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

According to international consensus, microalbuminuria is defined as an elevated urinary albumin excretion rate (UAER) of 20-200 micrograms/min, which is below the proteinuric range. Nephropathy is a major complication in IDDM, seen in about 30% of patients after many years of diabetes. Increasing microalbuminuria is an excellent marker of subsequent nephropathy in these patients. End-stage diabetic nephropathy is also important in NIDDM, but in most Western countries this serious complication eventually develops in only 5 to 10% of cases, whereas the majority of patients die before this from cardiovascular disease. In completely healthy individuals there is no clear correlation between age and UAER, at least up to about 70 years of age. The mean excretion rate is around 5 micrograms/min, with a considerable range, but excretion only rarely exceeds 15 micrograms/min. In population studies among middle-aged and elderly individuals, higher values are seen. In newly diagnosed NIDDM about 40% of patients show an excretion rate above 15-20 micrograms/min. There is a significant but not precise correlation between albumin excretion rate and glycemic control, and usually UAER is reduced by standard antidiabetic treatment. In a considerable number of patients, high values cannot be reduced. In the course of NIDDM about 20-30% of patients show microalbuminuria. In patients with known diabetes, microalbuminuria is related not only to subsequent diabetic proteinuria, but even more strongly to early death, mainly from cardiovascular disease. Even slight microalbuminuria (15-40 mg/l in early morning urines) is clearly associated with increased mortality. In subjects with newly detected elevated blood glucose (by screening) microalbuminuria also predicts early mortality. The mechanisms are not established, but several arteriosclerosis-related risk factors are seen more frequently in patients with microalbuminuria, e.g. lipid abnormalities, elevated systolic blood pressure (BP), hemostatic measures, as well other markers of cardiovascular disease. Usually there is a significant but not precise correlation between BP and UAER in groups of patients throughout the course of diabetes. New studies document that also in the elderly background population microalbuminuria is a significant risk factor for early death, maybe even stronger than the established risk markers, which thus may be confounded with the presence of microalbuminuria.
...
PMID:Microalbuminuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 129 5

Points of agreement: (1) In IDDM, hypertension occurs in patients who have already developed nephropathy, probably in the microalbuminuric phase. (2) Hypertension is an important accelerator of the development of diabetic nephropathy. (3) Hypertension, obesity and NIDDM are often associated, and insulin resistance is commonly observed in all three states. (4) Antihypertensive therapy retards the development of diabetic nephropathy in IDDM and reduces proteinuria in NIDDM. (5) The choice of antihypertensive agent in the diabetic patient must be based upon the efficacy of the drug as well as avoidance of side effects including deleterious influence on glucose, insulin and lipid levels and renoprotection. (6) Carefully conducted long-term comparative trials between different classes of antihypertensive drugs in microalbuminuric IDDM and NIDDM patients are essential. Points of major controversy: (1) Detection of IDDM patients prone to the development of diabetic nephropathy can be performed by measuring specific parameters such as erythrocyte Na(+)-Li+ countertransport activity. (2) Insulin resistance is a pathogenic mechanism rather than purely an association with hypertension and obesity. (3) A certain class of antihypertensive agents--ACE inhibitors--confers a specific renoprotective effect in diabetic nephropathy, in addition to its effects upon systemic blood pressure. (4) Reduction of blood pressure should be considered in the normotensive microalbuminuric diabetic patient. (5) Microalbuminuria is a sufficient 'surrogate endpoint' for the progression of renal failure.
...
PMID:Meeting report of the International Society of Hypertension Conference on Hypertension and Diabetes. 131 6

To detect early renal involvement in young diabetic patients (IDDM), urinary protein excretion and renal function were examined in 110 patients aged 5.9-25.0 years. Clearances of inulin and PAH were determined as well as albumin (Alb), IgG, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) and creatinine (Cr) excretion rates (UV). The patients were grouped according to IDDM duration (2- less than 5, 5-10 and greater than 10 years) and albumin excretion rate (non-albuminuria less than 20, microalbuminuria 20-200, and albuminuria greater than 200 micrograms/min per 1.73 m2). Four patients had overt albuminuria, 17 microalbuminuria (equally distributed among the duration groups). Grouped according to albumin excretion rate, the mean GFR was increased in those without albuminuria but 'normalized' in patients with microalbuminuria/albuminuria. Grouped according to albumin excretion rate and the duration of the disease, the non-albuminuric patients with IDDM for greater than 10 years had a lower GFR than those with a shorter duration of IDDM. The patients with microalbuminuria/albuminuria and IDDM for less than 5 years had a reduced GFR. Patients with increased NAG excretion rate had lower Na excretion rate, lower fractional Na excretion and greater creatinine excretion than those with normal NAG excretion. Albumin excretion correlated with IgG excretion, but also with NAG excretion. Our results suggest that early albuminuria in IDDM is of both glomerular and tubular origin. The hyperfiltration declines with increasing albumin excretion but also with the duration of the disease.
...
PMID:Urinary protein excretion and renal function in young people with diabetes mellitus. 132 Feb 27

