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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several methods are available for the measurement of antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase (anti GAD). These antibodies are valuable tools for the immunodiagnosis of insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus (
IDDM
) and for the assessment of risk for the future development of
IDDM
. We here describe a new enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of anti-GAD which was tested in a multicenter study. The results of the new anti-GAD ELISA correlate well with those obtained by radioimmunoassays (RIA) and they have a higher sensitivity (69%) and specificity (98%) compared to other anti-GAD enzyme immunoassays as determined in the IDW Proficiency Test Program for the detection of GAD antibodies. The new ELISA is simple and easy to perform, with convenient handling of the reagents. Quantitative and reproducible test results are available within approximately four hours. The new anti-GAD ELISA can be used for large scale population screening to indicate a prediabetic state as well as to diagnose autoimmune diabetes in adults (
LADA
) and the risk for
IDDM
in pregnant women with gestational diabetes.
...
PMID:Comparison of a new anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with radioimmunoassay methods: a multicenter study. 928 79
LADA
or type 1.5 diabetes is a slowly progressive form of autoimmune diabetes of adults and represents a considerable proportion (about 5-10%) of all diabetic patients. Associations with high risk HLA genotypes and autoimmune phenomena (GAD, IA2, ICA) show similarities with
type 1 diabetes
, but phenotypical characteristics of these patients do not allow the correct identification without screening of GAD antibodies. The relatively low antibody titers against islet-cell antigens in
LADA
patients may be sign of a less aggressive form of autoimmune diabetes and could be responsible for the long non-insulin requirement phase of this diabetes type. Similar as in prediabetic relatives of type 1 diabetic patients the risk for beta cell failure in adult "type 2 diabetic" patients increases with the number of antibodies positive. Consequently, low titers of GAD--in particular in elderly patients--do not predict a progressive and rapid loss of beta-cell failure, when associations with high risk genotypes or other islet-cell antibodies are lacking. Patients with
LADA
share insulin resistance with type 2 diabetic patients, but display a more severe defect in stimulated beta-cell capacity than patients with classical type 2 diabetes. With respect to features of the metabolic syndrome, patients with
LADA
have lower BMI, blood pressure and triglyceride levels compared with classical type 2 diabetes patients. Early identification of
LADA
patients will be mandatory, when effective immune interventions are available for prevention of the beta-cell destructive process and insulin requirement of these patients.
...
PMID:Progress in the characterization of slowly progressive autoimmune diabetes in adult patients (LADA or type 1.5 diabetes). 1146 May 97
According to the most recent classification of diabetes mellitus the latent autoimmune diabetes in adults belongs to the group of type 1 autoimmune diabetes mellitus, as a slowly progressive form. It is not clear whether
LADA
is a distinct clinical entity or it is a part of the clinical spectrum of
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. The authors compare the antropologic (body mass index, waist to hip ratio), immunologic (occurrence of islet cell cytoplasmic autoantibodies and autoantibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase and tyrosin phosphatase), genetic (HLA DR and DQ alleles known to be associated to
type 1 diabetes
mellitus) characteristics and occurrence of the features of the metabolic syndrome in the groups of type 1 and type 2 diabetes and
LADA
. 81 type 1 and 190 type 2 diabetics and 38
LADA
patients were involved into the study. Freshly diagnosed type 1 diabetics served for controls of the autoantibody study: 48 patients manifested < or = 16 years of age and 89 type 1 diabetics manifested above 16 years of age. The three main diabetic groups differed in age: the average age in the type 1, type 2 and
