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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A review of 88 cases from the literature with personal observations on 3 new patients is given of the syndrome featured by
juvenile diabetes mellitus
,
optic atrophy
, hearing loss, diabetes insipidus, atonia of the urinary tract and bladder and other abnormalities. The postmortem in one of our cases is mentioned. The pattern of inheritance is autosomal recessive. The interpretation of the data on diabetes insipidus from the literature and in our three patients is also discussed. It can only be stated that neurohypophyseal diabetes insipidus can be a component of the syndrome and that in many cases--particularly in the presence of lesions of the efferent urinary tract--the possibility of nephrogenous diabetes insipidus can not be excluded with certainty. It seems probable that the same mechanism can be held responsible for the lesions of the olfactory, optic, vestibular and cochlear nerves, the hypophyseal form of diabetes insipidus, retarded sexual maturation, abnormal pupillary reaction, myelopathy and the electro-encephalographic, electroneurological and electromyographic changes in the Wolfram syndrome. The process underlying this affection of neural structures remains obscure.
...
PMID:Juvenile diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, hearing loss, diabetes insipidus, atonia of the urinary tract and bladder, and other abnormalities (Wolfram syndrome). A review of 88 cases from the literature with personal observations on 3 new patients. 27 Feb 76
Nine patients with the syndrome of
juvenile diabetes mellitus
and
optic atrophy
exemplified the wide range of manifestations of this syndrome. The disease may occur as a recessively inherited or sporadic disorder and tends to have multi-system involvement. Hearing loss, diabetes insipidus, and evidence of cerebellar or central vesitbulo-ocular dysfunction are common.
...
PMID:Juvenile diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy. 58 96
The syndrome of
juvenile diabetes mellitus
, primary
optic atrophy
and hydronephrosis, hydroureter and megacystis was observed in two brothers. One patient showed consistent elevation of the plasma creatine phosphokinase activity (isoenzymes MM 71%, MB 29%), without any sign of myocardial or skeletal muscle disease. This rare syndrome is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. It has not yet been reported in Austria, to our knowledge.
...
PMID:[Familial incidence of juvenile diabetes mellitus and primary optic atrophy (author's transl)]. 66 11
Twenty-one families were selected from the published reports in which the propositus had the triad of
juvenile diabetes mellitus
, diabetes insipidus, and
optic atrophy
. The data were consistent with the hypothesis of an autosomal gene which, in the homozygote, causes
juvenile diabetes mellitus
and one or more of diabetes insipidus,
optic atrophy
, and nerve deafness. Heterozygotes appear to have an increased probability of developing
juvenile diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus, diabetes insipidus, and optic atrophy. An autosomal recessive syndrome? 88 9
The authors report on one case of Wolfram syndrome, a rare condition, which is characterized by
juvenile onset diabetes mellitus
, diabetes insipidus,
optic atrophy
and sensorineural deafness. The findings of this 13-year follow-up show that this patient developed typical neurological complications of long-standing diabetes mellitus as in the common type 1 variant. Moreover, some peculiar signs occurred such as anosmia, ophthalmoplegia interna, and central nystagmus. Since Wolfram syndrome is probably part of a more generalized neurodegenerative disorder, long-term prognosis will depend both upon the severity of chronic diabetic complications and upon the rapidity, by which degeneration of cerebellar, pontine and brain stem structures appear. Prognosis of the cardinal clinical signs is such that
optic atrophy
, though usually quite rapid in the beginning, generally does not lead to complete blindness. Sensorineural hearing loss progresses very slowly so that deafness might be expected exceptionally only. The hearing deficit in classical diabetics, however, is of retrocochlear origin. Therefore, in Wolfram syndrome, a combined inner-ear and retrocochlear hearing loss may occur.
...
PMID:Juvenile onset diabetes mellitus, central diabetes insipidus and optic atrophy (Wolfram syndrome)--neurological findings and prognostic implications. 185 94
The Wolfram, or DIDMOAD, syndrome is a rare congenital disease that is associated with diabetes insipidus,
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
of an early onset, bilateral
optic atrophy
and deafness. Urological disorders are usually present as well. We have studied nine patients belonging to five different families. All of the family members were HLA typed (including DR), and islet cell as well as antinuclear antibody determinations were carried out. Although individuals with
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
are very prone to have either HLA-DR3 or -DR4 antigens, none of our patients had DR3 antigens and only one was DR4 positive. On the other hand, three of our patients were typed as HLA-DR2 positive. This antigen is uncommon in classical
insulin dependent diabetes
. In one of the families, the affected siblings did not share the same HLA haplotype. Islet cell and antinuclear antibodies were not found in any of the cases and six of the patients had a small, but significant, insulin secretory reserve. On the basis of some of the clinical features it was also possible to further distinguish between the DIDMOAD syndrome and the classical
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
. The differences encountered between classical and DIDMOAD
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
--the presence/absence of HLA linkage, HLA-DR2, -DR3 and -DR4 associations, islet cell or antinuclear antibodies, the tendency to ketosis and diabetic retinopathy--indicate that their etiopathogenies are triggered by distinct mechanisms.
