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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hypertension is more frequently found in patients with diabetes mellitus than in subjects with normal glucose tolerance. On the other hand, concomitant hypertension accelerates the progression of
diabetic nephropathy
. To examine whether human atrial natriuretic peptide (human ANF-[99-126], hANP) is involved into the pathogenesis of hypertension and nephropathy of diabetic patients and to find out whether the detection of increased hANP levels can serve as an early marker, helping to identify diabetic patients at increased risk of developing these diabetes complications, we studied 107 randomly selected patients with Type 1 or
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
(53 women, 54 men). There were no differences between patients with normal hANP levels and patients with hANP levels above normal range regarding age, diabetes duration, metabolic control, kidney function (creatinine clearance and proteinuria), electrolytes, and in plasma renin activity, aldosterone, epinephrine and norepinephrine levels in plasma. However, higher blood pressure was measured and antihypertensive therapy was found more frequently in patients with increased hANP levels (p less than 0.05). This was confirmed by analyzing the subgroup of patients with normal blood pressure without antihypertensive therapy: Again, diastolic blood pressure was found to be higher (p less than 0.05) in patients with elevated hANP than in patients with normal hANP levels. In this subgroup, increased creatinine clearance tended to be found more frequently among patients with increased hANP levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[What pathophysiologic significance does increased plasma levels of human atrial natriuretic peptide have in patients with diabetes mellitus?]. 297 Jan 66
Hyperfiltration is a very characteristic feature in insulin-dependent diabetes. Hyperfiltration is to some extent associated with long-term glycemic control but the correlation is not very strong. Long-term hyperfiltration may play a role in the genesis of late
diabetic nephropathy
, but it is difficult to distinguish effects of hyperfiltration per se from effects of poor metabolic control. Long-term hyperfiltration without diabetes does not produce nephropathy. It is hypothesized that IDDM patients who do not show considerable hyperfiltration in spite of poor metabolic control may be those who are to some extent protected against late
diabetic nephropathy
, but other mechanisms may also be involved in the renal protection of these patients, who survive long-term diabetes without nephropathy. On the other hand, those with poor metabolic control combined with hyperfiltration are likely to develop nephropathy. In addition, it is suggested that the metabolic aberrations in diabetes, with the subsequent changes in the biochemistry of the glomerular wall, are permissive and absolutely required for the development of
diabetic nephropathy
. Of note, diabetic glomerulopathy in
NIDDM
occurs without significant hyperfiltration and extreme hyperfiltration in the one-kidney-model (without diabetes) does not produce nephropathy. Nonglycemic modalities of intervention, resulting in reduced hyperfiltration, e.g., low-protein diet or administration of somatostatin analogues, deserves interest as new potential ways of preventing or postponing
diabetic nephropathy
. Also intervention with aldose-reductase inhibitors may be an important therapeutic modality for those patients in whom good metabolic control is not obtainable. It is now well-established that antihypertensive treatment, including ACE-inhibition, reduces rate of decline in GFR in patients with already established nephropathy. In addition, protein excretion is diminished in IDDM patients with incipient
diabetic nephropathy
by antihypertensive treatment where GFR is well-preserved during treatment. No data are available for
NIDDM
.
...
PMID:Comparative renal pathophysiology relevant to IDDM and NIDDM patients. 306 56
Diabetic nephropathy
, a rarely listed cause of end-stage renal failure (ESRF) among patients starting renal replacement therapy (RRT) in the early seventies, has progressively gained in importance and become one of the major reasons for the continuous growth of the patient population on RRT in most European countries. Amongst new patients commencing RRT in 1985, the acceptance rate varied between 3 and 12 per million population for type I diabetes mellitus and between one and four per million population for
type II diabetes mellitus
. Nordic countries, particularly Sweden and Finland, had the highest acceptance rate of young patients with type I diabetes mellitus whose median ages were 38-42 years. In most central and southern European countries the median age of patients with type I diabetes mellitus varied between 50 and 58 years. The high number of young patients with type I diabetes mellitus and ESRF in Nordic countries point to a different natural history of this disease. It cannot be excluded, however, that the higher median age in other countries might result from doctors mistakenly diagnosing type I disease in patients with type II disease who need insulin treatment. Patients with
type II diabetes mellitus
