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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mean glomerular volume, glomerular fraction of cortical volume, and percentage of obsolescent glomeruli were calculated in kidney specimens from autopsies on 34 Pima Indians, of whom 15 had
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
and kidney disease of diabetes mellitus. These values were compared with those of black, white, and non-Pima native American individuals without diabetes mellitus. Glomerular volume in the Pima Indians was similar in the diabetic and nondiabetic subjects and significantly greater than in the white subjects. Black and non-Pima native American individuals had glomerular volumes intermediate between white individuals and Pima Indians. The mean glomerular volume was not affected by the number of obsolescent glomeruli in diabetic Pima Indians. The glomerular volume fraction was greater in the Pimas than in the other groups. These data showed that glomerular volume in the Pima Indians was significantly greater than that in white subjects. There was no difference between diabetic and nondiabetics Pimas, and glomerular size was not correlated with the presence or degree of
glomerulosclerosis
in this population.
...
PMID:Large glomerular size in Pima Indians: lack of change with diabetic nephropathy. 139 22
A prospective study of the prevalence and causes of persistent albuminuria (greater than 300 mg/24 hr) was conducted in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (
NIDDM
) patients, age less than 66 years, attending a diabetic clinic during 1987. All eligible patients (N = 370) were asked to collect at least one 24-hour urine sample for albumin analysis. Urine collection was obtained in 224 males and 139 females (98%). Fifty patients (7 women) suffered from persistent albuminuria (13.8%). The prevalence of albuminuria was significantly higher in males (19%) than in females (5%). A kidney biopsy was performed in 35 patients (70%). The kidney biopsies revealed diffuse and/or nodular diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
in 27 patients (77%), while the remaining eight patients (23%) had a variety of non-diabetic glomerulopathies, such as minimal lesion and mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis. Diabetic retinopathy was present in 15 of 27 patients (56%) with diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
, while none of the eight patients with a non-diabetic glomerulopathy had retinopathy. Our cross sectional study has revealed a high prevalence of albuminuria and of non-diabetic glomerulopathy as a cause of this complication in
NIDDM
patients. Presence of diabetic retinopathy strongly suggests that a diabetic glomerulopathy is the cause of albuminuria. Albuminuric non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients without retinopathy require further evaluation, that is, kidney biopsy.
...
PMID:Prevalence and causes of albuminuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients. 151 98
Lytic changes to the mesangium and subendothelial area in diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
were studied by electron microscopy with an emphasis on the mechanism of nodule formation. Renal biopsy specimens were obtained from 30 diabetics (11 males, 19 females; 27
NIDDM
, 3 IDDM; mean age, 52.2 years) with renal involvement. Evaluations were made of the glomerular lesions, particularly the ultra-structural findings contributing to nodule formation, mainly by electron microscopy. Varying degrees of lytic change, such as a loose and edematous mesangial matrix, widening of the subendothelial space, followed by endothelial detachment, and destruction of anchor points, were observed in close association with progression of the diffuse lesions. Plasma proteins were found to infiltrate into the widened subendothelial space. Mesangial cells also protruded into the same space and encroached around the whole capillary wall. The interposed mesangial cells were occasionally separated from the basement membrane. Monocytes identified from their ultrastructure were frequently present noticed in the lytic areas, suggesting a reaction to lytic changes. These processes may occur repeatedly with direct expansion of the mesangial matrix, subsequently revealing a nodular appearance.
...
PMID:Early mesangiolysis and monocyte influx observed in diabetic glomerulosclerosis: relation to nodule formation. 203 30
A retrospective study was done on 109 diabetic patients who had renal biopsies during 1974-1984 to determine factors identifying nondiabetic renal disease in patients with diabetes mellitus presenting with renal dysfunction. Six of 49 (12%) patients with type I and 17 of 60 (28%) with
type II diabetes mellitus
had other renal diseases, with or without diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
. Multivariate predictors of other renal disease in type I diabetes mellitus were duration less than 5 years (p less than 0.001), absence of proteinuria (p less than 0.001), and absence of neuropathy (p less than 0.05). In
type II diabetes mellitus
these were late age of onset (p less than 0.001), absence of neuropathy (p less than 0.05), and Caucasian race (p less than 0.005). Some patients with other diseases appeared to respond to therapy directed at their nondiabetic
glomerulosclerosis
disease. We emphasize the need to distinguish between the subgroup of diabetic patients with nondiabetic renal disease from the majority who have diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
alone. The latter group should be spared the discomforts, risks, and costs of a renal biopsy.
