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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
78 diabetics and a healthy control group of 100 were evaluated according to their haemorrheological parameters (whole blood viscosity, plasma viscosity, aggregability and rigidity of erythrocytes). Diabetics were divided according to type of diabetes, quality of metabolic control and expression of microangiopathy. Hyperviscosity was noted in both groups of diabetics as compared to the control group. Changes in patients with
IDDM
were more pronounced in erythrocyte rigidity, while in patients with
NIDDM
they were more expressed in cell aggregability. These changes were present even before the clinical onset of the late complications of diabetes, although they were more expressed in patients with complications. Changes in patients with good metabolic control, were less expressed in comparison to those with poor metabolic control. The conclusion is that metabolic derangements in diabetes have an important influence on haemorrheological properties. Thus, reducing blood viscosity in these patients, may be a promising approach to improving microcirculation and delaying the progression of microangiopathy.
...
PMID:[Hemorheologic changes in diabetes mellitus]. 134 47
Atherosclerosis, presenting as macrovascular complications of diabetes mellitus, produces approximately 80% of all diabetic mortality, whether the patient has Type I insulin-dependent diabetes (
IDDM
) or Type II
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
). Specifically, 75% of this atherosclerotic macrovascular mortality flows as the outcome of coronary atherosclerosis, which is increased approximately two-fold in men and four-fold in women with diabetes as compared with otherwise matched populations with entirely normal carbohydrate tolerance. The remaining 25% of this atherosclerotic mortality in patients with diabetes mellitus is the result either of accelerated cerebrovascular or of peripheral vascular complications of diabetes, both of which are increased four-fold and five-fold, respectively, in patients with diabetes mellitus, regardless of type. Furthermore, atherosclerosis is the principal cause of hospitalizations for patients with diabetes mellitus. Admissions for this complication account for approximately 77% of total hospitalizations for diabetes owing to complications. Aside from mortality data alone, atherosclerosis is obviously a leading cause of diabetic disability, since it produces patients who are chronic cardiovascular, peripheral or cerebrovascular cripples, perhaps for many years before their ultimate demise. Small blood vessel or microvascular complications of diabetes mellitus, while formerly thought to be the end-stage in the unfolding of the diabetic process, do not appear to have the potential for mortality as do the atherosclerotic large blood vessel complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effective treatment of hypertension in patients with diabetes mellitus. 135 76
The Zn/Cu ratio was examined in the serum of three groups of persons: healthy volunteers, diabetic patients on diabetic diet (
NIDDM
), and diabetic patients on diabetic diet and insulin (
IDDM
). Zinc, copper, the Zn/Cu serum ratio, and the blood glucose level were determined during fasting and 2 h after breakfast. Zn and Cu serum levels in
NIDDM
and
IDDM
patients were decreased. The Zn/Cu ratio was higher in both groups of diabetic patients. These changes in the Zn and Cu levels as well as in the Zn/Cu ratio were not related to chronic diabetic complications.
...
PMID:Zinc and copper in the serum of diabetic patients. 137 73
Zinc status was assessed in 53 diabetic patients: 18 insulin-dependent diabetic patients (
IDDM
), 22 noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients (
NIDDM
) treated with oral antidiabetic agents, and 13 insulin-treated, noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients (IRDM). Plasma zinc concentrations were in the usual range for healthy subjects in these three groups (15.3 +/- 0.9 mumol/L). Urinary zinc excretions were elevated in the
IDDM
group (18.3 +/- 4.1 mumol/24 h; p less than 0.01 vs normal) and in the
NIDDM
group (17.5 +/- 3.5 mumol/24 h; p less than 0.01 vs normal), but normal in the IRDM group (11.3 +/- 2.4 mumol/24 h). In 14
NIDDM
patients treated with transient continuous sc insulin injections, urinary zinc decreased from 16.5 +/- 2.2 mumol/24 h before insulin treatment to 11.5 +/- 0.3 mumol/24 h after insulin treatment without any modification in plasma zinc concentrations.
