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)

For some time it has been recognized that postovulatory exacerbation of hyperglycemia contributes to the instability of diabetes in many women of reproductive age. It has been suggested that increasing plasma levels of progesterone and estrogen may induce insulin resistance and consequently lead to increased hyperglycemia during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. Due to the fact that menstrual cycles in a given woman may vary in length and that it takes patients several days on intermediate or long-acting insulin to achieve a steady state with regard to any dosage adjustment, it is difficult to design an insulin regimen that maintains euglycemia throughout the menstrual cycle in these labile patients. Recognition of this problem led to trying a nonsequential low estrogen contraceptive as adjunctive therapy in a 20-year old woman with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. The patient consistently suffered an exacerbation of hyperglycemia after ovulation in each cycle, lasting until the onset of menses. On 1 occasion the patient developed frank diabetic ketoacidosis. For the first 2 cycles on Lo Ovral, the hyperglycemia was postponed from the 1st postovulatory day until day 18-19 of the cycle. It was reasoned that the serum estrogen and/or progestin level might be building cumulatively, and the oral contraceptives (OCs) were subsequently withdrawn at day 19 of the cycle rather than day 21. A maximum blood glucose level of 400 mg/dl was attained at day 19 and was treated with additional regular insulin. Levels in excess of 240 mg/dl did not recur during that cycle. The following cycle OC therapy was interrupted at day 18; no blood glucose level in excess of 240 mg/dl occurred that month. Hemoglobin A1c fell from a pre-OC treatment value of 12.4% to the current A1c of 9.7%. A modest increase in blood pressure has occurred, but this is easily managed with a 2 g sodium diet and 25 mg of hydrochlorothiazide daily. On the basis of this experience, a controlled trial is warranted of low dose estrogen nonsequential OCs in lean, nonsmoking, 18-30 year old women with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus with postovulatory hyperglycemia.
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PMID:Oral contraceptives abolish luteal phase exacerbation of hyperglycemia in type I diabetes. 676 14

Diabetic neuropathy encompasses various disturbances concerning somatic and autonomic nervous system and has significant impact on prognosis and course of diabetes mellitus. The aim of the work is an evaluation of vestibulo-spinal reflexes in children and young adults suffering from diabetes mellitus type 1. Material--95 children and young adults aged from 6 to 28 years with diabetes mellitus type 1 diagnosed. The control group consisted of 44 otoneurologically healthy subjects aged from 6 to 28 years. After detailed medical history collection and physical ENT examination stato-posturography was performed in each case. Posturographer PE 62 Model 04 was applied in the studies. Static posturography as well as dynamic one (one leg standing test) was performed in each case. 6 patients belonging to diabetic group complained about vertigo or dizziness. There were worse stabilograms parameters in diabetic group in comparison to control one, statistically significant in younger children. There were better stabilogram parameters in diabetic patients with longer history of the disease. The parameters analysed were significantly worse in the subgroup with not compensated diabetes. The parameters were slightly better in relation to the presence of hypoglycaemic incidents. No apparent differences in stabilograms parameters were present in relation to the presence of diabetic complications. Diabetes mellitus type 1 with slight or without complications does not have significant influence on vestibulo-spinal reflexes and posture stability of the patients. Balance organ disturbances in diabetes mellitus type 1 in children and young adults despite their presence have subclinical course. Perhaps one should consider monitoring of those disturbances in the course of the disease.
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PMID:[The influence of metabolic disturbances present in diabetes mellitus type I on vestibulo-spinal reflexes in children and young adults]. 1237 5

The aim of this study was to evaluate the correlation between changes in the concentration of serum magnesium and serum immunoglobulin concentrations in type 1 diabetes mellitus. In this study were included 110 patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (64 men and 46 women) with ages ranging from 19 to 54 years (mean age 41.6+/-6.8 years). The mean duration of the disease was 8.7+/-7.5 years. Thirty-six healthy subjects served as a control group. The serum magnesium concentrations were evaluated by VITROS 750 XRC, Johnson & Johnson kit, (Ortho Clinical Diagnostics). Total serum IgA, IgG and IgM were determined by laser nephelometry (MININEPH The Binding Site kit). Values are means (x) + standard deviations (SD). Serum magnesium concentrations confirmed the magnesium deficit in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (1.8+/-0.11 mg/dL, range 1.73-2.47 mg/dL vs 2.2+/-0.2 mg/dL, range 1.6-2.4 mg/dL). In patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus, IgA levels are mildly elevated (4.03+/-0.51 g/L vs 3.43+/-0.48 g/L; p<0.05), while IgG levels are decreased (7.38+/-0.76 g/L vs 9.92+/-1.32 g/L; p<0.001) and IgM levels are almost constantly normal (1.18+/-0.16 g/L vs 1.22+/-0.15 g/L; p>0.05). Therefore, magnesium deficit has profound immunosuppressive capabilities in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus by significantly reducing the number of IgG synthesizing cells and serum IgG concentrations.
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PMID:The effect of magnesium deficit on serum immunoglobulin concentrations in type 1 diabetes mellitus. 1723 88