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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neonatal polycythemia is a perinatal complication in infants of diabetic mothers. The cord CBC (complete blood counts), serum iron, transferrin and
ferritin
concentrations were studied in newborn infants of 9 GDM (gestational diabetes), 21
NIDDM
(noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus), and 8 IDDM (insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus) mothers. The RBC (red blood cell) count, Hb (hemoglobin) and Hct (hematocrit) of these infants were higher than control infants. There was no difference between the serum iron concentration of the infants of each group diabetic mothers and the infants in the control group, but the transferrin concentration was significantly higher and the
ferritin
was significantly lower in the infants of diabetic mothers than in those of control mothers. There was a significant negative correlation between transferrin and
ferritin
(r = -0.491 p less than 0.001). Erythropoiesis is considered to be enhanced in the fetuses of diabetic mothers, and the iron needed for erythropoiesis is reportedly transported from the mother to the fetus according to the demands of the fetus, but the iron storage was shown to be reduced in the fetuses of diabetic mothers.
...
PMID:Cord transferrin and ferritin values for erythropoiesis in newborn infants of diabetic mothers. 263 11
Coeliac disease occurs more commonly in children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) than in the general population, but the prevalence of coeliac disease in adults with diabetes is unknown. We therefore screened an adult hospital-based diabetic population using IgA antigliadin antibody (IgA-AGA) to identify those patients requiring intestinal biopsy. In 1 year, 1789 patients (43% IDDM, 57%
NIDDM
) were screened, and 73 had raised IgA-AGA. Of these patients, 49 agreed to duodenal biopsy and 13 (10 IDDM) had coeliac disease. Selective IgA deficiency was found in eight patients, one of whom had coeliac disease. Of these 14 patients with newly diagnosed coeliac disease, four had microcytic anaemia, nine a low serum
ferritin
, and four a low albumin-corrected calcium. Eight patients had symptoms which improved on gluten withdrawal. Dietary compliance was maintained in 6/8 symptomatic patients, but only in 1/6 without symptoms. Included in the 1789 patients were four (all IDDM) with known coeliac disease. The overall prevalence of coeliac disease in adult patients with IDDM was 1:50 compared with 1:340 in
NIDDM
. Coeliac disease is common in adults with IDDM and may cause malabsorption and ill health. It should be suspected in any IDDM patient with gastrointestinal symptoms or unexplained anaemia.
...
PMID:The prevalence of coeliac disease in adult diabetes mellitus. 798 59
Deferoxamine has been proposed as a potentially important therapy for individuals with
NIDDM
and mild elevations in serum
ferritin
. Previously, iron chelation therapy with intravenous deferoxamine over a 5-13-wk period has been reported to normalize serum
ferritin
and markedly improve glycemic control. To confirm these results and to study potential beneficial effects of deferoxamine on insulin secretion, 9 individuals with
NIDDM
and elevated serum
ferritin
levels were treated twice weekly with deferoxamine infusion, following a previously described protocol. Although 8 of 9 subjects achieved normal or near-normal serum
ferritin
values after deferoxamine therapy, we found little evidence that it produced beneficial effects on glycemic control. Fasting glucose levels pre- and post-deferoxamine therapy were unchanged (11.6 +/- 1.2 and 11.3 +/- 1.5 mM, respectively, P = 0.80). GHb levels declined slightly after deferoxamine therapy (9.3 +/- 0.7 vs. 8.8 +/- 0.7%, P < 0.05); however, this effect was small and was not associated with elimination of or even substantial reduction in insulin or oral hypoglycemic therapy. Deferoxamine therapy did not significantly alter fasting insulin or C-peptide levels, nor stimulated insulin or C-peptide responses to intravenous arginine or glucose. During follow-up studies 1.5-8 mo after deferoxamine therapy, serum
ferritin
levels again were elevated in 5 of 8 subjects who showed an initial response. Thus, although deferoxamine therapy reduced serum
ferritin
levels in our subjects, we were unable to confirm a previous report that this effect was associated with any meaningful improvement in glycemic control or insulin secretion.
...