...
PMID:Effects of diabetes type and treatment on zinc status in diabetes mellitus. 137 71
The levels of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and glycosylated keratin were studied along the hair length in 17 patients with newly detected
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) aged 7 to 33, in 14 patients with newly detected
noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) aged 46 to 73, and in 41 healthy subjects. The level of glycosylated keratin in healthy hairs along the entire length varied within 0.094-0.124 mumol of fructosamine per 100 mg of hair. In 10 of 17 patients of the
IDDM
group measurements of glycosylated keratin levels made it possible to determine the time of appearance of diabetes mellitus, in 13 patients of the
NIDDM
group these levels along the entire hair length were elevated. The determination of these levels permitted the estimation of the time of appearance of
IDDM
. Its manifestation followed a long period (1-2 yrs.) of latent derangements of carbohydrate metabolism. In
NIDDM
patients the time of appearance of disease is difficult to determine because of the limited hair length and a long latent period of disease (over 2-3 yrs.).
...
PMID:[Determining the time of diabetes mellitus onset by the level of glycosylated keratin in hair]. 138 Oct 94
Ion channels in beta cells regulate electrical and secretory activity in response to metabolic, pharmacologic, or neural signals by controlling the permeability to K+ and Ca2+. The ATP-sensitive K+ channels act as a switch that responds to fuel secretagogues or sulfonylureas to initiate depolarization. This depolarization opens voltage-dependent calcium channels (VDCC) to increase the amplitude of free cytosolic Ca2+ levels ([Ca2+]i), which triggers exocytosis. Acetyl choline and vasopressin (VP) both potentiate the acute effects of glucose on insulin secretion by generating inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate to release intracellular Ca2+; VP also potentiates sustained insulin secretion by effects on depolarization. In contrast, inhibitors of insulin secretion decrease [Ca2+]i by either hyperpolarizing the beta cell or by receptor-mediated, G-protein-coupled effects to decrease VDCC activity. Repolarization is initiated by voltage- and Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels. A human insulinoma voltage-dependent K+ channel cDNA was recently cloned and two types of alpha 1 subunits of the VDCC have been identified in insulin-secreting cell lines. Determining how ion channels regulate insulin secretion in normal and diabetic beta cells should provide pathophysiologic insight into the beta cell signal transduction defect characteristic of non-
insulin dependent diabetes
(
NIDDM
).
...
PMID:The role of ion channels in insulin secretion. 138 42
It is clearly recognized that patients with
NIDDM
have an increased risk for CHD. Recent data indicate that persons with glucose concentrations in the nondiabetic range also may be at higher risk for CHD. These associations may not represent cause and effect, however. Emerging data suggest that hyperglycemia and CHD may both arise from hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. In support of this hypothesis are studies showing that
NIDDM
and CHD have many risk factors in common, including age, elevated blood pressure, dyslipidemia, adiposity, and a central pattern of fat distribution. Moreover, these risk factors are frequent concomitants of hyperinsulinemia, itself a risk factor for CHD and perhaps for
NIDDM
. Although the duration of
NIDDM
has been infrequently related to risk of CHD, the authors hypothesize that duration of hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance would be a more sensitive marker for risk of CHD. The relation of
IDDM
to CHD is a different situation. The etiological process leading to
IDDM
, namely the destruction of beta-cells in genetically predisposed persons, is not related to cardiovascular risk. However,
IDDM
patients still have an excess of CVD, the risk factors for which may vary according to the location of the diseases (e.g., LEAD vs. CHD). There is a strong relationship between proteinuria and CVD, which has led to a general theory of vascular complications in
IDDM
based on defective heparan sulfate metabolism (Steno hypothesis). Recent evidence challenges parts of this hypothesis, and the possibility is raised that a higher case-fatality rate in a subgroup of patients with both renal and CVD explains part of the renal connection, as does the general worsening of CVD risk factors.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and macrovascular complications. An epidemiological perspective. 139 12
