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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)
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PMID:[What pathophysiologic significance does increased plasma levels of human atrial natriuretic peptide have in patients with diabetes mellitus?]. 297 Jan 66

One hundred and twenty-nine (97 M, 32 F) previously untreated non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients were studied. Meal and glucose (75 g) tolerance tests were performed on two separate days with glucose, C-peptide and insulin levels estimated during each with the inclusion of growth hormone during the meal test. In addition glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1) and plasma creatinine levels were determined. Clinical evaluation included detailed ophthalmological examination following mydriasis. Differences between retinopaths (n = 21) and non-retinopaths (n = 108) were FPG 13.7 vs 11.6 (mmol/l) (p less than 0.01); HbA1: 12.9 vs 11.3 (%) (p less than 0.01); BMI: 25.2 vs 29.4 (kg/m2) (p less than 0.001); age 56.8 vs 52.4 (yr) (ns); creatinine: 91.2 vs 88.4 (mumol/l) (ns); systolic blood pressure: 152.4 vs 143.9 mmHg (ns); diastolic blood pressure 87.9 vs 87.7 mmHg (ns); fasting growth hormone: 4.6 +/- 0.9 vs 2.4 +/- 0.3 (mU/1) (p less than 0.01). Multivariate logistic analysis however revealed that systolic blood pressure in conjunction with the insulin response gave the most significant correlation with retinopathy. No significant correlation was observed with age, sex, diastolic blood pressure, creatinine, family history or smoking. The effect of disease duration could not be evaluated. B-cell function appears central to microvascular complications in non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Retinopathy in newly presenting non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetic patients. 307 31

Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is strikingly common in British Indians, but their susceptibility to diabetic complications is unknown. The ratio of albumin to creatinine concentrations was measured in samples of the first urine voided in the morning in 154 Indian and 82 Europid patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes and in a control group of 129 non-diabetic Indians. The ratio was significantly higher in the Indian patients than in the Europid patients and the Indian controls. There were no significant correlations between the logarithm of the albumin: creatinine ratio and age, known duration of diabetes, haemoglobin A1 concentration, or body mass index within either diabetic group. Hypertension and raised albumin:creatinine ratio were significantly associated, and significant correlations were seen between the logarithm of the albumin:creatinine ratio and systolic and diastolic blood pressures in the Indian but not the Europid diabetics. Because of the high prevalence of diabetes at a relatively early age in Indians, nephropathy may emerge as an important clinical problem.
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PMID:Microalbuminuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetes: its prevalence in Indian compared with Europid patients. 312 60

Intact endothelial cell function has been suggested to be important for insulin action. An association between retinopathy and insulin resistance has been found in type 2 diabetes. To evaluate, whether insulin resistance is related to retinopathy in insulin dependent diabetes, we examined 36 type 1 diabetic patients with various degrees of retinopathy: 7 patients had proliferative, 15 had background and 14 patients had no retinopathy. The three groups were matched for age, sex, body weight and insulin dose. Compared with patients with no retinopathy, those with proliferative retinopathy had a longer (P less than 0.05) duration of diabetes (13 +/- 3 vs 22 +/- 3 years for no vs proliferative retinopathy), and higher (P less than 0.05) serum creatinine (74 +/- 4 vs 97 +/- 8 mumol/l), triglyceride (0.69 +/- 0.04 vs 1.02 +/- 0.17 mmol/l) and diastolic blood pressure (77 +/- 3 vs 90 +/- 10 mmHg) levels. The rate of insulin-mediated glucose metabolism (1 mU euglycaemic insulin clamp) was virtually identical in each diabetic group (4.80 +/- 0.42, 4.90 +/- 0.36 and 4.98 +/- 0.74 mg/kg/min) and 40% below that in 8 matched normal subjects (7.53 +/- 0.53 mg/kg/min, P less than 0.001). In conclusion, proliferative retinopathy is related to long duration of diabetes, incipient nephropathy and hypertension. Insulin resistance characterizes the majority of patients with type 1 diabetes but is unrelated to retinopathy.
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PMID:No association between retinopathy and insulin resistance in type 1 diabetes. 351 24

A correlation between increased platelet adhesiveness and aggregation and the development of angiopathy in diabetes mellitus can be made. Thromboxane produced by platelets represents a potent platelet aggregation factor. We studied the platelet TXB2 production during blood coagulation in carefully selected patients with type II diabetes mellitus in good metabolic control and the results were correlated with the presence or absence of microangiopathy, fasting blood glucose levels, type of therapy, age, duration of diabetes and the most important hematochemical parameters. No statistically significant differences were found between serum TXB2 concentrations in diabetic patients and control subjects, in diabetics with or without microangiopathy and in diabetics on insulin therapy or on oral hypoglycemic agents. We did not observe any correlation between TXB2 production and age, duration of diabetes, sex, basal blood glucose levels, total and HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, blood creatinine and blood electrolytes. The thromboxane production may be a not important factor for determining the increased platelet aggregation which is at the origin of the angiopathy in diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Thromboxane production in diabetes mellitus. 357 51

