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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Still, there are a lot of questions about the pathogenesis of neonatal diabetes mellitus. In the author's opinion neonatal diabetes mellitus is a distinct entity which differs from the well-known types of diabetes in children (
type 1 diabetes
,
MODY
-diabetes) and transient neonatal hyperglycemia regarding pathogenesis, pathophysiology and prognosis. Casuistics of three children two of whom were sibs are reported in detail to demonstrate the characteristics of neonatal diabetes mellitus. Regarding the reported sibs we suppose genetic origin of the disease. Autosomal-recessive mode of inheritance must be assumed.
...
PMID:[Neonatal diabetes mellitus and microcephaly. Indications for autosomal recessive inheritance]. 147 Jan 85
In this study, 52 nonproteinuric Japanese patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (
NIDDM
) were followed from 1985 to 1990 to investigate the rate of development and progression of microalbuminuria and the factors which influence it. In 1985, 34 patients were normoalbuminuric, and 18 patients were microalbuminuric. Five years later, 11 of 34 initially normoalbuminuric patients (32.4%) developed microalbuminuria, and 6 of 18 initially microalbuminuric patients (33.3%) developed overt proteinuria. At the beginning of the study, hypertension existed more frequently in the patients who later developed microalbuminuria (8 of 11, 72.7%) than in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (4 of 23, 17.4%). Age-adjusted values of mean blood pressure (+/- SEM) at the beginning of the study in the patients who developed microalbuminuria (98.2 +/- 3.4 mm Hg, n = 11) were significantly higher than those in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (87.3 +/- 2.4 mm Hg, n = 23). In six patients who developed overt proteinuria, initial urinary albumin excretion rates (AER) were higher than those in the patients who stayed microalbuminuric, and four patients who presented with initial AER greater than 100 micrograms/min all developed overt proteinuria. These results indicate that, in Japanese patients with
NIDDM
, the rate of development of microalbuminuria is faster than that reported in Caucasian
IDDM
, and preexisting hypertension with relatively poor control of blood pressure may be a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria.
...
PMID:High blood pressure is a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria in Japanese subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 147 44
To investigate the frequency and etiology of diabetic osteopenia, we measured spinal bone mineral density (SBMD), total body bone mineral density (TBBMD), total body fat and lean body mass in 69 female diabetic patients (14 IDDMs and 55 NIDDMs). SBMD decreased with age in both
IDDM
and
NIDDM
, but when expressed as a percentage of age-matched normal Japanese females, some had lower SEMD, but others had normal or increased SBMD. Postmenopausal
IDDM
patients had lower SBMD than postmenopausal
NIDDM
patients. Thirteen out of 69 (18.8%) had an SBMD lower than 90% of age-matched controls. SBMD correlated positively with TBBMD. Those with lower SBMD had poor glycemic control, but there was no relation between SBMD and either duration of diabetes or presence of retinopathy and/or nephropathy.
IDDM
patients had lower 1.25 (OH)2D, osteocalcin than NIDDMs. SBMD correlated negatively with urinary pyridinoline and deoxypyridinoline excretion. SBMD correlated positively with body weight, and those with lower SBMD had significantly lower body mass index, body weight, fat weight and lean body mass than those with normal or increased SBMD. These results suggest that
IDDM
patients may be at higher risk of losing bone postmenopausally, and diabetic patients with lower SBMD have characteristics of poor diabetic control, lean habitus, low serum 1.25 (OH)2D.
...
PMID:[Spinal bone mineral density in the female diabetic patients]. 149 83
The acetylator phenotype was determined in 31 insulin-dependent (
IDDM
) and 110 noninsulin-dependent (
NIDDM
) Jordanian diabetics, and was compared to that of 160 healthy volunteers of the same ethnic group. Dapsone was used as the test drug. The rapid acetylator phenotype was slightly less frequent in
IDDM
and slightly more frequent in
NIDDM
. Neither of the differences was significant. When acetylator status in the two types of diabetes mellitus was compared, there was a significant difference among the two groups. Patients with
IDDM
had a higher percentage of the slow acetylator phenotype when compared to
NIDDM
patients. The association between acetylator status and
IDDM
in Jordanians, which agrees with that reported for the Saudi Arabian population, is the reverse of what is found in European populations. The results demonstrate ethnic differences in acetylator status among
IDDM
patients.
...
