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)

The influence of insulin on plasma and bone mineral homeostasis was studied in the BB rat model, which develops an autoimmune form of diabetes at the age of about 100 days. Untreated diabetes of short duration resulted in hypercalciuria and intestinal calcium malabsorption despite increased free concentrations of serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. The concentrations of two vitamin D-dependent calcium-binding proteins were also decreased: a low duodenal calbindin-D 9K concentration corresponding to the low intestinal active calcium absorption and a low serum osteocalcin concentration, corresponding to a low bone formation and highly correlated with serum IGF-I concentration. Indeed, on bone histology a very low number of osteoblasts and low osteoblast activity (osteoid formation and mineral apposition rate) were observed. Similar abnormalities persisted in rats with long-standing diabetes resulting in markedly decreased bone mass and increased brittleness of bone. Diabetes therefore resulted in low-turnover osteoporosis. Several hormones (testosterone, growth hormone and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D) and growth factors (IGF-I and its binding proteins) with known effects on bone were markedly decreased in diabetic rats. A continuous infusion of testosterone, GH or 1,25-(OH)2D3 for 14 d by miniosmotic pumps could not improve the biochemical or histomorphometric abnormalities. Insulin infusion for 2 weeks, however, rapidly increased and overcorrected the number of osteoblasts, normalized serum osteocalcin and IGF-I concentrations but could not yet normalize bone mineralization. Continuous infusion of IGF-I alone did not improve the osteoblast number of osteocalcin but markedly stimulated bone mineralization. From these data we can conclude that both insulin and IGF-I are potent bone growth factors but with different mode of action. In human type 1 diabetes, a similar decrease in serum osteocalcin and IGF-I was observed. A reduction of regional bone mass, both in long and trabecular bones, is frequently observed in human diabetes. Cumulative data from case control studies indicate that the life-time fracture risk is increased in diabetes.
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PMID:Diabetic bone disease. Low turnover osteoporosis related to decreased IGF-I production. 146 60

The coeliac disease (CD) or gluten-sensitive enteropathy (GSE) is a permanent intolerance to wheat gliadin and to correlated proteins inducing malabsorption and typical damages of the jejunal mucosa (total or subtotal villous atrophy = SVA) in genetically-predisposed individuals ("DQW2"). A large amount of research has been devoted to CD pathogenesis: the most recent studies, thanks to sophisticated and experimental methods, support the pathogenetic immunological theory and the one of direct cytotoxicity. The correct diagnostic procedure for CD, established in 1970 by the European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition (ESPGAN), suggested three small bowel mucosal biopsies. In the last years, because of the difficulties of such a practice, the necessity of non-invasive diagnostic approaches has developed; such approaches have been verified in absorption tests (one-hour blood xylose, intestinal permeability methods) and in immunogenetic tests (antibodies antigliadin, anti-reticulin, anti-endomysium, anti 90 KD glycoprotein, anti-human jejunum, HLA I/II antigens). The specific MHC antigens establish CD's incidence in several population and in particular situations, as in first-degree relatives and in diseases associated with CD (dermatitis herpetiformis (DH), insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and other auto-immune syndromes). The specific serum antibodies singly used as first level screening if estimated in combination with absorption tests, reach the highest levels of specificity and sensibility in CD diagnosis. It's anyway fundamental the comparison with at least a typical CD histological feature, caused by a challenge with a sufficient gluten to be carried in dubious cases and in non high auxological risk age (ESPGAN 1989). Adolescence is a period of frequent non compliance with a gluten-free diet and of particular psychological and physical problems: the apparent "gluten insensitivity", typical of teen-agers and adults, recalls the definitions of silent CD and latent CD (iceberg like). In the first case the jejunal mucosa is abnormal and the symptomatology isn't evident. In latent CD, genetically restricted, the mucosa is normal but there are minimal markers of inappropriate immunity to gliadin (at intestinal humoral immunity level) and a possible worsening of histological lesions to the third stage under environmental stimuli. This represents a two-stage model CD. That's why CD is still under-evaluated despite recent statistics reporting an increasing incidence (late and atypical forms). Prevalence rates between 1:300 and 1:4,000 and more are quoted in literature. The necessity of a strict gluten-free diet is confirmed by the evident frequency of lymphoma and by the increased risk of malignancy in untreated CD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Celiac disease and its diagnostic evolution. Comparisons and experiences in a hospital pediatric department (1975-1992). I]. 152 93

