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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have studied the epidemiologic characteristics of insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetic patients aged 0-19 in a city (
San
Diego, southern California, USA) characterized by an impressive racial diversity and especially mild and constant climatic conditions. Ascertainment was through retrospective review of medical records in 19 hospitals. For the 3 years 1978-1981 the mean annual incidence of
diabetes
was 7.3 cases/100,000, with no statistical difference between the sexes. The observed incidence rates in the various ethnic groups was significantly different from expected (p less than 0.03), with an excess of cases among Caucasians and fewer than expected cases among Mexicans, Blacks and Orientals. There was no identifiable seasonal trend. Some of the clinical characteristics at diagnosis differed between the sexes: males were slightly older (9.3 +/- 5.2 years versus 8.8 +/- 3.9 for females), had a shorter duration of
diabetes
-related symptoms and a higher frequency of infections both at the time of
diabetes
diagnosis and in preceding months. Females tended to have a higher frequency of Type 1
diabetes
in first-degree relatives. This study documents for the first time that, among multiple racial groups living in the same environment, Caucasians are at the highest risk of developing juvenile-onset Type 1
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Racial differences in incidence of juvenile-onset type 1 diabetes: epidemiologic studies in southern California. 406 50
The authors postulated that as Mexican Americans became more affluent and/or acculturated to "mainstream" United States life-style they would progressively lose their "obesity-related" pattern of cardiovascular risk factors which were defined as: obesity,
diabetes
, hypertriglyceridemia and low levels of high density lipoprotein cholesterol. This hypothesis was tested in 1979-1982 in the
San
Antonio Heart Study, a population-based study on 1,288 Mexican Americans and 929 Anglos living in three
San
Antonio neighborhoods: a low-income barrio, a middle-income transitional neighborhood, and a high-income suburb. The study population comprised 25-65-year-old men and nonpregnant women. In Mexican American women, all of the "obesity-related" risk factors fell sharply with rising socioeconomic status. In Mexican American men, by contrast,
diabetes
was the only "obesity-related" risk factor which fell with rising socioeconomic status. Moreover, it fell less steeply, there being an approximately twofold difference in
diabetes
prevalence between the barrio and the suburbs in men compared to a fourfold difference in women. Also, total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol rose with rising socioeconomic status in Mexican American men, but not in Mexican American women. "Obesity-related" risk factors were generally higher in Mexican Americans of both sexes than in their Anglo neighbors who were of similar socioeconomic status. These results suggest that cultural factors exert a stronger influence on
diabetes
and cardiovascular risk factors in Mexican Americans than do purely socioeconomic factors.
...
PMID:Sex difference in the effects of sociocultural status on diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors in Mexican Americans. The San Antonio Heart Study. 650 26
We have estimated the prevalence of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) in Mexican Americans and Anglos in three
San
Antonio neighborhoods. The age-adjusted NIDDM rates (both sexes pooled) for Mexican Americans were 14.5%, 10%, and 5% for residents of a low-income barrio, a middle-income transitional neighborhood, and a high-income suburb, respectively. In Mexican American women, though not in men, obesity also declined from barrio to suburbs. We have previously shown, however, that, although obesity is an important cause of NIDDM in Mexican Americans, there is a two- to fourfold excess in the rate of NIDDM in this ethnic group over and above that which can be attributed to obesity. We therefore speculated that genetic factors might also contribute to excess NIDDM in this ethnic group. The percent native American admixture of Mexican Americans as estimated from skin color measurements was 46% in the barrio, 27% in the transitional neighborhood, and 18% in the suburbs. The NIDDM rates in Mexican Americans thus paralleled the proportion of native American genes. Furthermore, the
San
Antonio Mexican American rates were intermediate between the NIDDM rates of "full-blooded" Pima Indians (49.9%), who presumably have close to 100% native American genes, and the
San
Antonio Anglo population (3.0%) and the predominantly Anglo HANES II population (3.1%), both of which presumably have few if any native American genes. The association of genetic admixture with NIDDM rates suggests that much of the epidemic of NIDDM in Mexican Americans is confined to that part of the population with a substantial native American heritage.