One of the most frequent and important complications of IDDM is hypertension. It begins usually in adulthood and is rare in children. In order to study the behaviour and control of BP in IDDM children and adolescents we analyzed the BP levels of 106 patients (48 males, 58 females; age 1.5-16 yrs) in relation to sex, age, duration of the disease, and different parameters of metabolic control; moreover we studied the modifications of BP levels with years (tracking). BP levels, registered every 3-6 mos, were compared to the standard levels for age of the local population (2000 students between 7 and 16 yrs of age) and expressed as standard deviation scores (SDS) of the means. For each subject a line describing the change of the SDS over time was calculated by the method of least squares: the slope of this line is called trend and represents the tendency of the BP to increase or maintain stable or decrease with time, i.e to develop or not hypertension. All patients, except one 16 y. old girl, had normal BP and no microalbuminuria, but 10 of them presented with mean levels in the upper quartile and a constantly upward BP trend. Two of these patients showed after a 2 year follow-up stable hypertension and microalbuminuria. Moreover, an analytical and statistical study pointed out that BP levels of IDDM children seem to be influenced in addition to age, sex, height, weight, ponderal excess, as the general population, by the duration of the disease the insulin dose and some metabolic parameters (HbA1, HbA1c, glycemia, creatininemia).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Blood pressure tracking in juvenile insulin dependent diabetes mellitus: preliminary data. 134 Jun 64

We investigated whether zincuria is associated with microalbuminuria in type I (insulin-dependent) diabetics (IDDM). In 169 IDDM, 215 overnight urine samples were collected for simultaneous assay of zinc and albumin. In 76 samples with excessive microalbuminuria (greater than 15 mg/L), zincuria was higher than in the 139 other samples (0.83 +/- 0.06 vs 0.58 +/- 0.03 mg/L p less than 0.001), though zincuria and microalbuminuria were not significantly correlated. An exercise provocation test was performed in 78 IDDM. Although microalbuminuria increased, zincuria did not change during the test. Another group of 83 IDDM underwent urinary zinc determination over a period of 1 h of recumbency. The 48 patients who had a zincuria higher than the mean + 2 SD of control values had higher microalbuminuria at rest (48 +/- 16 micrograms/min vs 12 +/- 2 p less than 0.01) and after exercise (111 +/- 33 vs 42 +/- 14 p less than 0.02) than the remaining 35 subjects. Both subgroups did not differ for zinc intake and zincemia. Thus, incipient nephropathy as detected by the measurement of microalbuminuria is associated with a highly significant increase in zinc excretion, which is not proportional to albumin leakage, nor is it amplified during exercise. Hyperzincuria is not explained by an increase in zinc intake and does not result in hypozincemia.
...
PMID:Urinary zinc and its relationships with microalbuminuria in type I diabetics. 137 72

Diabetes mellitus has become the leading cause of ESRF in the United States. Patients with diabetic nephropathy suffer high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Because only 40% of diabetic patients eventually develop diabetic kidney disease, it may be possible to devise primary prevention measures targeted at the subset of patients at risk. Recently, a predisposition to hypertension, a family history of diabetic nephropathy, and a family history of CVD disease each have been associated independently with the development of diabetic renal complication in IDDM. Risk factors for macrovascular damage, including raised arterial BP, dyslipidemia, and insulin resistance, can be detected early in the course of progression to diabetic nephropathy. These risk indicators recently have been shown to be already present at the stage of normoalbuminuria in those patients who eventually will progress to microalbuminuria. Treatment of established renal disease can only delay the onset of ESRF, and lowering of microalbuminuria has been shown to retard the onset of persistent proteinuria. However, no study to date has demonstrated prevention of renal disease in these patients. The ultimate aim should, therefore, be the prevention of the transition from normoalbuminuria to microalbuminuria in individuals who are at higher risk of diabetic renal disease and CVD.
...
PMID:Diabetic nephropathy. Future avenue. 139 18