IgA and IgG antigliadin antibodies were measured in 498 patients with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and no history of intestinal malabsorption. Thirty patients had abnormal concentrations of antigliadin antibodies; 22 of these had an intestinal biopsy carried out and 16 of the 22 had subtotal villous atrophy suggestive of coeliac disease (prevalence 3.2%). There were no significant differences between patients with coeliac disease and diabetes and diabetic patients with normal IgA antigliadin antibodies in any of the nutritional variables measured, duration of diabetes, and mean insulin requirement. The mean age of onset of diabetes and attainment of expected height for age were both significantly lower in the patients with both diseases. Typing HLA classes I and II was done in 242 patients. The incidence of HLA-B8, DR3, and DQW2, which are commonly associated with both the diseases, is increased when both are present.
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PMID:Screening of diabetic children for coeliac disease with antigliadin antibodies and HLA typing. 203 7

Cases of malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus conforming to the description of the protein deficient pancreatic diabetes type in Ethiopian patients were compared with Type 1 (insulin-dependent) and Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetic. Fourteen of 39 malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus patients had fat malabsorption compared with only two of ten Type 1 diabetic patients and one of nine control subjects. Xylose absorption was normal favouring a pancreatic cause for the malabsorption. Plasma C-peptide during oral glucose tolerance test was significantly lower than that in Type 2 diabetic patients and normal control subjects (p less than 0.01 to 0.001) and was also consistently but not significantly higher than in Type 1 diabetic patients. Glucagon secretion patterns were similar in malnutrition-related and Type 1 diabetic patients. Of 23 new malnutrition-related diabetic patients treated with glibenclamide after nutritional rehabilitation and insulin treatment, only three responded, 14 were unresponsive but remained ketosis free for over eight days while another six developed ketoacidosis or significant ketonuria within two to six days during the trial. Sixteen unselected Type 1 diabetic patients who discontinued their insulin therapy all developed frank ketoacidosis after a mean of 5.5 days. The similarity of the malnutrition-related and Type 1 diabetes mellitus in age of onset, insulin requirement for diabetic control and appearance of ketosis-proneness in some cases, together with the similarity of C-peptide and glucagon secretion patterns suggest that the protein deficient pancreatic diabetes variant of malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus may be Type 1 diabetes mellitus modified by the background of malnutrition rather than an aetiologically separate entity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The clinical and hormonal (C-peptide and glucagon) profile and liability to ketoacidosis during nutritional rehabilitation in Ethiopian patients with malnutrition-related diabetes mellitus. 211

Among 88 unselected patients with chronic pancreatitis 35% (95% confidence limits 25 to 46) had insulin-dependent diabetes, 31% (21% to 41%) had non-insulin-dependent diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance (by intravenous glucose tolerance test), and 34% (24% to 45%) had normal glucose tolerance. B cell function measured by C-peptide concentration after 1 mg glucagon IV correlated with the pancreatic enzyme secretion (meal stimulated duodenal lipase content). B cell function was preserved to a greater extent (P less than .01), and glycosylated hemoglobin and fasting level of glucose were lower (P less than .01 to .05) in the 31 patients with pancreatogenic diabetes than than in 35 otherwise comparable patients with type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes, yet daily insulin dose was similar in the two groups. Glucagon stimulated C-peptide was inversely correlated to glycosylated hemoglobin in insulin-dependent patients with pancreatogenic diabetes and in type I diabetes. Since body mass indices were identical in the two groups, better glucoregulation was not due to reduced food intake or malabsorption in pancreatogenic diabetes. Rather residual B cell function and/or different secretion of other pancreatic hormones in pancreatogenic diabetes may account for different metabolic control in type I IDDM compared with insulin-dependent pancreatogenic diabetes.
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PMID:Metabolic control and B cell function in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus secondary to chronic pancreatitis. 330 47