LADA
groups were 37, 63 and 58 years respectively. There was no difference among the three groups in gender. The duration of the disease differed significantly between the type 2 and
LADA
groups (4.0 and 8.0 years respectively). In spite of the shorter duration of the disease in the
LADA
group, compared to the type 2 diabetics the frequency of insulin dependency was significantly higher in the
LADA
(81.6%) than in the type 2 group (46.7%). The BMI and WHR were comparable between the type 1 and
LADA
patients (average values were 23 and 0.83 in type 1 patients and 23.25 and 0.89 in
LADA
). The type 2 group differed significantly from type 1 and
LADA
(average values were 29.1 and 0.5). The concentration of glycated hemoglobin was comparable in the three groups. But there was a significant difference in HbA1c concentration between the freshly diagnosed subgroups of type 1 and
LADA
patients: 10.85% and 8% respectively. The fasting C-peptid levels were significantly higher in the sera of type 2 diabetics (0.75 pmol/l) compared to type 1 (0.2 pmol/l) and
LADA
patients (0.29 pmol/l). There was a significant difference in C-peptid concentrations between the type 1 and
LADA
groups, too. The insulin deficiency in
LADA
seemed to be not as severe as in
type 1 diabetes
. The serum total cholesterol and triglyceride levels were significantly higher and the HDL cholesterol concentration significantly lower in type 2 diabetics comparing to type 1 and
LADA
patients and there was no significant difference in this respect between the type 1 and
LADA
groups. The frequency of occurrence of hypertension differed no significantly between type 2 and
LADA
, but that of in
type 1 diabetes
was significantly lower than both type 2 and
LADA
. The occurrence of multiple autoantibodies (ICA + GADA + anti-IA2) was much more frequent in
type 1 diabetes
compared to
LADA
. In the sera of
LADA
patients the occurrence of ICA and GADA alone or ICA + GADA was characteristic (31.5% - 21.1% - 15.8% respectively). There was no difference between
type 1 diabetes
and
LADA
in the occurrence of the alleles of the MHC kown to be associated with
type 1 diabetes
. The occurrence of the haplotypes HLA DQ2/DR3 and/or DQ8/DR4 was observed in two thirds of type 1 diabetic and
LADA
patients. Chronic diabetic complications were observed in all of the groups and there was only a secondary connection of the complications with the type of the diabetes. Based on the results the authors suggest that
LADA
is a part of the clinical spectrum of
type 1 diabetes
of autoimmune origin.
...
PMID:[Latent autoimmune diabetes in adults(LADA): part of the clinical spectrum of type-1 diabetes mellitus of autoimmune origin]. 1177 Jan 76
In Latvia diabetes mellitus is diagnosed using the WHO's clinical criteria; assays for the detection of autoantibodies are not available, and hence slowly progressive autoimmune diabetes is likely to be missed. Autoantibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) and protein tyrosine phosphatase (IA-2) among patients with clinically diagnosed NIDDM identify group of patients with slow-onset
type 1 diabetes
or
LADA
. The aim of this study was to estimate the risk of polyendocrine autoimmunity among clinically diagnosed NIDDM patients from Latvia. One hundred NIDDM patients and 100 healthy controls were tested for GAD65 and IA-2 autoantibodies as well as 21-hydroxylase (21-OH) and tissue transglutaminase (TTG) antibodies by RIA assay. Age at onset was >or= 30 years, and duration of disease less than 5 years. Of 100 patients, 85 were on oral hypoglycemic agents and 15 were on insulin. Body mass index (BMI) under 19 was recorded in 1% (1 of 100 cases), while overweight (BMI > 25.5 in females and 27 in males) was documented in 45% (45 of 100 cases). GAD65 antibodies were found in 30 of 100 (30%) and IA-2 antibodies in 40 of 100 (40%) patients. Either GAD65 or IA-2 antibodies were found in 55 of 100 (55%). None of the patients carried antibodies against 21-OH and only 1 of 100 (1%) carried antibodies against TTG. From the results obtained in our study we conclude that in Latvian adult NIDDM subjects, islet autoantibodies identify groups of slow-onset
type 1 diabetes
but not polyendocrine autoimmunity.
...