Xanthurenic acid (XA), kynurenic acid (KA) and creatinine in fasting urine were determined by reversed phase high pressure liquid chromatography in order to investigate the distortion of tryptophan metabolites in diabetes mellitus. The results of ten patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus and ten normal healthy subjects were compared. No tryptophan load test was performed in this study, because tryptophan loading produces further latent shortage of active vitamin B6 which results in exacerbation of the disease. The ratios of XA to KA and to creatinine were 0.35 +/- 0.099 (mean +/- S.D.) and 0.99 +/- 0.321 in the diabetic patients. The corresponding figures in the normal subjects were 0.17 +/- 0.064 and 0.55 +/- 0.22. Both ratios were significantly higher in the diabetic patients than in normal subjects (p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01, respectively). This means that XA was excessively excreted in diabetic patients resulting in distortion of tryptophan metabolism. Our findings indicated that the ratios are useful to monitor excess XA excretion and also for detection of diabetes.
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PMID:Studies on the urinary excretion of xanthurenic acid in diabetics. 652 81

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)
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PMID:[Diabetic nephropathy: significance of microalbuminuria and proteinuria in Type I and Type II diabetes mellitus]. 749 50

Zinc status was assessed in patients with type II diabetes mellitus and congestive heart failure (CHF). Three groups of patients were enrolled into the study: Group 1: 15 patients with type II diabetes mellitus and CHF; Group 2: 20 patients with isolated type II diabetes mellitus; and Group 3: nine patients with isolated CHF. Twenty-four-hour urine was measured for creatinine, protein, and zinc, and blood was drawn for creatinine, proteins, liver enzymes, hemoglobin A1c, and zinc. Insulin treatment and hemoglobin A1c were comparable in the diabetic patients of groups 1 and 2, but group 1 was also treated with captopril and diuretics like the CHF patients of group 3. Plasma zinc levels were statistically similar in all three groups, but urinary zinc excretion (mumol/24 h) and urinary zinc: creatinine (mumol/mmol) ratio were significantly higher in the type II diabetics and CHF group (27.2 +/- 1.5; 1.69 +/- 0.6, respectively) compared to the diabetic patients alone (19.4 +/- 0.76; 0.97 +/- 0.3, respectively) and the CHF patients (9.7 +/- 0.3; 0.62 +/- 0.3, respectively). and the CHF patients (9.7 +/- 0.3; 0.62 +/- 0.3, respectively). Patients with type II diabetes mellitus and CHF were treated with higher doses of captopril than the CHF patients (56.25 +/- 24 mg vs 18.8 +/- 11 mg P < 0.05). Thus, patients with type II diabetes mellitus and CHF excrete larger amounts of zinc, which may eventually lead to zinc deficiency.
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PMID:Type II diabetes mellitus, congestive heart failure, and zinc metabolism. 750 74

The detection of overt albuminuria (> 300 mg/g creatinine) in the absence of azotemia was used to diagnose early nephropathy in 34 Pima Indians with NIDDM of 16 +/- 1 years duration. Differential solute clearances were performed serially to define the course of the glomerular injury over 48 months. At baseline, the GFR (107 +/- 5 ml/min), filtration fraction and sieving coefficients of relatively permeant dextrans (< 52 A) were all depressed below corresponding values in 20 normoalbuminuric Pima Indians with a similar duration of NIDDM. Over the ensuing 48 months the GFR (-34%) and filtration fraction (-13%) in the nephropathic patients declined further. The sieving coefficients of large, nearly impermeant dextrans (> 56 A radius) increased selectively and fractional clearances of albumin and IgG increased correspondingly by > 10-fold. Analysis of the findings with pore theory revealed: (1) a progressive decline in pore density and the ultrafiltration coefficient (Kf); and (2) broadening of glomerular pore-size distribution that resulted in greater prominence of large pores (> 70 A radius). We conclude that increasing loss of intrinsic ultrafiltration capacity is the predominant cause of the early and progressive decline in GFR that follows the development of nephropathy in NIDDM. We speculate that progressive impairment of barrier size-selectivity contributes to but does not fully account for the increasingly heavy proteinuria that is observed early in the course of this disorder.
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PMID:Progression of overt nephropathy in non-insulin-dependent diabetes. 754 61

The relative influence of diabetes mellitus-related and physiological factors on vibration perception thresholds was assessed in 353 patients in a hospital-based setting (173 insulin-dependent and 180 non-insulin dependent patients, aged 51.1 +/- 15.9 years) and 80 healthy controls (aged 43.3 +/- 15.2 years) employing a Biothesiometer. Vibration perception thresholds were bilaterally measured at the thumbs, medial malleoli and halluces. Sixty (17.0%) older patients had off-scale thresholds (> 50 V). As no systematic side differences were found, values of contralateral sites were averaged. Considering the effects of age, height, gender and skin temperature in controls, age accounted for 46.7 and 52.2% threshold variance at the ankles and halluces, respectively, while height explained 5.1 and 5.1%, respectively. At the thumbs, only age was of relevance. Age relationships with vibration thresholds in health did not differ from published reports at any site. In the patient group, influences of age, height, gender, skin temperature, years from diagnosis, HbAlc, serum creatinine, drop in systolic blood pressure on standing, and ankle/arm blood pressure indices were assessed for each type of diabetes. For both types, age and height again had relevant effects at the lower extremities as did age and gender at the thumbs. Skin temperature was only marginally significant at the halluces of NIDDM patients. Of the disease-related factors, HbAlc had the strongest effect: for both IDDM and NIDDM higher levels were associated with lower vibration sensitivity. Increasing disease duration led to significantly higher thresholds in IDDM patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Determinants of vibration perception thresholds in IDDM and NIDDM patients. 755 4


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