The polyglandular autoimmune syndromes (PGA) are well known and are distinguished into type I, type II and type III. PGAI, also called APECED (autoimmune polyendocrinopathy, candidiasis and ectodermal dystrophy), is an autosomal recessive disorder, appearing in childhood and typically characterized by hypoparathyroidism (unusual in PGAII and PGAIII) and adrenal insufficiency. In APECED, autoimmune destruction of the pancreatic beta cells with development of insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes is possible, but less frequent than in the other PGAs, especially PGAII. The pathogenesis of this unique autoimmune disease is unknown. No HLA association seems to exist and genetic studies have assigned the autosomal APECED locus to chromosome 21. The case of a 28-years-old female suggesting the diagnosis of APECED, is presented, characterized by psycho-somatic abnormal development, teeth alterations, post-puberal gonadal failure with dystrophic hypoplasia of external genitalia, previous vaginal candidiasis, a slowly developing juvenile brittle diabetes. Intestinal malabsorption induced by Giardia lamblia occurred (probably resulting, like candidiasis, from immunological anergy). A strong familiarity linked to female sex was noticed (the mother, a sister, the little nice and some maternal female cousins being affected) while the father and a brother were healthy. Diabetes seems to be characterized by early onset and severe complications. In this patient no organo-specific antibodies were detected and the only immunologic disorder was a small decrease of CD3 and CD4/CD8 ratio, both CD4 and CD8 being at the lower normal range. This patient (and her female maternal relatives) needs a long-term follow-up in order to evaluate the function of endocrine glands and to initiate early treatment for hormonal deficits, as well as to detect the non-endocrine components of disease.
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PMID:[A rare case of juvenile diabetes mellitus associated with APECED (autoimmune poly-endocrinopathy, candidiasis and ectodermal dystrophy) with strong X-linked familial inheritance]. 930 48

The medical treatment has an important role in patients with chronic pancreatitis. Pain is the most frequent symptom, at least in the initial phases of the disease. In about 60% of patients it can be successfully treated by medical therapy; in the remaining 40% it requires surgery. Malabsorption of fat and protein and diabetes usually appear in the advanced stages of the disease. The treatment of these complications is based on the administration of pancreatic extracts and insulin. There are several types of pancreatic extracts; the most useful are those with high lipase content and high lipase-protease ratio. Moreover, they should be protected against gastric acid and should have a gastric emptying simultaneously with chyme, with a rapid liberation of enzymes into the duodenum. The treatment of diabetes usually requires low-moderate doses of insulin. Diabetic ketoacidosis is rare, while microvascular changes have the same frequency as in type 1 diabetes.
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PMID:Medical treatment of chronic pancreatitis. 1082 21

Diabetes mellitus, a common complication of chronic pancreatitis, can disturb the metabolism of zinc, copper, and selenium. We analyzed the effects of hyperglycemia, malabsorption, and dietary intake on these factors in 35 men with alcohol-induced chronic pancreatitis complicated by insulin-treated diabetes mellitus (CP-D), 12 men with chronic pancreatitis but no diabetes (nondiabetic CP), 25 men with type 1 diabetes mellitus (type 1 DM), and 20 control subjects. Diabetes due to chronic pancreatitis was associated with decreased plasma zinc and selenium concentrations and with increased urinary copper excretion. Of the chronic pancreatitis patients, 17% had low plasma zinc, and 41% of them had low plasma selenium. None of the type 1 diabetic patients had low plasma concentrations of zinc, but 12% of them had a low selenium concentration. Hyperglycemia, as assessed by fasting plasma glucose and by plasma HbAlc, was responsible for the increased zinc excretion and the decreased superoxide dismutase activity. The perturbations of the copper, selenium, and zinc metabolism were particularly pronounced in subjects with chronic pancreatitis plus diabetes mellitus. We have yet to determine whether the differences in trace-element status contribute to the clinical expression of the disease.
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PMID:Evidence that diabetes mellitus favors impaired metabolism of zinc, copper, and selenium in chronic pancreatitis. 1129 33