...
PMID:Clinical identification of nondiabetic renal disease in diabetic patients with type I and type II disease presenting with renal dysfunction. 323 94
The characteristic features of OLETF rats are: (1) late onset of hyperglycemia (after 18 weeks of age); (2) a chronic course of disease; (3) mild obesity; (4) clinical onset of diabetes mellitus (DM) mostly in males; (5) hereditary trait: (a) multiple recessive genes are involved in the induction of DM; (b) rat MHC, RT1 has no diabetogenic effect; (c) control strain, LETO appears to share some of diabetogenic genes with OLETF rats; (d) female OLETF rats also carry diabetogenic genes; and (e) one of the diabetogenic genes, designated as odb-1, is transmitted linked with the X-chromosome of OLETF rats, however testosterone is an important factor involved in developing diabetes; (6) the changes of pancreatic islets can be classified into three stages: (1) an early stage (at less than 9 weeks of age) mild lymphocyte infiltration; (2) a hyperplastic stage (10-40 weeks of age); hyperplastic change and fibrosis in or around islets; (3) a final stage (at more than 40 weeks of age) showing atrophy of islets; (7) diabetic nephropathy; (a) diffuse
glomerulosclerosis
; (b) nodular lesion (thickening of basement membranes, mesangial proliferation, fibrin cap). These clinical and pathologic features of disease in OLETF rats resemble those of human
NIDDM
.
...
PMID:OLETF (Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty) rat: a new NIDDM rat strain. 785 27
In 370 non-insulin-dependent diabetic (
NIDDM
) patients less than 66 years of age, we found the prevalence of albuminuria (> 300 mg 24 h-1) to be 13.8%. Males had a higher prevalence than females (19 vs. 5%). A kidney biopsy was performed in 35 patients. The biopsy revealed diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
in 77% of the cases and a variety of non-diabetic glomerulopathies in the remaining 23%. Fifty-six per cent of the patients with diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
had diabetic retinopathy, whereas none of the patients with non-diabetic glomerulopathies had signs of retinopathy. The presence of diabetic retinopathy strongly suggests that diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
is the cause of albuminuria. During a 5-year (range 1-7 years) prospective study, the course of kidney function was followed in 26
NIDDM
patients with diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
. The glomerular filtration rate declined, and elevated systolic blood pressure was positively correlated to the rate of decline. The frequency of diabetic complications increased with increasing levels of urinary albumin excretion. In a cross-sectional study of 549
NIDDM
patients, the prevalence of proliferative retinopathy was 2, 5 and 12%, the prevalence of hypertension 46, 68 and 85%, and the prevalence of ischaemic heart disease 22, 26 and 46% in normo-, micro-, and macroalbuminuria, respectively. The mortality from cardiovascular disease is increased ninefold in
NIDDM
patients with macroalbuminuria compared to the non-diabetic background population. The presence of the well-established risk factors cannot account for this finding alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dyslipidaemia and cardiovascular disease in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patient with and without diabetic nephropathy. 798 14
In many renal diseases, glomerular thrombosis may play an important role in the development of
glomerular sclerosis
and progression of renal failure. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of antiplatelet agents on the evolution of patients with chronic glomerular disease. Twenty four patients aged 48 +/- 17 years (21 with idiopathic glomerulonephritis, one with systemic lupus erythematosus and two with
type II diabetes mellitus
) were treated with aspirin and dipyridamole or aspirin alone during 23.9 +/- 17.5 months. The patients were followed during 31.8 +/- 23 months; seven patients had a progressive deterioration of renal failure requiring dialysis or transplantation (Group A) and 17 had a stable or improving renal function (Group B). Initial serum creatinine was significantly higher in group A than in group B (3.6 +/- 1.6 vs 1.5 +/- 1.5 mg/dl respectively p = 0.003); no other significant differences in the initial assessment were observed between both groups. It is concluded that antiplatelet agents may delay the progression of renal disease when started in patients with normal or slightly deteriorated renal function.