Not all patients with diabetes develop clinically significant nephropathy and, for this reason, attention has begun to focus on the risk factors for development of this serious complication. These risk factors have not been quantified to the same degree as those factors associated with more common progressive vascular diseases, such as atherosclerosis. However, studies of pathogenesis and clinical and epidemiological surveys of diabetic nephropathy point to numerous risk categories. Glycemic control, genetic and familial predispositions, renal and glomerular enlargement, glomerular hyperfiltration, and capillary and systemic hypertension can be invoked as contributors to this disease process. This review focuses on hemodynamic alterations and their role in the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy. Increases in GFR, largely driven by increases in plasma flow and capillary pressure, appear in early
IDDM
and
NIDDM
. This abnormality of renal vascular control probably is derived from alterations in several vasoactive control systems. In addition, the elevations in capillary pressure may be damaging to the glomerular capillaries. Arterial hypertension is not necessarily present before clinical nephropathy appears; however, it is a usual concomitant of progressive diabetic renal disease. The strongest evidences for the roles of altered systemic and renal hemodynamics in the progression of diabetic renal disease are clinical and experimental studies demonstrating attenuation of the disease process by lowering systemic and capillary pressures with antihypertensive agents, and dietary and glycemic modifications. Thus, although multiple factors probably interact to determine risk for the development of diabetic nephropathy, hemodynamic forces are a particularly important contributor and are especially amenable to therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:Diabetic nephropathy. Metabolic versus hemodynamic considerations. 139 17
Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) is characterized by a specific defect in glucose recognition by the pancreatic islet beta cell. This is in clear distinction to patients with
insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
IDDM
) who undergo pancreatic islet beta cell death and no longer have the ability to synthesize, store, and release insulin. Defective glucose-induced first phase insulin responses in patients with
NIDDM
can be partially restored by exogenous insulin treatment and by other pharmacologic therapy. These observations provide strength for the theory of glucose desensitization of the pancreatic beta cell as an important secondary defect in the pathogenesis of abnormal insulin secretion in
NIDDM
. However, even though defective insulin secretion is an essential part of the pathogenesis of
NIDDM
, in itself it is not sufficient. A multiplicative effect is required involving interaction between tissue resistance to insulin action and defective insulin secretion whose product is the syndrome of
NIDDM
.
...
PMID:Defective insulin secretion in NIDDM: integral part of a multiplier hypothesis. 140 Jun 9
The epidemiology of diabetes mellitus in Thai children aged 0-15 years was studied in 1985 and compared with a previous study done in 1984. Four hundred and seventy-six questionnaires were sent each year to hospitals in Thailand. In 1984, thirty-six cases of newly diagnosed diabetes mellitus were found of which 35 were
IDDM
and one was
NIDDM
. In 1985, twenty-seven cases of new
IDDM
were found, no case of
NIDDM
was reported. Two cases of MRD were reported from the Northeastern and Southern part of Thailand. The incidence of
IDDM
in the whole kingdom of Thailand was 0.19/100,000/year in 1984 and 0.14/100,000/year in 1985. The male to female ratio was 1:1.5 in 1984 and 1:2 in 1985. The peak age at diagnosis showed the main peak at 14 years old in boys. The peak age of girls preceded boys by 1-2 years in 1984 and 1985. Similar findings in 1984 and 1985 were the onset of symptoms showing a seasonal variation with highest frequency in winter with a slight change of increased incidence in the rainy season of 1985. There was an increased incidence of
IDDM
in families with lower educational and socioeconomic levels. The newly diagnosed
IDDM
with DKA was 16.2, and 19.5 per cent in 1984 and 1985. The incidence of
IDDM
in Thai children, aged 0-15 years seems to be the lowest compared to other countries previously described which might be due to some genetic and environmental including diet, micronutrient, eating habits and life-style which might play a role in the difference.
...
PMID:The epidemiology of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM): report from Thailand. 140 45
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