...
PMID:Contrasting features of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus associated with neuroectodermal defects and classical insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. 329 50
The Wolfram, or DIDMOAD, syndrome consists of diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus,
optic atrophy
, and deafness. Diabetes mellitus usually occurs as the first manifestation of this syndrome, followed by the development of
optic atrophy
, neurosensory hearing loss, and finally diabetes insipidus. We report on four cases with a review of the literature. The diabetes mellitus occurring in these patients is clinically indistinguishable from classic
type I diabetes mellitus
. Two of three patients continue to have measurable C-peptide secretion 8 yr after onset of diabetes. Two of three patients with Wolfram syndrome had the HLA-DR2 antigen. Combining our cases with those described in the literature, 7 of 11 patients have the HLA-DR2 antigen. The preponderance of the HLA-DR2 antigen in the Wolfram syndrome is different from classic type I diabetes. This is further evidence of the genetic heterogeneity of diabetes mellitus. Although the Wolfram syndrome is rare, it should be considered in diabetic patients with unexplained
optic atrophy
and hearing loss or with polyuria and polydipsia in the presence of adequate blood sugar control.
...
PMID:Wolfram syndrome: report of four new cases and a review of literature. 346 31
Four cases (belonging to two different families) of Wolfram's syndrome (WS), a rare congenital disease characterized in its complete form by insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus,
optic atrophy
, diabetes insipidus, deafness, and dilation of the urinary tracts are presented, and a review of the literature is included. Three of four patients are characterized by HLA-DR2 haplotype, which is rare in
IDDM
. The neurodegenerative nature of some symptoms and the possible pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus connected with it are discussed.
...
PMID:Wolfram's syndrome: a clinical, diagnostic, and interpretative contribution. 349 Mar 63
The association of diabetes mellitus, optic nerve atrophy, and sensorineural deafness is a rare but distinct syndrome. We describe an 18-year-old woman who developed diabetes mellitus at three years of age, sensorineural deafness at 14 years of age, and bilateral asymptomatic
optic atrophy
at 18 years of age. Diabetic retinopathy was notably absent. Forty-two patients with diabetes mellitus and
optic atrophy
have been described. All had
type I diabetes mellitus
without typical diabetic retinopathy even though insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus was present for many years. Other neurologic abnormalities, including diabetes insipidus, epilepsy, and nystagmus, have been described in association with diabetes mellitus and
optic atrophy
. A distinct, heredofamilial genetic mechanism, unrelated to diabetes mellitus per se, is postulated.
...
PMID:Coexistence of diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and sensorineural deafness: case report. 371 43
Seven patients with a rare syndrome of diabetes insipidus (DI), diabetes mellitus (DM),
optic atrophy
(OA), neurosensory deafness (D), atony of the urinary tract, and other abnormalities (Wolfram or DIDMOAD syndrome) are reported. Of the seven patients, three siblings were followed up for 10-17 years. All seven patients had diabetes mellitus and
optic atrophy
; six had diabetes insipidus; and in the four patients investigated there was dilatation of the urinary tract. The severity of diabetes varied, and all required insulin for control of the hyperglycaemia. In one patient the course of the disease simulated maturity onset diabetes of the young; another presented with ketoacidosis; but none had haplotypes usually associated with
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
. The diabetes insipidus responded to chlorpropamide, suggesting partial antidiuretic hormone deficiency. Onset of
optic atrophy
and loss of vision occurred relatively late and progressed slowly, although in one patient there was a rapid deterioration in visual acuity. Deafness was mild, of late onset, and of sensorineural origin. A degenerative process affecting the central and peripheral nervous system can explain all the manifestations of the syndrome except diabetes mellitus. The pathogenesis of the diabetes mellitus remains obscure.
...
PMID:Association of diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness. The Wolfram or DIDMOAD syndrome. 405 39
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