PMID:No effect of deferoxamine therapy on glucose homeostasis and insulin secretion in individuals with NIDDM and elevated serum ferritin. 845 4
In the search for diabetes genes, the combined approaches of positional cloning with random markers and subsequent evaluation of candidate genes mapping to areas of interest will be increasingly used. For islet candidate genes of unknown function, expressed trinucleotide (triplet) repeats represent a unique subset. It is unlikely that abnormal expansion of expressed islet triplet repeats would be a major cause of diabetes, yet the triplet repeats are frequently polymorphic and can thus be used to map the genes in the human genome. In this study, a human islet cDNA library was screened with (CGG)7 and (CAG)7, and 23 triplet repeats were isolated. Sequencing revealed four known and six novel islet genes containing 4-15 triplet repeats. The four known cDNAs included
ferritin
, the major iron-binding protein in cells; HSGSA2R, a full-length clone of the alpha-subunit of the G-regulatory protein; HUMSATB1A, a DNA-binding protein expressed predominantly in thymus; and HUMPPA-PRO, a ribosomal protein. The triplet repeats in
ferritin
and HUMPPAPRO were found to be monomorphic. Characterization of the six unique novel expressed islet triplet cDNAs revealed that they were 0.6-1.5 kb in size, contained 4-15 triplet repeats, and were expressed in islets and all other tissues examined. Four of the novel clones, CGG-isl 10, CGG-isl 11, CAG-isl 6, and CAG-isl 7, were mapped to human chromosomes 19, 16, 12, and 3, respectively, via somatic cell hybrids. One islet cDNA, CAG-isl 7, contained a repeat that was highly polymorphic, with 14 alleles (4-18 triplets) in African-Americans (heterozygosity = 0.86) and 6 alleles (heterozygosity = 0.77) in whites. Northern analysis indicated that the mRNA was abundant in pancreatic islets. A putative full-length clone contained an open reading frame encoding 213 amino acids with a variable number of alanines (4-18) within the COOH-terminal. The gene was uniquely mapped with odds > 1,000:1 on chromosome 3p in Centre d'Etude du Polymorphisme Humain pedigrees. There were no differences in CAG-isl 7 allele frequencies between African-American patients with
NIDDM
(n = 108) and control subjects (n = 116), nor was expansion above 18 repeats noted. Linkage analysis in 14 nonglucokinase maturity-onset diabetes of the young pedigrees showed a cumulative logarithm of odds score of -33.19 at theta = 0.00. Abnormal expansion was not observed in 20 IDDM patients with one
NIDDM
parent. While these data suggest no major role for CAG-isl 7 in diabetes, at least four of the six novel islet triplet genes are coexpressed in pancreatic islets and neural tissue, and these genes can now be considered as candidates for diabetes and/or neuropsychiatric diseases.
...
PMID:Identification of trinucleotide repeat-containing genes in human pancreatic islets. 854 59
Genetic hemochromatosis (GH) is associated with two mutations of the HFE gene (Cys282Tyr and His63Asp). Heterozygosity for GH is associated with a mild increase in iron metabolism parameters, and increased iron stores are associated with abnormal glucose tolerance and decreased insulin sensitivity in the general population. We have previously shown that the frequency of the two HFE mutations is not increased in patients with
type 2 diabetes
. However, to assess whether the presence of HFE mutations modulates the clinical presentation of
type 2 diabetes
, we studied the clinical characteristics and iron metabolism indexes according to the presence of the two mutations in 266 patients with
type 2 diabetes
. The Cys282Tyr mutation and the His63Asp mutation were present in 9. 8% and 26% of the patients, respectively. Serum iron, transferrin saturation and
ferritin
concentrations were significantly increased in patients expressing either HFE mutations, compared to those without any mutation. There was no difference in the clinical characteristics in the two groups except that obesity was significantly less frequent in the patients with at least one mutation than in those without any mutation (27.6% vs 42.8%, p=0.02). This finding suggests that, in the absence of obesity, HFE mutations, through the insulin resistance associated with the increase in iron stores, may contribute to the onset of
type 2 diabetes
.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of type 2 diabetes in patients with mutations of HFE. 1070 6
