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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
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The effect of insulin on the serum levels of the amino-terminal propeptide of type III procollagen (PIIINP) was investigated in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, whose disease was unsatisfactorily controlled by oral drugs. Before insulin therapy the PIIINP values of the patients (3.2 +/- 1.3 micrograms/l, n = 38) varied within the range of healthy subjects (3.1 +/- 0.6 micrograms/l, n = 50, NS). Insulin therapy (6-20 IU at bedtime plus the oral drugs) improved the glycemic control and increased the serum PIIINP during a 4 week (3.1 +/- 0.9 to 3.8 +/- 1.1 micrograms/l, P less than 0.01, n = 8) and an 8 week period (3.2 +/- 1.3 to 3.8 +/- 1.6 micrograms/l, P less than 0.001, n = 22). The values were still elevated after 6 months on insulin (3.5 +/- 1.5 to 4.0 +/- 1.7 micrograms/l, P less than 0.01, n = 12). Placebo-insulin did not alter the concentration of PIIINP (3.1 +/- 0.6 to 2.8 +/- 0.6 micrograms/l, NS, n = 8) whereas the glycemic control improved and body weight decreased. The PIIINP values correlated with fasting insulin before (r = 0.403, P less than 0.05, n = 30) and after the therapy (r = 0.452, P less than 0.001, n = 60). Insulin therapy, while correcting the hormone deficiency and restoring glucose and protein metabolism, seems to activate the synthesis of type III procollagen in patients with NIDDM. This may promote the atherosclerotic process.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 1992 Sep
PMID:Effect of insulin on serum amino-terminal propeptide of type III procollagen in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 142 60

The relationship between obesity and type II diabetes mellitus is well established and a majority of type II diabetic individuals are classified as obese. The pathogenesis of type II diabetes mellitus is not fully understood; however, multiple organ systems are involved, including abnormalities of insulin secretion, peripheral insulin resistance and hepatic insulin resistance. The goal of the treatment for the obese diabetic is to normalise these alterations and achieve normoglycaemia. Traditionally, the initial therapy, aiming to accomplish weight reduction, is diet and exercise. In obese type II diabetic patients, the whole body insulin-dose response curve is markedly depressed. A single exercise session improves and partially normalises both insulin responsiveness and sensitivity for glucose utilisation. Furthermore, a single bout of physical activity often results in decreased plasma glucose levels, which persists into the postoperative period. Type II diabetes patients participating in regular exercise programmes can potentially improve their metabolic control. An improved glucose control in both lean and obese type II diabetic patients under the age of 55 years has been demonstrated by improved HbA1C levels and glucose tolerance tests following physical training programmes. The effect of regular exercise on the metabolic control in these younger patients does not appear to be correlated with weight reduction. For most type II diabetic men over 55 years of age, physical training is not a feasible form of therapy because of other interfering diseases which may complicate or severely hinder all physical training apart from very low intensity exercise programmes. Lean, older, type II diabetic patients who have been able to exercise for 10 weeks or up to 2 years demonstrate no change in HbA1C levels, glucose tolerance or bodyweight. Thus, there is a clear difference in metabolic response to regular exercise between younger and older type II diabetic patients. The younger patient appears to be more inclined to respond to physical training with improvements in the metabolic control. The reason for this apparent difference is not clear, but possible explanations may include differences in training intensity, the presence or degree of complicating diseases, pretraining level of metabolic control or bodyweight. Type II diabetics are predisposed to cardiovascular disease and are characterised by hyperlipidaemia. In obese type II diabetic individuals, physical training improves the blood lipid profile as measured by decreased levels of triglycerides and total cholesterol. In young, overweight diabetics, improved lipid profiles can be achieved despite no change in bodyweight, while no apparent effects are reported for lean patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Sports Med 1992 Sep
PMID:Exercise training in obese diabetic patients. Special considerations. 143 93

