Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (type 1 diabetes)
20,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two-hundred-and-two impotent diabetic patients gave their consent to be investigated. Impotence is linked to diabetes mellitus in 58.9% of patients so all the other etiologies have to be systematically eliminated. Neuropathy or arteriopathy, when isolated, are found with the same frequency, but these 2 etiologies are often associated (47 patients). No statistical difference between IDDM and NIDDM was found. Mercury strain gauge plethysmography and venous occlusion coupled to ECG allows detection of arterial lesions in diabetic impotence. Patients agreed to submit to all of the various therapeutic possibilities. Combination of alpha-blockade and good glycemic control induced the best results.
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PMID:[Impotence in the diabetic]. 275 49

A 32-year old Chinese man with insulin dependent diabetes developed impotence and infertility with total azoospermia. The azoospermia was reversed following improved diabetic control with soluble insulin three times daily. With the reversal of azoospermia, his wife conceived five months later.
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PMID:Reversal of azoospermia in an insulin dependent diabetic. 389 81

Past studies of the alteration of nerve morphology of penile erectile tissue in men with impotence using light and histofluorescent techniques have been inconclusive. We evaluated the ultrastructure of erectile tissue of five men; the content of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine in this tissue was also known. Our results show that in nerve fibers of men whose penile tissue samples displayed very low norepinephrine content, nerve fibers were extremely sparse. In two men with insulin dependent diabetes, alteration of the intracellular caveolae, glycogen, and microfilaments of smooth muscles were found. In addition, in these patients, there was an increased amount of cell surface coat material. In diabetic patients, these changes may translate into biomechanical alterations of the smooth muscle function within the erectile tissue.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of human penile erectile tissue in patients with abnormal norepinephrine content. 725 26

To improve diabetes care according to the St. Vincent Declaration an interdisciplinary working group on erectile dysfunction in patients with diabetes was installed in the Departments of Internal Medicine, Urology and Psychiatry at the University of Graz. The screening and basic diagnostic procedures are performed in the diabetes clinic in the Department for Internal Medicine. To inform the patients about the options of treatment of diabetic erectile dysfunction and to determine prevalence data an anonymous questionnaire with a pre-stamped envelope was sent to 133 male patients with diabetes mellitus type I (IDDM). 59 (44%) of the questionnaires were returned and could be analyzed. Mean age and diabetes duration were representative for the male diabetes population. The prevalence of erectile dysfunction in this group was 49%. 7% of the patients were completely impotent. None of the patients reported the use of erection aids as a vacuum device or intracavernosal injection of smooth muscle-relaxant drugs. The prevalence of erectile dysfunction is high among patients with diabetes mellitus type I. Modern management offers satisfactory success in most cases, therefore screening for erectile dysfunction and adequate therapy should be offered to all patients.
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PMID:[Erectile dysfunction in patients with type I diabetes mellitus]. 856 Sep 2

The EURODIAB IDDM Complications Study involved the examination of 3250 randomly selected insulin-dependent diabetic patients, from 31 centres in 16 European countries. Part of the examination included an assessment of neurological function including neuropathic symptoms and physical signs, vibration perception threshold, tests of autonomic function and the prevalence of impotence. The prevalence of diabetic neuropathy across Europe was 28% with no significant geographical differences. Significant correlations were observed between the presence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy with age (p < 0.05), duration of diabetes (p < 0.001), quality of metabolic control (p < 0.001), height (p < 0.01), the presence of background or proliferative diabetic retinopathy (p < 0.01), cigarette smoking (p < 0.001), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (p < 0.001) and the presence of cardiovascular disease (p < 0.05), thus confirming previous associations. New associations have been identified from this study - namely with elevated diastolic blood pressure (p < 0.05), the presence of severe ketoacidosis (p < 0.001), an increase in the levels of fasting triglyceride (p < 0.001), and the presence of microalbuminuria (p < 0.01). All the data were adjusted for age, duration of diabetes and HbA1c. Although alcohol intake correlated with absence of leg reflexes and autonomic dysfunction, there was no overall association of alcohol consumption and neuropathy. The reported problems of impotence were extremely variable between centres, suggesting many cultural and attitudinal differences in the collection of such information in different European countries. In conclusion, this study has identified previously known and new potential risk factors for the development of diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
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PMID:Prevalence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy and its relation to glycaemic control and potential risk factors: the EURODIAB IDDM Complications Study. 893 8