PMID:Islet autoantibodies in Latvian subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: slow-onset type 1 diabetes or polyendocrine autoimmunity? 1202 Nov 19
In Latvia diabetes mellitus is diagnosed using the WHO's clinical criteria, and assays for the detection of autoantibodies are not available. In consequence, slowly progressive autoimmune diabetes or
LADA
is likely to be missed. Antibodies to GAD65 and IA-2 are the major immunological markers in autoimmune diabetes. Recently, a new beta cell antigen, called ICA12, has been identified, which has a homology to the SOX family of transcription factors. The aim of the study was to analyze the prevalence of ICA12 antibodies in diabetes mellitus patients and controls from Latvia and to see whether this antigen is important in revealing autoimmunity when antibodies against major antigens are not present. We studied 88
IDDM
patients and 100 NIDDM patients as well as controls for the prevalence of GAD65, IA-2, and ICA12 antibodies by radioligand binding assay (RIA) using (35)S-labeled islet antigens. We found ICA12Abs in 26 of 88
IDDM
patients (30%) vs. 4% in healthy controls (4/100) and in 9 of 100 NIDDM patients (9%) vs. 2% controls (2/100). ICA12Abs alone are present in only 3% (3/88) of the patients with
IDDM
and 1% (1/100) of the NIDDM patients. We conclude that ICA12 represents the minor antigens in autoimmune diabetes and that, as a minor antigen, ICA12 alone does not contribute significantly in revealing new cases of autoimmunity.
...
PMID:Antibodies to new beta cell antigen ICA12 in Latvian diabetes patients. 1202 Nov 28
Major histocompatibility complex class I chain-related gene A (MICA) encodes polymorphic, stress-inducible antigens recognized by gammadelta T cells within the intestinal epithelium. MICA microsatellite polymorphism has been implicated to be related to different autoimmune diseases. Ninety-eight patients with
type 1 diabetes
(median age, 35 years; range, 9-89 years and 51 patients with latent autoimmune diabetes (
LADA
; median age, 48 years; range, 19-79 years) were compared with 113 healthy control patients (median age, 35 years; range, 19-65 years) to study the importance of MICA-microsatellite polymorphism and HLA-DR-DQ as genetic risk factors for diabetes. The different factors were compared univariately and by logistic regression analysis. In the logistic regression model, heterozygosity for MICA5.0/5.1 was a significant risk factor for
LADA
(odds ratio [OR] = 12; 95% confidence interval [95%CI], 2.5-59) as well as heterozygosity for HLA-DR3-DQ2/DR4-DQ8 (OR = 15; 95%CI, 2.7-84). None of the MICA polymorphisms were related to
type 1 diabetes
. Heterozygosity for HLA-DR3-DQ2/DR4-DQ8 was a risk factor for
type 1 diabetes
(OR = 14; 95%CI, 2.9-66) as well as DR4-DQ8/x (OR = 2.8; 95%CI, 1.4-5.9). HLA-DR15-DQ6 was protective for
type 1 diabetes
(OR = 0.12; 95%CI, 0.015-0.96). We concluded that both heterozygosity for MICA5.0/5.1 and HLA-DR3-DQ2/DR4-DQ8 are separate risk factors for
LADA
, but that heterozygosity for HLA-DR3-DQ2/DR4-DQ8 and DR4-DQ8 alone are most important for
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:Heterozygosity for MICA5.0/MICA5.1 and HLA-DR3-DQ2/DR4-DQ8 are independent genetic risk factors for latent autoimmune diabetes in adults. 1294 47
Type 1 and type 2 diabetes have different clinical presentations in their common forms. The absence of biological tests for diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, for reliable evaluation of insulin secretion and, beta-cell mass or for diagnosis of insulitis and the limited sensitivity of antibody tests in
type 1 diabetes
explain the difficulty of classifying a large number of cases of diabetes and the identification of questionable clinical entities:
LADA
(Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adult), non-insulin dependant diabetes in coloured people. Hyperglycaemia may also be observed in genetic diseases affecting insulin secretion (MODY, mutations of mitochondrial DNA), complex genetic diseases, pancreatic, endocrine and iatrogenic affections. Type 1 diabetes is characterised by the destruction of, beta-cells while type 2 diabetes combines abnormal insulin secretion and insulin resistance. The reduction of the beta-cell mass in type 2 diabetes remains controversial. These different conditions are examples of multifactorial diseases during which several physiopathological processes are disturbed in association with the expression of multiple genes, of normal structure and function, but variants of which copy for a number of partial phenotypes the association of which causes the disease. Some hypotheses suggest that type 2 diabetes is the consequence of the selection of variants of genes involved in energetic storing and responsible for defence against infection and of the recent very rapid changes in the environment.