The extent to which computerized medical administration facilitates quality control was studied using as an example the quality of blood glucose regulation in diabetics supervised by general practitioners in 11 computerized practices. Systematic use of the general practice computer rapidly provided an unequivocal answer that 37% of such patients were not regulated in accordance with the guidelines for type 2 diabetes mellitus of the Dutch College of General Practitioners. The extra workload for the participating general practitioners was minimal. Automated recording of problem lists, as applied in the general practices belonging to the Registration Network, facilitates access to data on chronic diseases and risk factors for purposes of research, quality control and quality assessment.
Fam Pract 1992 Sep
PMID:Computerization of general practices and quality control. Blood glucose regulation in type 2 diabetics investigated in the Registration Network family practices. 145 94

In NIDDM diabetic subjects, the microcirculatory damage shows a double aspect: an alteration of the vascular wall, particularly of the arteriolar capillary, and a hemorheological alteration at the level of the capillary district. In the microcirculation, because of the low velocity of the flow and the inverse relationship between capillary size and RBC diameter, the viscosity has an important role with its components: RBC viscosity and deformability. Even the erythrocyte aggregation has a key role as resultant of the attracting and repulsing forces, among which the plasma-RBC viscosity and the deformability play opposite role. Our method allows to evaluate the erythrocyte, the whole blood, the plasma and the plasma-RBC viscosity, and the deformability. Studies from this laboratory in NIDDM subjects show an increase in the blood viscosity, a decrease in the erythrocyte deformability and plasma-RBC viscosity. It is suggested that in microcirculatory district the flow reductions are particularly of hemorheological type and that the sludged blood is an "optical" phenomenon with poor meaning. We consider some hematological parameters, namely the Hgb A1c %, Hgb concentration, RBC count, MCV, etcetera.
Minerva Cardioangiol 1992 Sep
PMID:[Plasma-erythrocyte viscosity and evaluation of several pro- and anti-aggregating factors in NIDDM patients in metabolic decompensation state]. 147 Mar 97

In 50 normotonic patients with type 2 diabetes (NIDDM) and controls matched for sex and age with NIDDM and hypertension a statistically significant difference was found as regards S-peptide values on fasting, cholesterol, triglycerides, BMI and atherogenic index (cholesterol/HDL, p < 0.01). C-peptide values correlated positively with values of the systolic and median BP and the atherogenic index in both groups. In normotonic diabetics there was also a positive correlation with the BMI and in hypertonic subjects with the triglyceride levels. The results confirm the hypothesis that in NIDDM there is a direct relationship between arterial hypertension, unfavourable lipid parameters and insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinism resp. The authors discuss possible mechanisms by which hyperinsulinism mediates a rise of BP, hyperlipoproteinaemia, hyperglycaemia and hirsutism (hormonal metabolic syndrome X and 5H resp.). These phenomena are the main risk factors of cardiovascular diseases and lead via heart attacks and cerebrovascular attacks (IHD and stroke) to a high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in our population. The morbidity and mortality is steadily increasing and thus we are among civilized countries among those with the highest morbidity and mortality.
Vnitr Lek 1992 Sep
PMID:[Insulin resistance and arterial hypertension. Hyperinsulinism as a basic etiopathogenic factor in essential arterial hypertension and associated phenomena]. 148 85