had a similar age distribution at start of RRT throughout Europe and their median ages clustered around 60 years in most countries. The contribution of haemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis and renal transplantation was analysed for diabetic compared to non-diabetic ESRF. Despite large geographical differences in the proportional use of methods of treatment, a general trend to apply CAPD more frequently in diabetic as compared to non-diabetic patients was observed, and this was true for countries with both predominant haemodialysis and predominant transplant programmes. Transplantation without prior dialysis was performed in 17% of Swedish and 30% of Norwegian patients with type I diabetes mellitus. In order to better explain the mortality of patients with diabetic ESRF, the proportional distribution of causes of death was analysed. Myocardial ischaemia and infarction was confirmed to be the leading cause of death in patients with diabetes mellitus on RRT. The coronary death rate was estimated to be 10 times greater in young patients with type I diabetes mellitus as compared to their non-diabetic counterparts. Other cardiovascular as well as infectious causes were recorded in a similar proportion of deaths in diabetics as in non-diabetics. Cancer deaths, however, appeared to be definitely less frequent in patients on RRT due to
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Renal replacement therapy in patients with diabetic nephropathy, 1980-1985. Report from the European Dialysis and Transplant Association Registry. 314 13
In 97 patients with type I diabetes mellitus, 155 patients with
type II diabetes mellitus
, and two matched control groups, serum concentrations of laminin P1, a non-collagenous component of basement membranes, were determined by radioimmunoassay to see whether laminin P1 might be a valuable indicator of microangiopathic complications in diabetics. Independent of the type of diabetes, serum laminin concentrations in patients without nephropathy or with early renal damage as assessed by microalbuminuria were comparable with those of the control subjects. Patients with macroproteinuria or with renal insufficiency had significantly increased serum laminin P1 concentrations. Diabetic retinopathy was not found to influence serum laminin P1 concentrations. These data indicate that serum laminin P1 concentrations are increased in advanced
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Serum concentrations of laminin P1 in diabetics with advanced nephropathy. 319 51
Diabetes is associated with changes in plasma lipids and lipoproteins into atherogenic direction. In IDDM these changes are small or absent if good metabolic control can be maintained.
Diabetic nephropathy
is, however, associated with the appearance of dyslipoproteinemia. In
NIDDM
plasma total and VLDL triglyceride levels are elevated, and HDL-cholesterol level is decreased, and this pattern of dyslipoproteinemia does not always respond to improved control of hyperglycemia. Abnormalities of lipoprotein metabolism, not reflected in conventional plasma lipid and lipoprotein level measurements, and glucosylation of lipoproteins and resulting alterations in lipoprotein catabolism may be of importance in the enhanced atherogenesis in diabetes. Both IDDM and
NIDDM
are associated with an increased frequency of hypertension, but the underlying mechanisms appear to be different. In IDDM hypertension is usually associated with the development of
diabetic nephropathy
and thus with a long duration of the disease. In
NIDDM
hypertension is often present already at the time of diagnosis, and also in IGT, the precursor stage of
NIDDM
, the prevalence of hypertension is already increased. Obesity explains only in part the high prevalence of hypertension in patients with
NIDDM
. Diabetes is known to be associated with multiple abnormalities in hemostatic factors and, although these abnormalities may contribute importantly to the increased risk of ASVD in diabetic patients, information about their real role is scanty and conflicting. The impact of general major risk factors for ASVD, elevated plasma cholesterol, elevated blood pressure, and smoking, on the risk of ASVD appears to be similar in diabetics and nondiabetics. Only a relatively small proportion of the excessive occurrence of ASVD in diabetics can, however, be explained by the effects of diabetes on the levels of general risk factors for ASVD. This proportion mediated through the effects of diabetes on risk factors is larger in female diabetics than in male diabetics. The major proportion of the excess of ASVD in diabetics remains, however, unexplained and must be due to effects of diabetes itself through mechanisms that are incompletely understood.
...
PMID:Diabetes and atherosclerosis: an epidemiologic view. 355 30
Fasting plasma zinc levels were determined in 45 IDDM and in 40
NIDDM
patients. Mean values were similar in both groups, but diabetic men showed a significantly higher plasma zinc (p less than 0.05) than diabetic women. In patients with
diabetic nephropathy
a lower zinc level was associated with decreased plasma albumin as compared to patients without complications (p less than 0.001). Neuropathy and macro-angiopathy were also associated with lower zincemia (p less than 0.05) but in the presence of normal albumin levels. In IDDM without nephropathy a significant positive correlation was found between plasma zinc and plasma glucose, albumin, branched chain amino acids and glutamine, while in
NIDDM
without nephropathy a significant positive correlation exists between plasma zinc and the amino acids glutamine, valine, histidine and lysine.
...
