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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 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.
...
PMID:Prevalence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy and its relation to glycaemic control and potential risk factors: the EURODIAB IDDM Complications Study. 893 8
The purpose of this study was to investigate the presence of ventricular late potentials derived from signal-averaged ECG in patients with
IDDM
with and without diabetic neuropathy. Eighty patients with
IDDM
but without evidence of cardiac disease and 80 age-matched healthy control subjects were investigated. The corrected QT interval was measured from the standard surface electrocardiogram. Ventricular late potentials were derived from signal-averaged electrocardiogram. Out of the 80 diabetic patients, 20 had an autonomic neuropathy, 20 had an isolated peripheral neuropathy, and 40 had no symptoms of
neuropathy
. The corrected QT interval was significantly prolonged in patients with an autonomic neuropathy as compared with the control group (436 +/- 23 ms(x 5) vs 384 +/- 23 ms(x 5), p < 0.001). In the other patient groups there was no significant prolongation of the corrected QT interval. Ventricular late potentials were present in 3 diabetic patients with an isolated peripheral neuropathy and in 1 control subject (NS). No diabetic patient with an autonomic neuropathy had ventricular late potentials. Our data did not indicate an increased incidence of ventricular late potentials derived from signal-averaged electrocardiogram in diabetic patients independent of a coexisting diabetic neuropathy or a prolonged corrected QT interval.
...
PMID:Signal-averaged electrocardiogram in patients with insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus with and without diabetic neuropathy. 917 Dec 51
The role cardiac autonomic neuropathy (CAN) plays in diabetes is not well known. The aim of this study was to identify the factors involved in CAN in diabetic patients. One hundred patients, 44 insulin-dependent (
IDDM
) and 56 non-insulin-dependent (NIDDM), were investigated, using five standard tests. Three of these tests were for parasympathetic control (cardiac response to the lying-to-standing, deep breathing, and Valsalva tests), and the other two measured sympathetic control (testing for orthostatic hypotension and evaluating heart and blood pressure response to the handgrip test). Results were compared to those found in a series of 40 healthy volunteers. An age-adjusted comparison with the controls, showed that 34 patients had one abnormal parasympathetic test, 23 had two, and 6 patients had three. Cardiac parasympathetic
neuropathy
was thus present in 63% of the patients. The handgrip test was completed by 84 diabetic patients. There was evidence of orthostatic hypotension and/or an abnormal cardiac response to the handgrip in 15 of these patients, who all had a parasympathetic abnormality as well. There was no significant association between the type of diabetes and the presence of CAN. The duration of diabetes was significantly longer in patients with CAN (9.3 +/- 0.9 years) (p < 0.01) than in those with all three parasympathetic tests normal (5.8 +/- 0.9 years) (p < 0.01). The HbA1c level was also higher in patients with CAN than in those with three normal parasympathetic tests (9.95 +/- 0.35% versus 8.17 +/- 0.42%, p < 0.005). There was a significant association between the presence of retinopathy, observed by angiofluorography, and the presence of peripheral neuropathy confirmed by the electrophysiological investigation and the presence of CAN (p < 0.001). However, more than half the patients without retinopathy or nephropathy had CAN, and 11 of the 31 patients with a normal electrophysiological investigation also had CAN. Eighteen patients (6
IDDM
) without retinopathy and nephropathy, who had been diabetic for less than 2 years, also had CAN. This study shows that CAN occurs early and is frequently found in a population of unselected diabetic patients. Metabolic factors may play an important role in its occurrence. CAN is significantly associated with the presence of retinopathy, which suggests that an impairment of autonomic peripheral blood flow control might be a contributing factor in the formation of microvascular lesions.
...