The prevalence and incidence of CHD, defined by ECG abnormalities according to the Tecumseh criteria for Minnesota Codes, were determined in Pima Indians greater than or equal to 25 yr of age. In a cross-sectional analysis, the age-sex-adjusted prevalence (+/- SE) of ECG abnormalities was higher in 1454 NIDDM patients (6.86 +/- 0.65%) than in 1696 nondiabetic subjects (3.23 +/- 0.63%; prevalence rate ratio = 2.12; 95% CI 1.39-3.25). In a prospective analysis, the age-sex-adjusted incidence (+/- SE) of ECG abnormalities was higher in 824 NIDDM patients (12.77 +/- 1.67) than in 935 nondiabetic subjects (5.93 +/- 1.43 cases/1000 person-yr; incidence rate ratio = 2.15; 95% CI 1.26-3.69). The prevalence of ECG abnormalities in insulin-treated NIDDM patients was significantly higher than in NIDDM patients not treated with insulin (age-sex-adjusted OR = 2.83; 95% CI 1.84-4.33); and this association persisted when adjusted for other factors such as sBP, BMI, duration of diabetes, serum cholesterol concentration, and oral hypoglycemic agents (OR = 2.12; 95% CI 1.34-3.37). In the prospective analysis, the incidence of ECG abnormalities in NIDDM patients treated with insulin was higher than in those NIDDM patients not treated with insulin, but, when controlled for age, sex, duration of diabetes, and oral hypoglycemic agents in a proportional-hazards model, the relationship with insulin treatment was not statistically significant (incidence rate ratio = 1.36; 95% CI 0.80-2.31). This suggests that insulin treatment may be a marker of more severe diabetes, and that factors associated with clinical indications for insulin treatment, rather than insulin treatment per se, are related causally to CHD. On the other hand, endogenous fasting and 2-h postload serum insulin concentrations were not associated with ECG abnormalities among 761 NIDDM patients not treated with insulin nor among 1226 nondiabetic subjects. Furthermore, in the prospective study, neither endogenous fasting nor 2-h postload serum insulin was associated with the subsequent development of ECG abnormalities in NIDDM patients or nondiabetic subjects.
Diabetes 1992 Sep
PMID:Insulin treatment, endogenous insulin concentration, and ECG abnormalities in diabetic Pima Indians. Cross-sectional and prospective analyses. 149 65

This article is divided into two parts. A retrospective overview summarizes some of the work that provided the framework and tools of the more recent studies. The five novel areas of research are related to the indirect effects of insulin. Regulation of plasma glucose is of central importance in health and diabetes. Understanding this precise regulation requires sensitive isotope dilution methods that can measure the rates at which glucose is produced by the liver and used by the tissues on a minute-to-minute basis. Validation studies indicated that the non-steady-state tracer method yields reasonable results when the specific activity of plasma glucose does not change abruptly. During hyperinsulinemic glucose clamps, the decrease in specific activity of glucose can be prevented by the MSTI. During exercise, the decrease of specific activity can be only in part ameliorated by step-tracer infusion. Depancreatized dogs are used extensively as a model of selective insulin deficiency, because dog stomach secretes physiological amounts of glucagon. This strategy can avoid injections of somatostatin, which can have other affects in addition to the suppression of insulin and glucagon. In human diabetes, in addition to an increase of glucose production, there is also an increase in glucose cycling in the liver. In animal models of diabetes, mild NIDDM, and in glucose intolerance, the percentage of increments of glucose cycling are much larger than those of glucose production. We hypothesize, therefore, that measurements of glucose cycling can be used as an early marker of glucose intolerance. Application of different tracer strategies and use of the depancreatized dog as a model of diabetes, we investigated the importance of the indirect effects of insulin in the pathogenesis of diabetes. 1) Because, in the treatment of IDDM, insulin is administered by the peripheral routes we compared the relative importance of hepatic and peripheral effects of insulin in regulating the rate of glucose production. Experiments were performed in depancreatized dogs that were initially maintained at moderate hyperglycemia (10 mM) with subbasal portal insulin infusion. During the experimental period, insulin was infused either peripherally or portally at 0.9 mU.kg-1.min-1. In addition, peripheral infusions were also given at 0.45 mU.kg-1.min-1. We concluded that when suprabasal insulin levels are provided to moderately hyperglycemic depancreatized dogs, the suppression of glucose production is more dependent on peripheral than portal insulin concentrations. This indirect effect of insulin may be mediated by limitation of the flow of precursors and energy substrates for gluconeogenesis and/or by suppressive effect of insulin on glucagon secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Diabetes 1992 Sep
PMID:Banting Lecture: glucose turnover. A key to understanding the pathogenesis of diabetes (indirect effects of insulin). 149 70