In order to study the relationship between the serum
ferritin
level and the components of the insulin resistance syndrome in type 2 diabetic patients, we evaluated fifty type 2 diabetic patients who were selected according to NDDG/WHO criteria from those patients attending Korea University Hospital from 1997 to 1998. Twenty-five healthy non-diabetic subjects of comparable age and sex distribution acted as a control group. The results showed that the value of log
ferritin
was higher in the
type 2 diabetes
patients than the control subjects, but not at a statistically significant level (p = 0.09). Log
ferritin
was correlated with fasting blood sugar level (r = 0.235, p = 0.048) and body mass index (BMI) (r = 0.285, p = 0.05). In the type 2 diabetic patients, log
ferritin
was correlated with fasting C-peptide (r = 0.478, p = 0.009). In the control subjects, log
ferritin
was correlated only with BMI (r = 0.477, p = 0.012). In a stepwise multiple regression analysis, the diabetic group showed a significant correlation between fasting C-peptide and log
ferritin
(p = 0.001). In the control group, the fasting sugar level was significantly correlated with log
ferritin
(p = 0.034). These results suggest that serum
ferritin
can be employed as a marker of not only glucose homeostasis but also insulin resistance both in type 2 diabetic and control subjects.
...
PMID:Serum ferritin in healthy subjects and type 2 diabetic patients. 1095 94
Iron-related insulin-resistance is improved by iron depletion or treatment with iron chelators. The aim of this study was to evaluate insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion after blood letting in patients who had high-
ferritin
type 2 diabetes
and were randomized to blood letting (three phlebotomies [500 ml of blood] at 2-week intervals, group 1) or to observation (group 2). Insulin secretion and sensitivity were tested at baseline and 4 and 12 months thereafter. The two groups were matched for age, BMI, pharmacologic treatment, and chronic diabetic complications. All patients were negative for C282Y mutation of hereditary hemochromatosis. Baseline glycated hemoglobin (6.27 +/- 0.9% vs. 6.39 +/- 1.2%), insulin sensitivity (2.75 +/- 1.8 vs. 3.2 +/- 2.1 mg.dl(-1).min(-1)), and area under the curve for C-peptide (AUC(C-peptide); 38.7 +/- 11.6 vs. 37.6 +/- 14.1 ng.ml(-1).min(-1)) were not significantly different between the two groups of patients. Body weight, blood pressure, blood hematocrit levels, and drug treatment remained essentially unchanged during the study period. As expected, serum
ferritin
, transferrin saturation index, and blood hemoglobin decreased significantly at 4 months only in patients who received blood letting. In parallel to this changes, blood HbA(1c) decreased significantly only in group 1 subjects (mean differences, -0.61; 95% CI, -0.17 to -1.048; P = 0.01). AUC(C-peptide) decreased by -10.2 +/- 6.3% after blood letting. In contrast, a 10.4 +/- 6.4% increase in AUC(C-peptide) was noted in group 2 subjects at 4 months (P = 0.032). At 12 months, AUC(C-peptide) returned to values not significantly different from baseline in the two groups of subjects. At 4 months, the change in insulin sensitivity from baseline was significantly different between the two groups (80.6 +/- 43.2% vs. -8.6 +/- 9.9% in groups 1 and 2, respectively, P = 0.049). At 12 months, the differences between the two groups were even more marked (55.5 +/- 24.8% vs. -26.8 +/- 9.9%; P = 0.005). When the analysis was restricted to those subjects who completed the follow-up until 12 months, results did not show differences compared with the changes observed at 4 months, except for insulin sensitivity. A statistically significant increase in insulin sensitivity was observed in the blood-letting group (from 2.30 +/- 1.81 to 3.08 +/- 2.55 mg.dl(-1).min(-1) at 4 months, to 3.16 +/- 1.85 mg.dl(-1).min(-1) at 12 months; P = 0,045) in contrast with group 2 subjects (from 3.24 +/- 1.9 to 3.26 +/- 2.05 mg.dl(-1).min(-1) at 4 months, to 2.31 +/- 1.35 mg.dl(-1).min(-1) at 12 months). In summary, blood letting led simultaneously to decreased blood HbA(1c) levels and to changes in insulin secretion and insulin resistance that were significantly different from those observed in a matched observational group of subjects with high-
ferritin
type 2 diabetes
. The mechanisms for improvement in peripheral insulin sensitivity after blood letting should be investigated further.