...
PMID:[Is it justifiable to use antiplatelet drugs as a universal protection in patients with chronic glomerular damage?]. 824 41
A 24 year old male diagnosed of
type II diabetes mellitus
of 2 years of known clinical evolution discovered by an episode of hyperglycemic decompensation without ketoacidosis is presented. In the study of possible visceral involvement of the disease agenesis of the left kidney with compensating hypertrophy of the right kidney, increase of glomerular filtrate and proteinuria of 1.8 g/24 hours were observed. Renal histologic study demonstrated the existence of diffuse intercapillar
glomerulosclerosis
compatible with diabetic glomerulopathy. From these data and review of the literature the possibility of the greater risk of individuals with a single kidney to present nephropathy in the case of coexistence of associated diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:[Early diabetic nephropathy in a patient with agenesis of one kidney]. 833 23
Diabetic nephropathy can be regarded mainly as a type of microangiopathy, but is a disease that may also include aspects of macroangiopathy. This is especially true of renal disease in
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
), which is characterized not only by diabetic
glomerulosclerosis
, but also by atherosclerosis. We performed morphological studies on the kidney, using computed tomography (CT), focusing on such points as: (1) abdominal aortic calcifications at the level of kidney, (2) calcifications in the renal artery, and (3) wedge-shaped defects on the renal surface. We noted that these findings became more prominent in
NIDDM
patients during end-stage renal failure than during normal renal function, and were significantly more common in those two
NIDDM
groups than in age-matched nondiabetic patients without hypertension, hyperlipidemia or gout.
NIDDM
patients exhibited these features more frequently than IDDM patients.
...
PMID:[Computed tomographical evaluation of diabetic nephropathy]. 875 67
Microalbuminuria predicts overt nephropathy in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (
NIDDM
) patients; however, the structural basis for this functional abnormality is unknown. In this study we evaluated renal structure and function in a cohort of 34 unselected microalbuminuric
NIDDM
patients (26 male/8 female, age: 58 +/- 7 years, known diabetes duration: 11 +/- 6 years, HbA1c: 8.5 +/- 1.6%). Systemic hypertension was present in all but 3. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was 101 +/- 27 ml.min-1.1.73 m-2 and albumin excretion rate (AER) 44 (20-199) micrograms/ min. Light microscopic slides were categorized as: C I) normal or near normal renal structure; C II) changes "typical" of diabetic nephropathology in insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM) (glomerular, tubulo-interstitial and arteriolar changes occurring in parallel); C III) "atypical" patterns of injury, with absent or only mild diabetic glomerular changes associated with disproportionately severe renal structural changes including: important tubulo-interstitial with or without arteriolar hyalinosis with or without global
glomerular sclerosis
. Ten patients (29.4%) were classified as C I, 10 as C II (29.4%) and 14 as C III (41.2%); none of these patients had any definable non-diabetic renal disease. GFR, AER and blood pressure were similar in the three groups, while HbA1c was higher in C II and C III than in C I patients. Diabetic retinopathy was present in all C II patients (background in 50% and proliferative in 50%). None of the patients in C I and C III had proliferative retinopathy, while background retinopathy was observed in 50% of C I and 57% of C III patients. In summary, microalbuminuric
NIDDM
patients are structurally heterogeneous with less than one third having "typical" diabetic nephropathology. The presence of both "typical" and "atypical" patterns of renal pathology was associated with worse metabolic control, suggesting that hyperglycaemia may cause different patterns of renal injury in older
NIDDM
compared to younger IDDM patients.
...
PMID:Patterns of renal injury in NIDDM patients with microalbuminuria. 896 Aug 44
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