PMID:Acetylator phenotypes of Jordanian diabetics. 149 43
This article is divided into two parts. A retrospective overview summarizes some of the work that provided the framework and tools of the more recent studies. The five novel areas of research are related to the indirect effects of insulin. Regulation of plasma glucose is of central importance in health and diabetes. Understanding this precise regulation requires sensitive isotope dilution methods that can measure the rates at which glucose is produced by the liver and used by the tissues on a minute-to-minute basis. Validation studies indicated that the non-steady-state tracer method yields reasonable results when the specific activity of plasma glucose does not change abruptly. During hyperinsulinemic glucose clamps, the decrease in specific activity of glucose can be prevented by the MSTI. During exercise, the decrease of specific activity can be only in part ameliorated by step-tracer infusion. Depancreatized dogs are used extensively as a model of selective insulin deficiency, because dog stomach secretes physiological amounts of glucagon. This strategy can avoid injections of somatostatin, which can have other affects in addition to the suppression of insulin and glucagon. In human diabetes, in addition to an increase of glucose production, there is also an increase in glucose cycling in the liver. In animal models of diabetes, mild
NIDDM
, and in glucose intolerance, the percentage of increments of glucose cycling are much larger than those of glucose production. We hypothesize, therefore, that measurements of glucose cycling can be used as an early marker of glucose intolerance. Application of different tracer strategies and use of the depancreatized dog as a model of diabetes, we investigated the importance of the indirect effects of insulin in the pathogenesis of diabetes. 1) Because, in the treatment of
IDDM
, insulin is administered by the peripheral routes we compared the relative importance of hepatic and peripheral effects of insulin in regulating the rate of glucose production. Experiments were performed in depancreatized dogs that were initially maintained at moderate hyperglycemia (10 mM) with subbasal portal insulin infusion. During the experimental period, insulin was infused either peripherally or portally at 0.9 mU.kg-1.min-1. In addition, peripheral infusions were also given at 0.45 mU.kg-1.min-1. We concluded that when suprabasal insulin levels are provided to moderately hyperglycemic depancreatized dogs, the suppression of glucose production is more dependent on peripheral than portal insulin concentrations. This indirect effect of insulin may be mediated by limitation of the flow of precursors and energy substrates for gluconeogenesis and/or by suppressive effect of insulin on glucagon secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Banting Lecture: glucose turnover. A key to understanding the pathogenesis of diabetes (indirect effects of insulin). 149 70
Diabetic renal disease is a clinical syndrome in which proteinuria is followed by the development of renal failure, and is commonly associated with the concomitant development of hypertension. In insulin-dependent diabetic (
IDDM
) patients, hypertension often first appears in the microalbuminuric phase of diabetic nephropathy whereas in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (
NIDDM
) patients, hypertension often antecedes nephropathy and may precede the diagnosis of diabetes. Antihypertensive regimens including diuretics, vasodilators such as hydralazine, beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors reduce proteinuria and delay the decline in renal function in
IDDM
patients with established nephropathy. No such data are as yet available for calcium antagonists. In microalbuminuric diabetic patients with hypertension, conventional antihypertensive agents, ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists have been shown to decrease urinary albumin excretion. In the diabetic patient with normal blood pressure and microalbuminuria, there is much less information. It appears likely that ACE inhibitors reduce or retard the rate of increase in albuminuria in these patients. The effect on ultimately delaying or preventing renal failure remains unknown although the preliminary evidence is encouraging. Data on calcium antagonists remain inconclusive with some reports suggesting an increase in proteinuria with the dihydropyridine calcium antagonists. However, a recent longer term study suggested that nifedipine may prevent the rise in albuminuria which is generally observed in the untreated normotensive microalbuminuric subject.
...
PMID:The management of diabetic proteinuria. Which antihypertensive agent? 150 44
To clarify the problem in the measurement of renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rates in diabetes, the effect of glucose on the determination of para-aminohippuric acid (PAH) and inulin was examined. The concentration of urinary PAH in glucosuric diabetic subjects decreased after the storage of urine samples because of the glycation of PAH. Therefore, glucose must be removed by the acid treatment before the determination of the concentrations of urinary PAH. Since glucose can interfere with the assay of inulin, the sample must be treated with NaOH prior to the determination of the inulin concentration. GFR of the subjects with
type 2 diabetes
was next examined. GFR in the subjects with a duration of diabetes less than 10 years was significantly higher than that in the subjects with a duration of diabetes more than 10 years. Thus, the subjects with short-term
type 2 diabetes
may present with hyperfiltration similar to the subjects with short-term
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:[Measurement of renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rates in diabetic subjects]. 150 86
Of the many information obtainable from the urine of diabetic patients, urinary C-peptide (CPR), albumin and anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) were representatively described using my clinical and experimental data. C-peptide excretion in 24h collection of urine is a good estimate of insulin secretion from the pancreas and thus low in
IDDM
patients and even in
NIDDM
patients at a later stage, but high in pathological conditions including Graves' disease, obesity, liver cirrhosis and Cushing's syndrome. Urinary albumin excretion in small amounts (microalbuminuria) is usually observed in diabetic patients who have been under a poor control state of diabetic hyperglycemia for over 5 years and provides a good tool for monitoring early diabetic nephropathy. The grade of microalbuminuria (30-300 mg/day) is positively correlated with the HbA1 level in diabetic patients, showing that microalbuminuria is reversible along with an improvement of diabetic control at least in an early phase of diabetic nephropathy. As the albumin level measured in a spot urine sample correlates well with the value in the 24h collection of urine, the albumin measurement is conveniently feasible with a spot urine sample at every patient's visit. The amount of ADH excreted in urine is 7-10% of that secreted from the posterior pituitary. The excretion of ADH in a day was in the urine of diabetic patients positively correlated with HbA1, urinary osmolarity and concentration of sodium in urine, although the pathological meaning of the observed ADH hypersecretion in the development of diabetic complications is currently unknown.
...
PMID:[Pathophysiological analysis of diabetes mellitus and complications from the urine of diabetic patients]. 150 92
A lipopolysaccharide from wheat flour (LPSw) which was isolated and characterized is shown to exert definitely a suppressive effect on incidence of
type 1 diabetes
in mice. Therapeutic effect on
type 2 diabetes
in patients was also obtained, though only from preliminary results. The percutaneous route of administration is most favorable. The important role that precursor tumor necrosis factor, free or cell bound, may play in this mechanism is discussed.
...
PMID:Homeostasis as regulated by activated macrophage. V. Suppression of diabetes mellitus in non-obese diabetic mice by LPSw (a lipopolysaccharide from wheat flour). 152 28
A review of the putative risk factors associated with the development of coronary heart disease in diabetes is presented. Emphasis is given to the effect of nephropathy (persistent proteinuria) and hypertension on cardiovascular mortality in
IDDM
. Risk factors associated with CHD in
NIDDM
are also reviewed. Finally, possible reasons to explain the increased incidence of CHD associated with proteinuria in
IDDM
patients, including lipoprotein abnormalities, increased fibrinogen levels, increased platelet adhesiveness, and altered hemostatic variables, are discussed.
...
PMID:Risk factors for coronary heart disease in diabetes mellitus. 152 26
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