...
PMID:Blood letting in high-ferritin type 2 diabetes: effects on insulin sensitivity and beta-cell function. 1191 18
Aims of the study were: (i) to determine the prevalence of mutations C282Y and H63D in the HFE gene causing hereditary hemochromatosis in patients with
type 2 diabetes
mellitus and non-diabetics, (ii) to investigate the relationship among HFE genotypes, serum
ferritin
and glucose intolerance and (iii) to assess possible association of HFE mutations with the susceptibility to develop late diabetic complications in the Czech population. Two approaches were employed - the case-control study comprising diabetics and non-diabetic controls (n = 326) and the cross-sectional study comprising subjects with a previously unknown defect of glucose tolerance (n = 113, oral glucose tolerance test performed in each subject). Allele frequencies of C282Y and H63D did not differ between diabetic and control groups nor among subjects with normal glucose tolerance (NGT), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and diabetes. Ferritin levels significantly differed between diabetic and non-diabetic women (P<1.10 (-3)) and among subjects with NGT, IGT and diabetes (P<0.05). Differences in
ferritin
levels related to particular genotypes of C282Y and H63D were not detected. Prevalence of diabetes in the first and second quartiles of
ferritin
distribution differed highly significantly from the prevalence in the third and fourth quartiles in women (P = 0.000037), OR = 3.50 (95% CI, 1.89-6.48). The extent of diabetic late complications did not correlate with
ferritin
plasma levels.
...
PMID:Relations among serum ferritin, C282Y and H63D mutations in the HFE gene and type 2 diabetes mellitus in the Czech population. 1214 86
Imbalances between mineral intakes and recommended amounts have been observed in different groups of elderly subjects. Nevertheless, assessment of the status of magnesium and trace elements in the elderly is difficult, even for iron because infection and inflammation increases
ferritin
. Mineral bioavailability may change due to ageing. Therefore, formulation of mineral recommendations is complex and individual recommendations are sometimes necessary. A number of surveys show magnesium, zinc, selenium and chromium intakes by old persons to be lower than the corresponding reference nutrient intakes. Contrarily, intakes of iron are generally adequate or higher than recommended, and it has been suggested that increased storage of iron in the elderly may be related with the development of age-related diseases through the increase in oxidative stress. Low iron status together with iron excess may be common in an elderly population. The same applies for zinc. Magnesium and selenium deficiencies among the elderly are also well documented, especially among the institutionalised and people with pathologies. Chromium deficiency is associated with
type II diabetes mellitus
. Recommended iron intake is lower for elderly women compared to young, because menstruation ceases after menopause, but in old men, it is similar to that of young men. Dietary Reference Values for the rest of the elements are similar to those of adults, although several suggestions have been made about the quantities. This review examines various aspects of the changes in mineral bioavailability due to ageing, of data published on mineral intakes and status, and finally the dietary recommendations for this vulnerable population group.
...
PMID:Magnesium and trace elements in the elderly: intake, status and recommendations. 1216 71
Serum
ferritin
level is related to body iron stores and is influenced by several diseases. We aimed to evaluate the association between serum
ferritin
concentration and the complications and nature of diabetes mellitus (DM). We examined association of
ferritin
concentration, fasting and post-prandial glucose levels and glycated hemoglobin in 329 patients with
type 2 diabetes
mellitus and 269 healthy controls. In the present study, 41 of 150 poorly controlled diabetic patients and 31 of 119 cases had hyperferritinemia. We confirmed that serum
ferritin
was increased in diabetic patients as long as glycemic control is not achieved. There was also a correlation between
ferritin
level and diabetic retinopathy. In conclusion, this study showed an independent positive association between serum
ferritin
concentration and markers of glucose homeostasis.
...
PMID:Serum ferritin levels in poorly- and well-controlled diabetes mellitus. 1453 31
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