Nephropathy is a severe complication of type I diabetes mellitus. About 25% of all new candidates for renal replacement therapy consist of diabetic patients. Glomerular hyperfiltration is an important causative factor in the development of this nephropathy. Microalbuminuria is the clinical first symptom of glomerular hypertension. New information stresses the importance of angiotensin II. Systemic as well as local reduction of angiotensin II formation can reduce glomerular hyperfiltration. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors should therefore be considered as first anti-hypertensive agents in type I diabetics with microalbuminuria.
...
PMID:Effects of ACE inhibition on the course of nephropathy in type I diabetes mellitus. 143 57

As many as 34 patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) and 42 patients suffering from type I diabetes mellitus without clinical manifestations of renal damage were examined for clinical and morphological signs of hyperperfusion renal damage (hyperfiltration, microalbuminuria, specific morphological alterations). The lack of renal functional reserves was regarded as a criterion for the status of hyperfiltration (oral protein administration, intravenous injection of small doses of dopamine). The risk of the progression of renal failure by the hemodynamic type in NS amounted to 65%. In the mechanism of the development of hyperfiltration in NS, the role of systemic hypertension, renal failure, a reduction of the ultrafiltration coefficient is discussed. Hypooncia does not make any material contribution to the development of hyperfiltration in NS. The clinical and morphological signs of hyperfusion renal injury were revealed in 50% of patients suffering from type I diabetes mellitus without the clinical signs of renal injury.
...
PMID:[Hyperfiltration as a factor in the progression of chronic kidney diseases]. 144 Mar 23

Diabetic patients are at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, particularly when proteinuria is present. Lipoprotein(a)[Lp(a)] levels were assessed in 37 patients with insulin dependent (IDDM) and in 75 patients with non-insulin dependent (NIDDM) diabetes who showed varying degrees of proteinuria and glycaemic control. Median Lp(a) in 112 diabetic patients was significantly greater than in 116 healthy controls (113 vs 48 mg/L; p less than 0.01). 86 of the patients had first morning urine albumin concentration less than 30 mg/L (normoalbuminuria = NA), 16 patients 30-200 mg/L (microalbuminuria = MA) and ten patients greater than 200 mg/L (albuminuria = ALB). There was no significant difference in median Lp(a) concentration between the three groups (NA = 108, MA = 163, ALB = 98 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). No significant difference in median Lp(a) or NIDDM treated with oral agents and/or diet (120, 98, 115 mg/L respectively; p greater than 0.7). When the 86 NA patients were divided on the basis of median fructosamine concentration (357 mumol/L), no significant difference was found in median Lp(a) levels between those grouped below or above this median (98 mg/L vs 118 mg/L; p greater than 0.5). Across all diabetics studied there was no significant correlation present between Lp(a) and urinary protein or glycaemic control. These cross-sectional results suggest that median Lp(a) concentration is increased in both IDDM and NIDDM patients, but this increase is not related to the degree of proteinuria or short-term glycaemic control.
...
PMID:Lipoprotein(a) concentration in diabetes: relationship to proteinuria and diabetes control. 144 18

In this study, 52 nonproteinuric Japanese patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) were followed from 1985 to 1990 to investigate the rate of development and progression of microalbuminuria and the factors which influence it. In 1985, 34 patients were normoalbuminuric, and 18 patients were microalbuminuric. Five years later, 11 of 34 initially normoalbuminuric patients (32.4%) developed microalbuminuria, and 6 of 18 initially microalbuminuric patients (33.3%) developed overt proteinuria. At the beginning of the study, hypertension existed more frequently in the patients who later developed microalbuminuria (8 of 11, 72.7%) than in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (4 of 23, 17.4%). Age-adjusted values of mean blood pressure (+/- SEM) at the beginning of the study in the patients who developed microalbuminuria (98.2 +/- 3.4 mm Hg, n = 11) were significantly higher than those in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (87.3 +/- 2.4 mm Hg, n = 23). In six patients who developed overt proteinuria, initial urinary albumin excretion rates (AER) were higher than those in the patients who stayed microalbuminuric, and four patients who presented with initial AER greater than 100 micrograms/min all developed overt proteinuria. These results indicate that, in Japanese patients with NIDDM, the rate of development of microalbuminuria is faster than that reported in Caucasian IDDM, and preexisting hypertension with relatively poor control of blood pressure may be a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria.
...
PMID:High blood pressure is a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria in Japanese subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 147 44


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>