Diabetes
1984 Jan
PMID:Prevalence of diabetes in Mexican Americans. Relationship to percent of gene pool derived from native American sources. 669 Mar 48
Obesity and Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
are common in the Mexican American population. It is not clear whether this is merely a specific instance of the more general phenomenon of excess Type 2
diabetes
and obesity among poor people, or whether Mexican Americans have a discrete genetic susceptibility to Type 2
diabetes
. The latter consideration arises because Mexican Americans are of mixed native American and European ancestry and native Americans may have a genetic predisposition to Type 2
diabetes
which Mexican Americans could share. We studied 936 Mexican Americans and 398 Anglo-Americans randomly selected from three socially and culturally distinct neighborhoods in
San
Antonio, Texas. Three categories of obesity--lean, average, and obese--were defined using the Anglo-American distribution of the sum of the triceps and subscapular skinfold. Mexican Americans were two to four times as likely to fall into the obese category as Anglo-Americans, but within categories, the two ethnic groups were closely matched in terms of sum of skinfolds. The prevalence of Type 2
diabetes
, however, was significantly greater in Mexican Americans than in Anglo-Americans even when the comparisons were made within the three obesity categories. The summary prevalence ratio, controlling for obesity, was 2.54 for men (p = 0.004) and 1.70 for women (p = 0.036). Thus, lean Mexican Americans are still at greater risk of Type 2
diabetes
than equally lean Anglo-Americans. Conversely, although Type 2
diabetes
prevalence increases as expected with increasing obesity in both ethnic groups, obese Anglo-Americans are still relatively protected compared with equally obese Mexican Americans. Plasma glucose was significantly higher in Mexican Americans than in Anglo-Americans even after controlling for obesity. These results indicate that, although obesity contributes to Type 2
diabetes
in Mexican Americans, it does not by itself explain the entire excess prevalence rate.
...
PMID:Does obesity explain excess prevalence of diabetes among Mexican Americans? Results of the San Antonio Heart Study. 686 33
Because migration is such a widespread phenomenon, studies of the effects of accompanying life change on the health and well-being of the migrant have special significance in areas like California that support large migrant communities. Previous studies have shown that increased weight and elevated blood pressure may be linked to changes in diet, exercise habits, and the altered sociocultural milieu of the migrant. Among Samoans, a Pacific Island population of Polynesian descent, these changes appear to be particularly prominent in segments of the population that have moved to the environment of Hawaii, which epidemiologic studies have characterized as "intermediate-modern.' Preliminary findings from a survey of weight, height, blood pressure, fasting glucose levels, and mortality records among Samoans living in California indicate that individuals living under more highly urbanized conditions exhibit even more pronounced changes. Adult weight among Samoans in California (
San
Francisco) greatly exceeds that of their counterparts in Hawaii and Samoa. Elevated blood pressures are also seen, though the extent to which this is associated with excessive weight gain is unclear. The number of individuals with high (greater than or equal to 160 mg/dl) fasting plasma glucose levels would be consistent with a population in which the prevalence of
diabetes
is many times higher than in the U.S. population. Although mortality patterns are difficult to determine for this population, available records suggest an excess mortality from cardiovascular diseases of all types among adult Samoans under age 50. Further investigations will attempt to link biobehavioral changes in the migrants' lifestyle to these observed patterns of risk.
...
PMID:Biocultural risks in longevity: Samoans in California. 710 Sep 69
The prevalence and general characteristics of chronic symmetric symptomatic polyneuropathy were assessed in two elderly populations living in Varese, northern Italy, and
San
Giovanni Rotondo, southern Italy. We interviewed 4,191 subjects (3,027 in Varese and 1,164 in
San
Giovanni Rotondo), 55 years and older, seen in office consultations by 27 general practitioners. A neurologist examined 734 patients who had two or more symptoms of polyneuropathy. A diagnosis of possible polyneuropathy (screening neuropathic symptoms and one of the following findings: bilateral impairment of strength; bilateral impairment of sensation; bilateral impairment of deep tendon reflexes) was made in 213 patients (7.0%) in Varese and 94 (8.1%) in
San
Giovanni Rotondo. Probable polyneuropathy (screening symptoms and at least two of the physical findings) was present in 111 Varese patients (3.7%) and 40
San
Giovanni Rotondo patients (3.4%). The age- and sex-adjusted prevalence rate of probable polyneuropathy was 3.6 per 100 in Varese and 3.3 per 100 in
San
Giovanni Rotondo. The disease was more prevalent in women in Varese and in men in
San
Giovanni Rotondo and was significantly correlated with age in Varese.
Diabetes
was found in association with probable polyneuropathy in 43.7% of patients. Muscle cramps and distal paresthesia were the main symptoms. In general, polyneuropathy was mild to moderate, impairment of deep tendon reflexes and sensation being the most common findings.
...