PMID:Factors involved in cardiac autonomic neuropathy in diabetic patients. 917
The aim of the present study was to examine if diabetes in the absence of
neuropathy
affects the exercising capacity of
IDDM
patients, and whether regular, intense training has a beneficial effect on endothelial function. Five groups of subjects were studied: 23 healthy control subjects who exercised regularly (age 33 +/- 6 years), 23 nonneuropathic type 1 diabetic patients who exercised regularly (age 33 +/- 6 years,
IDDM
duration 11 +/- 8 years), 7 neuropathic type 1 diabetic patients who exercised regularly (age 36 +/- 7 years,
IDDM
duration 22 +/- 8 years), 18 healthy subjects who did not exercise regularly (age 34 +/- 7 years), and 5 nonneuropathic type 1 diabetic patients who did not exercise regularly (age 31 +/- 4 years,
IDDM
duration 20 +/- 3 years). All groups were matched for age, sex, and body weight. No differences existed in the energy expenditure per week in physical activity among the three exercising groups or between the two nonexercising groups. The maximal oxygen uptake was similar between control and diabetic nonneuropathic exercisers, and among diabetic neuropathic exercisers, control nonexercisers, and diabetic nonexercisers; however, a significant difference existed between the first two and the last three groups (P < 0.0001). A stepwise increase was found in the resting heart rate among the groups, ranging from the lowest in control exercisers to the highest in diabetic nonexercisers, but the maximal heart rate was lower only in diabetic neuropathic exercisers compared with all other groups (P < 0.05). Assessments of endothelial function in both macro- and microcirculation were performed in 12 control exercisers, 10 diabetic nonneuropathic exercisers, 5 diabetic neuropathic exercisers, 17 control nonexercisers, and 4 diabetic nonexercisers. When all diabetic patients were considered as one group and all control subjects as another, the microcirculation endothelial function in the diabetic group was reduced compared with the control subjects (91 +/- 49 vs. 122 +/- 41% flux increase over baseline; P < 0.05). In contrast, no differences existed among the three diabetic groups or between the two control groups. Similarly, in macrocirculation, a reduced response during reactive hyperemia was observed in the diabetic patients compared with control subjects (7.0 +/- 4.5 vs. 11.2 +/- 6.6% diameter increase; P < 0.05), whereas again no difference existed among the three diabetic groups or between the two control groups. These data suggest that diabetes per se does not affect aerobic exercise capacity (VO2max) in physically active individuals, but is reduced in the presence of
neuropathy
. In addition, regular exercise training involving the lower extremities does not improve the endothelial function in the micro- and macrocirculation of the nonexercised upper extremity in type 1 diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Aerobic exercise capacity remains normal despite impaired endothelial function in the micro- and macrocirculation of physically active IDDM patients. 935 35
Although the detailed pathogenesis of diabetic polyneuropathy is not known, several mechanisms appear to be involved and may occur sequentially. Hence, the early and much researched activation of the polyol-pathway appears to secondarily affect nonenzymatic glycation, perturbation of vasoactive substances, the immune system and neurotrophism. These metabolic abnormalities may be differentially expressed in the
neuropathy
occurring in
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) and non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) diabetes. This notion is supported by differences in the structural abnormalities of the neuropathies in the two types of diabetes. Distinct and characteristic nodal changes occur in
IDDM
but not in NIDDM
neuropathy
, which also shows a milder axonal atrophy. On the other hand, nerve fiber loss which characterizes diabetic neuropathy tends to be focal in the older NIDDM patients, suggesting a more prominent vascular genesis. A further characteristic feature of diabetic neuropathy is blunted fiber regeneration, which probably is consequent to impairments of the necessary immune response and local synthesis of neurotrophic factors. Nerve biopsies from diabetic patients, although not necessary for diagnosis, provide valuable tissue for biochemical and molecular analysis of underlying mechanisms, the detailed elucidation of which will facilitate the design of targeted therapies.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of diabetic neuropathy and its correlations with neurophysiology. 935 80
Scleroderma-like syndrome (SLS) may represent the earliest apparent diabetes complication in insulin-dependent diabetic (
IDDM
) patients. To evaluate the frequency of SLS and its association with other diabetes-related pathology in our diabetic population, we studied 153 (127 Jewish and 26 Arab)
IDDM
patients and 45 healthy age- and gender-matched controls (25 Jewish, 20 Arab). The mean age and diabetes duration of the patients were 14.09 +/- 5.1 years and 51 +/- 45 months, respectively. While no diabetes-related pathology was found in the controls, SLS was detected in 47% of all patients (skin, 31.4%; arthropathy, 37.9%; both, 22%), and nephropathy,
neuropathy
, and retinopathy were present in 10.5%, 5.2%, and 4.6%, respectively. Independent of age, SLS directly correlated with diabetes duration (p < 0.01) and with the presence of either nephropathy or
neuropathy
(p < 0.009 and p < 0.005, respectively). One or more features of systemic diabetic involvement were present in 22% of patients with SLS, compared to only 7.2% in patients without SLS (p < 0.009). When patients were analyzed according to ethnicity, the frequency of skin involvement and
neuropathy
were found to be higher among Arab patients, particularly males (p < 0.002 and p < 0.005, respectively), and detection of one was significantly associated with the presence of the other (p < 0.001). In conclusion, our results suggest that SLS is the most common diabetic complication among Jewish and Arab
IDDM
patients, and its presence may reflect an inherited tendency to develop other serious diabetic complications. Ethnicity (Arab) by itself, particularly when associated with male gender, seems to accelerate neurological and dermatological diabetic involvement.
...
