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)

A 27-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes mellitus was admitted to the Shimane Medical University Hospital because of secondary amenorrhea. She had been treated with insulin since July, 1986. Fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c levels were controlled within normal limits. However, body weight gradually decreased and amenorrhea started in 1988. Physical examination revealed emaciation with BMI of 17.3. Basal levels of plasma T3, somatomedin C, LH, FSH and estradiol levels were low, whereas HGH levels were slightly elevated. Plasma LH markedly increased in response to LHRH administration. She was diagnosed as having weight loss-related hypothalamic amenorrhea. Induction of ovulation was not obtained with clomiphene citrate. Treatment with subcutaneous pulsatile administration of LHRH (20 micrograms every 120 min) resulted in an increase in plasma levels of LH, FSH and estradiol, which was accompanied by ovulation and corpus luteum formation. Further treatment with pulsatile LHRH administration was followed by conception. Two gestational sacs were detected by ultrasonography. One of them was absorbed at the early stage of pregnancy. She was delivered of one healthy female infant without complications. These findings suggest that it is important not only to control plasma glucose levels but to keep the appropriate weight and support the psychological aspects of the subject in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. Subcutaneous pulsatile LHRH therapy may be effective for the induction of ovulation in clomiphene-resistant hypothalamic amenorrhea; however, it will be necessary to solve the problem of dosage and the interval of LHRH administration in the future.
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PMID:[A case of type 1 diabetes mellitus with hypothalamic amenorrhea: successful pregnancy following subcutaneous pulsatile administration of LHRH]. 158 22

To investigate the cause of secondary amenorrhoea in insulin-dependent diabetes gonadotrophins, sex steroid hormone levels and residual beta cell activity (C-peptide index) were estimated in a group of 43 women with IDDM. Among 26 women with residual insulin secretion, the C-peptide positive (CpP) group, 5 had secondary amenorrhoea (CpP-Am); among 17 women without endogenous beta cell activity, the C-peptide negative (CpN) group 6 had secondary amenorrhoea (CpN-Am). In this study two different types of secondary amenorrhoea in insulin-dependent diabetics were observed. All CpP-Am women have the classical hormone profile of the polycystic ovary syndrome (increased (LH/FSH ratio, increased serum testosterone, decreased SHBG) together with a history of oligomenorrhoea and excess weight before the onset of diabetes. On the other hand, all CpN-Am women had decreased LH levels as well as low LH/FSH ratio and testosterone levels. These results strongly suggest that a lack of residual pancreatic beta cell activity influences hypothalamus-pituitary function in insulin-dependent diabetes. It might be concluded that PCOS is independent of diabetes while low LH amenorrhoea seems to be the consequence of diabetes and is strongly associated with a lack of residual insulin secretion.
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PMID:The effect of residual beta cell activity on menstruation and the reproductive hormone profile of insulin-dependent diabetics. 267 77

The case of a 31-year-old female suffering from type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) and Kabuki syndrome is presented. The patient was diagnosed as having impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) at age 18; secondary amenorrhea occurred at age 20, following acute body weight loss. Extensive examination revealed the patient to have a slowly progressive form of type 1 DM and, based on the physical findings, including her facial features, she was diagnosed as also having congenital Kabuki syndrome. Since then, this patient has experienced several episodes of diabetic ketoacidosis, all of which were brought about by prolonged bronchial infection. Although it is perhaps reasonable at present to consider this case to represent a chance association, further clinical investigations will be carried out to clarify whether or not Kabuki syndrome and type 1 DM have any common pathogenic features.
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PMID:A case showing an association between type 1 diabetes mellitus and Kabuki syndrome. 1263 62

Celiac disease (gluten-sensitive enteropathy) is currently regarded as a multisystem autoimmune disorder; its clinical signs and symptoms do not involve merely the gastrointestinal tract but are associated with several other medical specialties, including orthopaedics and traumatology. In orthopaedic and trauma patients, celiac disease should be suspected in the following diagnoses: osteomalacia, premenopausal osteoporosis, post-menopausal osteoporosis more severe than expected and refractory to medication, osteoporosis in men under 55 years of age, recurrent bone fractures in the limbs, large joint arthralgia or arthritis of unclear aetiology, erosive spondyloarthropathy particularly in patients with the history of chronic diarrhoea, anaemia or associated autoimmune disorders (type 1 diabetes mellitus or autoimmune thyreopathy), and in women with secondary amenorrhea or early menopause. The orthopaedist or trauma surgeon should be aware of suspected celiac disease in patients who do not respond adequately to the standard treatment of pain related to the musculoskeletal system, in patients with recurrent fractures of the limb bones and in young patients with suspected secondary osteoporosis. With the use of appropriate screening methods, celiac disease as-yet undiagnosed can be revealed. A long-life gluten-free diet in these patients results in the alleviation of metabolic osteopathy and joint and muscle problems, in reduced requirements of analgesic and antiphlogistic drugs as well as in reduced risks of fracture.
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PMID:[Bone and Joint Involvement in Celiac Disease]. 2651 37

Autoimmune polyglandular syndrome (APS) is a rare disease that is characterized by autoimmune reactions to multiple endocrine and non-endocrine organs, which can be divided into four main types. The principal manifestations of APS-3 are autoimmune thyroid disease and other autoimmune diseases, such as type 1 diabetes, atrophic gastritis, pernicious anemia, vitiligo, alopecia, and myasthenia gravis, but not Addison's disease or hypoparathyroidism. Here we report a case demonstrating the rare coexistence of growth hormone deficiency and hyperthyroidism with sexual dysgenesis, secondary amenorrhea, cardiomegaly, splenomegaly, hypoproteinemia, pleural effusion, seroperitoneum, pericardial effusion, anasarca, osteoporosis, vitamin D deficiency, iron-deficiency anemia, poor blood coagulation, leucocytopenia, peripheral neuropathy, hyperuricemia, ichthyosis, tinea cruris, and onychomycosis.
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PMID:A rare case of coexistence of autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 3 with growth hormone deficiency and hyperthyroidism in a patient with pseudo-Turner's syndrome. 3304 97