PMID:Plasma zinc levels in diabetes mellitus: relation to plasma albumin and amino acids. 375 14
The prevalence of hypertension was studied in 374 patients with
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) and in 1197 non-diabetic controls. The diagnosis of hypertension was made when the mean systolic pressure of three measurements on different occasions was 151 mmHg or greater, or the mean diastolic pressure was 91 mmHg or greater. The prevalence was 42.8% in the diabetics and 17.8% in the controls. It showed a significant difference over age 31 (p less than 0.05). Proteinuria (p less than 0.001), abnormal ECG (p less than 0.01), hyperlipidemia (p less than 0.05) and hypertensive or sclerotic changes of the retina (p less than 0.001) were more frequently observed in the diabetics than in the controls. Hypertension was found in 71% of those with proteinuria, 48% with diabetic retinopathy, 61% with abnormal ECG and 54% with hyperlipidemia in the diabetics. The incidence of proteinuria was 22.8% in the diabetic hypertensives and was 8.3% in the non-diabetic hypertensives (p less than 0.001). 24 subjects out of 119 diabetics, who were normotensive at their initial visits, became hypertensive within 10 years (N-H), and 95 remained normotensive (N-N). 38% of N-H showed proteinuria already on their initial examinations and 3% of N-N did. 73% of those who showed proteinuria on their initial examination became hypertensive and 13% of those who were free from proteinuria did (p less than 0.001). The results suggest that
diabetic nephropathy
plays an important role in developing hypertension in diabetics.
...
PMID:Prevalence of hypertension in diabetes mellitus--its relation to diabetic nephropathy. 399 82
Diabetic nephropathy
is a progressive renal disease and represents a serious late complication of diabetes. There are familial clustering and huge ethnic differences in the occurrence of
diabetic nephropathy
, which point to a genetic predisposition.
Diabetic nephropathy
is defined by persistent albuminuria (albumin excretion rate [AER] > 300 mg/day), declining glomerular filtration rate and rising blood pressure. Several years of incipient nephropathy, characterized by worsening microalbuminuria (AER 30 to 300 mg/day or 20 to 200 micrograms/min), which is Albustix-negative and detectable by special assays only, are followed by established nephropathy. The natural history of nephropathy differs between insulin-dependent (IDDM) and non-insulin-dependent (
NIDDM
) diabetes mellitus. In IDDM, nephropathy develops in 30 to 40% of cases. The incidence peaks after 15 to 16 years of diabetes. In
NIDDM
, estimates of prevalence range from 15 to 20%, and nephropathy often supervenes after a shorter known duration of diabetes than in IDDM. GFR is often increased above normal (hyperfiltration) from the onset of IDDM due to increased renal blood flow, glomerular capillary hypertension and increased filtration surface. The glomeruli are hypertrophied and the kidneys enlarged. In both IDDM and
NIDDM
, GFR begins to decline irreversibly, when AER has risen to 100 to 300 mg/day at an average rate of 10 ml/min. per year. This is due to progressive reduction of the filtration surface area through mesangial expansion. Serum creatinine levels begin to rise when GFR falls below 50 ml/min, and then end-stage renal failure follows after an average of five years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Diabetic nephropathy: significance of microalbuminuria and proteinuria in Type I and Type II diabetes mellitus]. 749 50
Urinary albumin fragments (uAF) from patients with
NIDDM
were analyzed as a possible factor in the early discovery of
diabetic nephropathy
before emergence of microalbuminuria. SDS-PAGE and immunoblot assay were employed for detection of uAF. Samples from 252 patients with
NIDDM
, 158 patients with non-diabetic diseases, and 48 healthy volunteers were examined; uAF were detected in 139 (55.2%), 94 (59.5%), only one (2.1%), respectively. In diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria, uAF were detected in 48 out of 159 cases (30.2%). Two years after the initial study, 3 of the 17 diabetic patients (17.6%) with normoalbuminuria and uAF showed micro- or macroalbuminuria. It was concluded that detection of uAF might be useful for the early detection of
diabetic nephropathy
in
NIDDM
.
...
PMID:Urinary albumin fragments as a new clinical parameter for the early detection of diabetic nephropathy. 754 25
At present we are able to disclose
diabetic nephropathy
in the very early stages, i.e. when urinary albumin excretion is only slightly increased (20-200 micrograms/min = microalbuminuria). Good blood glucose control and active antihypertensive treatment may stop or retard the further development towards renal failure. Angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE)-inhibitors seem to have a renoprotective effect. In this article we suggest guidelines for the use of ACE-inhibitors in patients with type 1 diabetes and early
diabetic nephropathy
. Special concerns are included in respect of adolescents, pregnant women and persons with
type 2 diabetes
.
...
PMID:[ACE inhibitors and early diabetic nephropathy]. 757 May 36
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