We determined arterial venous and sinusoidal factors in 20 patients with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and erectile dysfunction by performing dynamic infusion cavernosometry (DIC), colour flow Doppler ultrasonography, penile biothesiometry and corpus cavernosum electromyography (CCE). DIC, colour flow Doppler ultrasonography and penile biothesiometry were done in standard fashion except for CCE. Paradoxical increase in the electrical activity of corpus cavernosum after intracavernous (IC) papaverine was called a discoordination that was due to cavernous smooth muscle contraction instead of relaxation. Arterial and accompanying pathologies were found in 10 (50%) patients. In 3 (15%) of them pure arterial pathology, in 6 (30%) patients arterial and veno-occlusive dysfunction (VOD) and in one patient arterial pathology with abnormal biothesiometry were found. VOD and accompanying pathologies were found in 12 (60%) patients. In 6 (30%) of them VOD and arterial, in 4 (20%) patients VOD and discoordination and in 2 (10%) patients VOD and abnormal biothesiometric values were present. A higher frequency and coexistence of VOD and discoordination pattern were observed. In conclusion, patients with diabetic impotence show a wide range pathophysiology of erection and the evaluation of these patients must include multistep techniques.
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PMID:Multifactorial evaluation of diabetic erectile dysfunction. 906 35

Autonomic dysfunction is a recognized feature of the Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LES). However, the characteristic pattern of dysautonomia has not been clearly documented and its pathophysiologic basis is not known. We therefore abstracted autonomic symptomatology and results of quantitative tests for salivation, and vasomotor, cardiovagal, and sudomotor reflexes from records of 30 LES patients. Dry mouth (77%) and impotence (45% of men) were the most common symptoms. Composite Autonomic Scoring Scale results were abnormal in 93% of patients, and autonomic failure was severe in 20%. The frequency of specific test abnormalities were the following: sudomotor function, 83%; cardiovagal reflexes, 75%; salivation, 44%; and adrenergic function, 37%. Although voltage-gated N-type calcium (Ca2+) channels are implicated in autonomic transmission, the low frequency of serum antibodies to N-type Ca2+ channels found in the patients of this study (31% positive) argues against a pathogenic role in mediating LES-related dysautonomia. In contrast, 93% of the patients were seropositive for P/Q-type Ca2+ channel antibodies. A subset of these antibodies is thought to impair neuromuscular transmission. Autoantibodies of thyrogastric or glutamic acid decarboxylase specificity (markers of predisposition to type 1 diabetes mellitus) were found in 45% of patients, and type 1 antineuronal nuclear antibody (or anti-Hu, a marker of autoimmune neuropathy associated with small-cell lung carcinoma) was found in 3%. No autoantibody correlated with autonomic dysfunction severity. Sensorimotor neuropathy was documented in five patients, and was not significantly associated with autonomic neuropathy. Autonomic failure was most severe in older subjects with cancer (p = 0.02, age by cancer interaction).
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PMID:Autonomic dysfunction in the Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome: serologic and clinical correlates. 944 63

Thirty-eight patients of NIDDM, 12 of IDDM and 10 healthy age matched controls were subjected to seven standardised autonomic reflex function tests. A scoring criteria was utilised for diagnosing and grading the severity of dysautonomia. Eight patients of IDDM and 24 of NIDDM had dysautonomia. One-third of the patients in each group had grade IV autonomic dysfunction. Severity of autonomic dysfunction was directly related to the duration of disease in NIDDM whereas in IDDM this relation was not seen. Peripheral neuropathy was almost always associated with dysautonomia in NIDDM. On the contrary, in IDDM dysautonomia was independent of peripheral neuropathy. Charcot's arthopathy, dysphagia, constipation and nocturnal diarrhea were always associated with evidence of dysautonomia. Other symptoms viz. gustatory sweating, postural dizziness and impotence did not necessarily indicate dysautonomia.
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PMID:Clinical dysautonomia in diabetes mellitus--a study with seven autonomic reflex function tests. 1252 Oct 82

Penile tissue consisting of corps cavernosum (cc) and tunica albuginea (TA) was obtained from 35 impotent patients undergoing surgery for implantation of penile prostheses and was examined for nor adrenaline content. 10 patients were classified as a non diabetic non neuropathic group, on the basis of their clinical history and differential diagnostic symptoms which included Peyronie's disease, vascular disease, hypertension and psychogenic impotence. The nor adrenaline content was found to be significantly lower in tunica albuginea than the corpus cavernosum (P<0.02) in this group. The nor adrenaline content of corpus cavernosum from insulin dependent (IDDM) and non insulin dependent (NIDDM) diabetic neuropathic patients was also found to be significantly lower (P <0.02) than that of non diabetic non neuropathic patients. The nor adrenaline content of tunica albuginea however, was similar in both groups. A non significant association in the content of nor adrenaline in corpus cavernosum and tunica albuginea among IDDM and NIDDM diabetic neuropathics was also observed. These results provide evidence that an underlying neuropathic factor itself causes vascular as well as metabolic changes in the adrenergic nerves of the penis in diabetics due to neuropathy in addition to the effect of the disease and thus may contribute to the development of impotence in these patients irrespective of their type of diabetes.
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PMID:Estimation of nor-adrenaline content of human penile tissue in diabeticmen with/without neuropathy. 1641 54