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)

Immigrants from the third world are more prone to acquire nutritional deficiency diseases, such as rickets, osteomalacia and iron deficiency anemia than the rest of the population in the recipient countries. Lately, evidence is also emerging that some immigrant groups are particularly susceptible to diseases related to overnutrition, such as coronary heart disease and non-insulin dependent diabetes. The purpose of this review article is to give a holistic view of the nutrition related diseases and disorders among immigrants. It deals with the prevalence of these diseases among immigrants in Northern European countries, and looks into some of the hypotheses, which have been put forward to explain why immigrant groups are more prone to acquire these diseases than the rest of the population. The focus of this part of the paper is the process of dietary change after migration. The practical implications of the findings from the literature review are then discussed.
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PMID:Nutrition-related diseases and dietary change among Third World immigrants in northern Europe. 813 25

Wistar rats with non-insulin dependent diabetes induced by neonatal streptozotocin (STZ) administration were raised either in large or in small litters. The STZ-treated rats from small litters showed a higher body weight as well as increased blood glucose levels compared with vehicle- and STZ-treated rats reared in large nests at an age of 8 weeks. The higher body weight of these rats was maintained until an age of 15 weeks, whereas the basal blood glucose was normalized. However, both STZ-treated groups exhibited an impaired glucose tolerance. During pregnancy only the glucose tolerance of the STZ-treated animals from large nests was improved although not normalized. The STZ-treated rats from small nests failed to adapt to pregnancy because the blood glucose levels after glucose load were similar to values found in the virgin state. The body weight of pregnant STZ treated rats raised in small litters was significantly lower than in vehicle- or STZ-terated rats from large nests. The number of fetuses per litter was similar in all groups tested. Compared with the vehicle-treated rats from large litters the fetal body weight of STZ-treated rats from small nests was decreased and that of STZ rats raised in large litters was increased. These results suggest that the rats with the more impaired glucose tolerance produce growth-retarded pups and, conversely, rats with rather mild impairment have bigger fetuses than the vehicle-treated ones. In the present study we have examined for the first time the combined effects of postnatal overnutrition and pregnancy on glucose homeostasis of rats treated neonatally with STZ. Our data demonstrate that postnatal overnutrition is an aggravating factor in the development of a diabetic state in these rats, especially at times when the insulin requirement is higher such as puberty and pregnancy.
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PMID:Influence of postnatal overnutrition and pregnancy on non-insulin dependent diabetes induced in Wistar rats by neonatal streptozotocin. 886 3