The syndromes of insulin resistance are a group of clinically diverse disorders, and our understanding of their molecular pathogenesis has advanced in parallel with our understanding of the structure of the insulin receptor and the mechanism of insulin action. The most straightforward progress has related to defining the role of both anti-receptor antibodies and mutations in the insulin receptor gene in causing these disorders. Despite this progress, the cause of severe target cell resistance in patients without defects in the receptor locus remains unknown, and we are limited in our ability to relate specific molecular defects in insulin signalling to in vivo phenotypes, such as those relating to growth and development and function of adipose tissue and muscle. Answers to these questions may ultimately be explained by the existence of multiple species of insulin receptors expressed in different tissues, brought about by alternative splicing and receptor hybrids, and by divergent pathways of insulin signalling with different consequences for specific tissues. The possibility that the insulin receptor and GLUT4 may be candidate genes for inherited insulin resistance in NIDDM has been addressed with the aid of genetic screening techniques such as SSCP. Currently, the loci have not been implicated in studies in most patients. Transgenic methodologies will be powerful tools for pursuit of unanswered questions in the field of insulin resistance in coming years.
Diabetes 1992 Sep
PMID:Lilly Lecture: syndromes of insulin resistance. From patient to gene and back again. 149 71

In summary, nutrition practice guidelines for dietitians who provide outpatient care for persons with NIDDM provide a roadmap for nutrition care that allows for consistency in individualized care. A field test that compares care according to practice guidelines with usual or basic care can provide evidence, based on medical, education/behavior, and cost outcomes, that practice guidelines are not only reasonable and realistic but also effective.
J Am Diet Assoc 1992 Sep
PMID:Practice guidelines for nutrition care by dietetics practitioners for outpatients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: consensus statement. 151 76

Adrenal tumors are usually diagnosed by clinical symptoms of hormone excess. The increasing use of ultrasound and computed tomography results in the detection of a substantial number of incidentally discovered adrenal tumors. Most of these tumors are nonfunctional adrenocortical adenomas, but a few cases of subclinical cortisol production in "incidentalomas" have been reported. We investigated prospectively the prevalence of autonomous cortisol production in 68 patients (44 females and 24 males, aged 25-90 yr) with adrenal incidentalomas at our institution. As a screening procedure all patients with incidentalomas underwent an overnight dexamethasone suppression test (1 mg). Patients who failed to suppress serum cortisol below 140 nmol/L (5 micrograms/dL) underwent more comprehensive studies (prolonged dexamethasone suppression test, determination of the diurnal rhythm of cortisol secretion in saliva, and CRH stimulation test). Eight patients (12% of all patients with incidentalomas; 5 females and 3 males, aged 25-71 yr) were finally identified as having cortisol-producing tumors, and the findings in these patients were compared with those of overt Cushing's syndrome in 8 patients (8 females, aged 26-50 yr) suffering from cortisol-producing adrenal adenomas. The tumor size of patients with cortisol-producing incidentalomas ranged from 2-5 cm. No specific signs and symptoms of hypercortisolism were present, but arterial hypertension (seven of eight subjects), diffuse obesity (four of eight subjects), and noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM; two of eight subjects) were frequently observed. Baseline cortisol levels were in the normal to upper normal range, whereas baseline ACTH levels were suppressed in five of the eight patients. In none of the patients was serum cortisol suppressible by low dose or high dose dexamethasone. The ACTH and cortisol responses to CRH were normal in two, blunted in one, and suppressed in four patients. Unilateral adrenalectomy was performed in seven patients and resulted in temporary adrenal insufficiency in four of them. After surgery, improvement of arterial hypertension, a permanent weight loss in obese subjects, and a better metabolic control of NIDDM were noted in the majority of patients. The following conclusions were reached. Incidentally diagnosed adrenal tumors with pathological cortisol secretion in otherwise clinically asymptomatic patients are more frequently observed than previously assumed. Adrenocortical insufficiency is a major risk in these patients after adrenalectomy. After surgery, hypertension, obesity, and NIDDM may improve. Patients with asymptomatic adrenal incidentalomas, therefore, should be screened for cortisol production by means of an overnight dexamethasone suppression test.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1992 Sep
PMID:Preclinical Cushing's syndrome in adrenal "incidentalomas": comparison with adrenal Cushing's syndrome. 151 73


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