PMID:Chronic symmetric symptomatic polyneuropathy in the elderly: a field screening investigation in two Italian regions. I. Prevalence and general characteristics of the sample. Italian General Practitioner Study Group (IGPSG). 747 77
The "New World syndrome" is comprised of disorders that are hypothesized to have resulted from an interaction of the Amerindian genotype with an environment that includes marked changes in lifestyle and diet. The principal component of the syndrome is adult-onset (noninsulin dependent)
diabetes mellitus
. The purpose of this paper is to describe the emergence of
diabetes
in a Mexican-origin population. Using a unique file of multiple-cause mortality data, we have computed standardized mortality ratios and relative standardized mortality ratios for Mexican-origin individuals and for other white persons age 30 and over from the 1930's through the middle 1980's. Results for the study population residing in Bexar County (
San
Antonio), Texas, show that
diabetes
mortality for Mexican-origin individuals did indeed increase in a pattern consistent with the New World syndrome hypothesis. This study is the first description of the emergence of
diabetes
using a data set with consistently defined causes of death and demographic characteristics.
...
PMID:Emergence of diabetes mellitus in a Mexican-origin population: a multiple cause-of-death analysis. 748 19
Both insulin resistance and decreased insulin secretion have been hypothesized to be precursors of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
. An elevated proinsulin concentration reflects abnormal proinsulin processing and could indicate abnormal insulin secretion. We examined fasting insulin (measured by a radioimmunoassay that does not cross-react with proinsulin), as a marker of insulin resistance, and proinsulin and the fasting proinsulin-to-insulin ratio, as markers of impaired proinsulin processing, in 597 nondiabetic Mexican-Americans from the
San
Antonio Heart Study. Fasting insulin, proinsulin, and the fasting proinsulin-to-insulin ratio were higher in subjects with a parental history of
diabetes
than in subjects without such a history. These differences remained statistically significant after adjustment for obesity, body fat distribution, and glucose tolerance. A parental history of
diabetes
in nondiabetic Mexican-Americans is associated with an increase in fasting specific insulin and a disproportionate increase in proinsulin relative to insulin. These data suggest that both increased insulin resistance and abnormal processing of proinsulin are present in offspring of parents with
diabetes
.
Diabetes
1995 Oct
PMID:Higher proinsulin and specific insulin are both associated with a parental history of diabetes in nondiabetic Mexican-American subjects. 755 50
Diabetes
is the single largest cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in adults in the U.S. Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) has been recognized for some time as an important cause of ESRD, but non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) has been assumed, until recently, to rarely cause ESRD. The objective of this study is to determine the incidence of treatment of diabetic ESRD by diabetic type for three ethnic/racial groups: non-Hispanic whites, African-Americans, and Mexican-Americans. A population-based incidence cohort was assembled from all dialysis centers in Bexar (
San
Antonio) and Dallas counties in Texas. All patients with diabetic ESRD beginning dialysis between 1 December 1987 (Bexar) or 1 December 1988 (Dallas) and 31 July 1991 were identified. All non-hispanic whites and African-Americans and a 1/2 random sample of Mexican-Americans were approached for enrollment. Individuals were confirmed to have
diabetes
using the World Health Organization criteria.
Diabetes
typing was done using a computerized historical algorithm. Age-specific and age-adjusted incidence rates were obtained by diabetic type and ethnic/racial group. NIDDM causes the majority of diabetic ESRD: 59.5% for non-Hispanic whites, 92.8% for Mexican-Americans, and 84.3% for African-Americans. Mexican-Americans and African-Americans, respectively, have 6.1 and 6.5 times higher incidence of treatment for diabetic ESRD than non-Hispanic whites. NIDDM results in more ESRD than does IDDM. Minorities (African-Americans and Mexican-Americans) are at increased risk, and programs aimed at prevention of NIDDM-related ESRD must focus on them.
Diabetes
1995 Dec
PMID:NIDDM is the major cause of diabetic end-stage renal disease. More evidence from a tri-ethnic community. 758 41
This study assessed the health concerns and needs for health education in the Afghan refugee and immigrant community of the
San
Francisco Bay Area. The study used a telephone survey, seven community meetings and a survey administered to 196 Afghan families through face-to-face interviews. Data were analyzed qualitatively and statistically. Health problems of most concern are mental health problems and stress related to past refugee trauma and loss, current occupational and economic problems, and culture conflict. Physical health problems include heart disease,
diabetes
and dental problems. Needed health education topics include dealing with stress, heart health, nutrition, raising children in the United States (particularly adolescents), aging in the United States, and
diabetes
. Using coalition building and involving Afghans in their community assessment, we found that the Afghan community is eager for culture- and language-appropriate health education programs through videos, television, lectures, and written materials. Brief health education talks in community meetings and a health fair revealed enthusiasm and willingness to consider health promotion and disease-prevention practices.
...
PMID:Afghan Health Education Project: a community survey. 759 62
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