PMID:Ethnicity and prevalence of scleroderma-like syndrome: a study of Arab and Jewish Israeli insulin-dependent diabetic children. 936 72
Since 1990 in most Eastern European countries health care systems have been decentralized or are undergoing the processes of decentralization. Increasingly, diabetic patients are no longer treated by diabetologists but by non-specialized physicians. During the same period structured treatment and teaching programmes have been introduced and health care is increasingly influenced by the St. Vincent declaration. To show the effect of these changes on the quality of diabetes care 90% (n = 244) of all insulin-treated diabetic patients aged 16 to 60 years and living in the city of Jena (100247 inhabitants) were studied in 1994/1995. The results were compared with the baseline examination of 1989/1990 (n = 190). HbA1c (HbA1c/mean normal) in
IDDM
patients under specialized care was similar in 1994/1995 (1.54 +/- 0.27, n = 47) to 1989/1990 (1.52 +/- 0.31, n = 131, p = 0.0018), but higher under non-specialized care (1.71 +/- 0.38, n = 80, p = 0.0087). In the total group of NIDDM patients there was no significant change in HbA1c (1994/1995: 1.75 +/- 0.4, n = 117, vs 1989/1990: 1.78 +/- 0.4, n = 59, p = 0.67), but with a tendency to higher HbA1c under non-specialized (1.81 +/- 0.4, n = 79) compared to specialized care (1.66 +/- 0.39, n = 38, p = 0.06). Incidence of severe hypoglycaemia (
IDDM
0.13; NIDDM 0.04), ketoacidosis (0.02; 0.01) and the prevalence of nephropathy (21%; 35%) and
neuropathy
(24%; 38%) remained unchanged in comparison to 1989/1990, whereas there was an increase in the prevalence of diabetic retinopathy. Specialized care is mandatory for patients with
IDDM
.
...
PMID:The JEVIN trial: a population-based survey on the quality of diabetes care in Germany: 1994/1995 compared to 1989/1990. 938 29
Thirty patients with juvenile
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) were electrophysiologically evaluated. In addition to the conventional motor and sensory nerve conduction studies, intrafascicular microneurography was performed in the median nerve. In this method a tungsten microelectrode was inserted into the median nerve trunk at the elbow, and a compound nerve action potential (CNAP) was recorded with supramaximal electrical stimulation at the wrist. The subjects' age ranged from 8 to 31 years with an average (SD) of 15.4 (6.2) years; the disease duration varied from 1 to 23 years with an average (SD) of 8.3 (5.8) years. Polyneuropathy index (PNI), expressed as a mean percentage of the normal for twelve indices over the four nerves obtained by motor conduction studies, was 93.9% on the average in patients with
IDDM
. The mean amplitude of CNAP obtained by intrafascicular microneurography was 417 microV. These results indicate that
neuropathy
in
IDDM
is milder than that in adult non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The mean value of PNI decreased at a rate of 0.56% per year; the mean glycosylated hemoglobin (A1c) level was as high as 8.2 +/- 0.9%, findings consistent with those of the previous analysis of adult patients with NIDDM. The PNI value had a significant negative correlation with the duration of diabetes mellitus (p < 0.001) and with mean glycosylated hemoglobin (A1c) level (p < 0.01). CNAP amplitude had a tendency to correlate with duration of diabetes mellitus (p < 0.1). In patients with
IDDM
we can tell exactly when the disease occurred. Progression of
neuropathy
in juvenile
IDDM
was identical to that of adult NIDDM. Careful management of diabetes mellitus is of importance to prevent the progression of
neuropathy
.
...
PMID:[Electrophysiological evaluation of polyneuropathy in juvenile insulin dependent diabetics]. 939 28
The pathogenetic process of diabetic retinopathy and the role of different systemic risk factors in
IDDM
and NIDDM is not completely understood. The aim of the present cross-sectional clinical study was (1) to compare the prevalence of systemic risk factors for diabetic retinopathy in
IDDM
and NIDDM patients, (2) to determine relations between these risk factors and the degree of retinopathy and (3) to evaluate the relationship between retinopathy and
neuropathy
. The study included 1,218
IDDM
and 784 NIDDM patients attending our hospital during 1994. The mean diabetes duration was 15.4 and 13.2 years, respectively.
IDDM
patients with proliferative retinopathy were characterized by higher mean age of 46.4 +/- 1.08 vs. 21.8 +/- 0.42 years and longer diabetes duration of 30.0 +/- 0.79 vs. 7.7 +/- 0.26 years. Among the NIDDM patients, those ones with proliferative retinopathy had the lowest mean age of 40.5 +/- 1.42 vs. 49.7 +/- 0.61 years (p < 0.01) at diabetes manifestation. There was no statistical difference between mean HbA1c concentrations in relation to retinopathy stages. Albumin excretion was increased in both
IDDM
and NIDDM patients with proliferative retinopathy (p < 0.01) along with increased BMI of
IDDM
and increased insulin requirement of NIDDM patients (p < 0.01). Multiple regression analysis showed that proliferative retinopathy with the inclusion of non-proliferative retinopathy of
IDDM
and NIDDM patients was significantly correlated with diabetes duration, albumin excretion, somatic and autonomic neuropathy (p < 0.01). In NIDDM patients proliferative retinopathy with the inclusion of non-proliferative retinopathy was correlated with the age at diabetes manifestation and with cholesterol levels (p < 0.05). In
IDDM
and NIDDM patients proliferative retinopathy was found to be correlated with somatic and autonomic neuropathy, albumin excretion (p < 0.01) and hypertension (p < 0.05). The importance of the significant correlation of autonomic neuropathy both with background and proliferative retinopathy in
IDDM
and NIDDM patients needs to be prospectively investigated.
...
PMID:Relations between diabetic retinopathy and cardiovascular neuropathy--a cross-sectional study in IDDM and NIDDM patients. 943 26
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).
...
PMID:Autonomic dysfunction in the Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome: serologic and clinical correlates. 944 63
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