco and St. Louis) to determine geno-types at the insulin locus in 313 unrelated American Blacks (132 nondiabetic, 27 with IDDM, and 154 with NIDDM). In both centers, nondiabetic individuals were younger and leaner than NIDDM patients. Allelic and genotypic frequencies at the insulin locus were not different between the two centers. Class 1 alleles represented 60% of all alleles, class 2 alleles 11%, and class 3 29%. No class of insulin allele was associated with NIDDM in this study. Subdivision of the study population by obesity, family history, or age at diagnosis failed to detect a subgroup for which the insulin allele was associated with NIDDM. Only 27 IDDM individuals were studied, and no significant association of class 1 alleles with this group was noted. However, examination of more IDDM individuals is required before a definitive statement can be made. Fasting serum triglyceride levels were determined retrospectively in 50 NIDDM individuals. No differences in triglyceride levels among genotypes were noted. The frequency of class 3 alleles in 13 hypertriglyceridemic NIDDM subjects was not different from that of the whole group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes 1985 May
PMID:Lack of association of the polymorphic locus in the 5'-flanking region of the human insulin gene and diabetes in American blacks. 388 60

Evidence for bimodality in the distribution of two hour post oral glucose challenge plasma glucose concentrations has come previously primarily from native American and Pacific Island populations having high non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) prevalence. Because the National Diabetes Data Group (NDDG) criteria for diagnosing NIDDM rely in part upon the assumption of bimodality, it is important to determine the generality of this phenomenon. We looked for bimodality among Mexican Americans in San Antonio, a population having greater than 50% Caucasian admixture. By fitting both a single normal distribution model and a mixture model of two normal distributions, for each age decade, we found that the mixture model was preferred to the single normal model (p less than 0.001) and that this model fit the data well. The proportion in the upper component (hyperglycemics) increased with each successive age decade. The minimum misclassification cutpoints decreased with age, but all were higher than the 200 mg/dl cutpoint recommended by the NDDG. Use of the NDDG cutpoint, however, improved sensitivity with only a minimal deterioration of specificity. Our findings further generalize the bimodality phenomenon and support the NDDG criteria.
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PMID:Evidence of bimodality of two hour plasma glucose concentrations in Mexican Americans: results from the San Antonio Heart study. 397 50

Dietary intakes of essential nutrients were measured as part of a population-based investigation of diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors in Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans in San Antonio, Texas. Twenty-four hour dietary recalls were conducted on 2134 individuals residing in three socioeconomically distinct neighborhoods: low-income, middle-income, and upper-income. Mean intakes of calcium, vitamin A and vitamin C were significantly lower among Mexican-Americans than among Anglos. Intake of vitamin C was most affected by socioeconomic status. Females of both ethnic groups consumed less than their RDA for calcium and iron. Intakes of B vitamins, phosphorus, and potassium were adequate, with few ethnic or socioeconomic differences.
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PMID:Dietary intakes of essential nutrients among Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans: the San Antonio Heart Study. 402


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