...
PMID:[Physiopathological mechanisms in type 1 and type 2 diabetes]. 1566 75
During the 1997-2002 period, 48 eyes of 41 patients of the mean age 58 years were operated on because of complications of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. In the cohort of operated patients, the
type I diabetes mellitus
was determined in 10 (21%) cases, the type II diabetes mellitus in 36 (75%) cases, and in two cases (4%), another type of diabetes was detected. One patient of those two had
LADA
type diabetes and the second one had secondary diabetes due to chronic pancreatitis. In the early postoperative period, or during first three months postoperatively, after the pars plana vitrectomy, the visual acuity (VA) in 28 (59%) eyes improved, in 16 (33%) eyes remained the same, and in 4 eyes (8%) worsened. VA 1/60 (0.017 or 3/200) and better had 37 (77%) eyes, VA 6/60 (0.1 or 20/200) and better had 17 (37%) eyes, and VA 6/12 and better (0.5 or 20/40) had 3 (6%) eyes only. VA worse than 1/60 (0.017 or 3/200) had 11 (23%) eyes. Authors emphasize the importance of regular and detailed ophthalmologic examinations with early diagnosis of pathological changes and early start of adequate treatment.
...
PMID:[Early functional effect of the pars plana vitrectomy in complications of the proliferative diabetic retinopathy]. 1578 55
Autoimmune diabetes is a complex, multifactorial disease caused by the interaction of genetic and environmental factors. This autoimmune diabetes is commonly manifested in childhood and adolescence with a fast onset (
type 1 diabetes
,
IDDM
) and it can occur in adult patients with a slow onset with delayed insulin requirement, (latent autoimmune diabetes in adults,
LADA
). Autoimmune diabetes has strong class II HLA association mainly with DQB gene which constitutes the first susceptibility locus. However, association with the 5'INS- VNTR and CTLA-4 genes has been established. In this study, we analysed the polimorphic allele frequencies of DQB HLA gene in 63
LADA
patients, 70
IDDM
and 79 control subjects. The HLA DQB1 alleles typing was detected through Olerup SSP DQ kit using sequence specific primers. We observed a positive association of *0201-*0302 and *0201-*0201 genotypes in both types of diabetic patients compared to the control group (p < 0.05). Moreover, *0201-*0302 genotype was higher in
IDDM
than in
LADA
(p < 0.05). On the other hand, the *0602 protective allele analysis showed a high prevalence in the normal group compared to the diabetic population. In Argentina, the most frequent allele of susceptibility in
LADA
and
IDDM
patients was the *0201. Summing up, the finding of an increase in the *0201 allele, both in allelic and genotypic frequencies, allows the characterisation of our population of patients,
LADA
and
IDDM
, unlike other populations, in which the most frequent allele is *0302.
...
PMID:[HLA DQB1 genotyping in latent autoimmune diabetes of adults (LADA)]. 1604 35
Autoimmune thyropathies are frequent in patients with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. Some recently published papers confirm similarly high prevalence of autoimmune thyropathies also in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Chronic autoimmune thyroiditis is the most frequent form of autoimmune thyropathies. Authors examined 79 accidentally selected diabetics (38 women and 41 men, x = 55.4 +/- 2.8). Diabetic patients were divided into three groups. 20 patients with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus - classical form were the first group, 12 patients with
LADA
were the second group and 47 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus constituted the third group. Authors diagnosed chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in 8 (40 %) patients in the group of patients with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, in 6 (50%) in the group of patients with
LADA
and in 20 (43%) of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. They didn't find out statistically more frequent prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in all groups of patients with diabetes (patients with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, patients with
LADA
, patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus) in comparison with control group of non-diabetic subjects. They found out statistically significant more frequent prevalence of chronic autoimmune thyroiditis in diabetics of woman gender and in diabetics with positive family history of thyropathies. Results of paper confirm recommendation of examining once or twice a year autoantibodies against thyroid gland and level of thyrotropin (TSH) with the aim of early finding of laboratory manifestation of thyroidal autoimmunity or developing functional disorder.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune thyropathies in diabetics]. 1662 76
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