The prevalence of coeliac disease (CD) in the adult population is unknown because silent and latent stages do exist. Type 1 diabetes mellitus may be associated with CD because of common genetic background and/or shared pathogenetic mechanisms. We investigated 74 adults with type 1 diabetes (32+/-11 yr, disease duration 13+/-9 yr), 69 parents of diabetic probands (56+/-10 yr), 59 siblings (30+/-11 yr) and 50 healthy controls (35+/-10 yr) for the presence of circulating islet cell antibodies (ICA), anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies (GADA65), anti-gliadin immunoglobulins A and G (IgA- and IgG-AGA). All patients with raised AGA, performed also IgA anti-endomysium antibody (EmA) indirect immunofluorescence assay. Samples were positive for ICA in 19 diabetics (26%), 4 parents (6%), 4 siblings (7%), 0 controls (p<0.001); for GADA in 34 diabetics (46%), 4 parents (6%), 1 sibling (2%), 0 controls (p<0.001). Twenty-five diabetic patients (34%), 10 parents (14%), 5 siblings (8%), 3 controls (6%) (p<0.001) had raised IgA-AGA (>4.4 mg/l). Four diabetic patients (5%), 5 parents (7%), 0 siblings (0%), 4 controls (8%) had raised IgG-AGA (>18 mg/l). Both IgA- and IgG-AGA were detected in 1 diabetic and 2 parents. The prevalence of ICA, GADA, and IgA-AGA positivity in Type 1 diabetes patients was significantly higher than in controls (p<0.001). Finally, 50 AGA-positive subjects performed EmA test: only 2 of them resulted EmA-positive, a diabetic patient and a sibling. The patient with Type 1 diabetes had a small-bowel biopsy specimen consistent with CD and, as sole evidence of malabsorption, sideropenic anaemia. EmA-positive sibling also showed severe iron deficiency, yet refused endoscopy. We conclude that: 1) CD cannot be diagnosed on the basis of associated IgA- and IgG-AGA alone. Nevertheless, detection of such antibodies is useful, in combination with EmA, in screening for endoscopic biopsy; 2) too high rate of detection of IgA-AGA in Type 1 diabetic patients in comparison with other groups excludes a false positivity of the test itself, while suggests a pathogenetic association of both immunological disorders, perhaps related to abnormal gammadelta TCR-bearing intraepithelial lymphocytes.
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PMID:Screening for coeliac disease in families of adults with Type 1 diabetes based on serological markers. 1134 64

Celiac disease (CD) is a small intestinal disorder with overt malabsorption in the minority and with subclinical or atypical symptoms in the majority of patients. It is triggered by gluten and related cereal proteins in a unique genetic background (HLA-DQ2 or DQ8 and other unmapped genes). CD is characterized by a highly specific mucosal autoantibody response to tissue transglutaminase. In the intestine this enzyme creates antigenic neoepitopes in gluten peptides which are more efficiently presented to the immune system in the context of HLA-DQ2 or DQ8. Between 3% and 6% of patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) have (atypical) CD, and the prevalence of a variety of autoimmune diseases in patients with CD correlates with the time of gluten exposure, reaching 35% after 20 years. It is still unknown whether oligosymptomatic CD favors the development of type 1 DM and whether a gluten-free diet modifies the progression of DM in general. Apart from shared or adjacent HLA loci in both diseases, post-translational modification of potential autoantigens by enzymes such as tissue transglutaminase could play a role in the autoimmunity of type 1 DM.
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PMID:Celiac disease and its link to type 1 diabetes mellitus. 1139 50


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