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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since the recently reported relationship between serum fructosamine and
IgA
concentrations appears to throw doubt on the clinical utility of fructosamine as a measure of hyperglycemic status if
IgA
concentration is not taken into account, we studied serum immunoglobulin concentrations in 169 diabetics and their relationship with various clinical and analytical parameters. Over 41% of the patients studied had abnormal serum
IgA
concentrations. Serum
IgA
concentration was negatively correlated with serum albumin, and among IDDM patients was positively correlated with age (so that the prevalence of abnormal
IgA
was 57.7% among IDDM patients aged over 30 years). Among
NIDDM
patients, abnormal
IgA
concentrations were especially prevalent among those being treated with oral hypoglycemics. Abnormal
IgA
was also more frequently found in both IDDM and
NIDDM
patients, who had been under treatment for 10 years or more. Abnormal IgG concentrations were found in 11.8% of the diabetics, and the mean IgM concentration found in the patients was 41.6% lower than in the normoglycemic group. We conclude that abnormal serum
IgA
concentrations are very common in diabetic patients and that further research should be carried out to verify whether the determination of serum immunoglobulins,
IgA
in particular, is of clinical use for monitoring diabetes or evaluating its secondary effects.
...
PMID:Abnormal serum immunoglobulin concentrations in patients with diabetes mellitus. 177 77
The
IgA
antigliadin antibodies AGA title was detected in 37 patients with IDDM, mean age 32.59 +/- 14.71, where mean duration of disease was 8.76 +/- 9.62 years, and 29 patients with
NIDDM
, mean age 55.31 +/- 14.71, where disease lasted 11.5 +/- 5.55 years. A group of 51 normal pts. was employed as control. In IDDM group 2 cases on 37 showed high AGA title (case n. 1 and n. 2) but just the case n. 1 where IDDM lasted 16 years, showed an histologic picture of coeliac disease (partial villous atrophy), while in the case n. 2 where IDDM was at the onset, the histologic picture was normal. The increase of AGA title in the IDDM at the onset is rarely associated with coeliac disease, but it seems to be an aspecific response. Viceversa an increased AGA title is in IDDM for greater than 1 years often associated with coeliac disease. In
NIDDM
no high AGA title was found. The prevalence of coeliac disease in our patients with IDDM was 1:37 and we suggest that diabetics be screened routinely for antigliadin antibody.
...
PMID:[Celiac disease in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and insulin-independent diabetes mellitus]. 271 Oct 15
An epidemic of renal disease is occurring among the Zuni Indians in western New Mexico. In 1985, 1.6% of Zunis had clinically recognized renal disease and 1% had renal insufficiency. The incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in 1984 and 1985 was 14 times the rate for US whites, and three times the rates of other Indians in ESRD network 6. One third of the cases of renal disease and ESRD is due to
type 2 diabetes
, but the etiology of disease in most of the remainder is unknown. Affected subjects range from early childhood to old age. Early signs are hematuria, mild to moderate proteinuria, normal BP, and low total hemolytic complement, normal or low C3 and C4 levels, in about 40% of the cases. The clinical course varies from benign to rapidly progressive renal failure. Biopsies usually reflect an immune-complex mediated mesangiopathic glomerulonephritis, with
IgA
, IgG, IgM, and C3 variably present in the mesangium. In some cases, there is a very strong familial pattern suggesting autosomal dominant inheritance or a marked communal exposure effect. This may be a genetic disease educed by the consanguinity in the ethnically homogeneous Zuni population. Mesangiopathic renal disease is common in some Oriental populations, and this phenomenon may reflect the American Indians' Oriental ancestry. This disease may also be due to toxic exposures related to jewelry-making, potting, Zuni water, Zuni salt, or herbal or other products used for medicinal or religious purposes. This epidemic is much morbidity and generating huge costs for ESRD treatment. Further study is needed to better understand its etiology.
...
PMID:Epidemic renal disease of unknown etiology in the Zuni Indians. 359 94
Sera of patients with type 1 and
type 2 diabetes
were examined for
IgA
- and insulin-containing immune complexes (
IgA
-ICs, ICs-insulin) using a solid-phase anti-C3 enzyme immunoassay. IgM-ICs and IgG-ICs were also investigated.
IgA
-ICs were detected in 6 of 26 type 1 diabetics, in 9 of 25 insulin-treated type 2 diabetics, and in 8 of 34 type 2 diabetics on oral hypoglycemic agents, but only in 2 sex- and age-matched controls. ICs-insulin was detected in 9 of 25 type 1 diabetics and in 1 of 19 insulin-treated type 2 diabetics, irrespective of the time of insulin treatment. ICs-insulin did not appear to be related to the presence of microangiopathy.
IgA
-ICs were found to be associated with the presence of microangiopathy, suggesting that they may play a role in the pathogenesis of the late diabetic complications.
...
PMID:IgA- and insulin-containing (C3-fixing) circulating immune complexes in diabetes mellitus. 669 99
Serum immunoglobulin (G, A, M) levels were performed on 66 patients with non-insulin-dependent (type II) diabetes mellitus (
NIDDM
). When compared with 30 age-matched normal controls and 32 hospitalized controls there was no significant difference between the mean IgG and IgM levels. The
IgA
levels were significantly higher (P less than 0.005) in the diabetic group when compared with both control groups. This is true regardless of age, sex, duration of disease, and type of treatment (insulin/diet or oral hypoglycemic agents and/or diet). Thirty-six percent of the diabetic patients'
IgA
levels exceeded the mean +/- 2 SD of the normal control group. There were no significant differences in immunoglobulin levels between insulin-treated and non-insulin-treated diabetic groups. Since diabetic patients may have a number of secondary diseases, attempts were made to correlate the most common of these (acute and/or chronic bacterial infections, hypertension, arteriosclerotic heart disease, and diabetic neuropathy) with elevated
IgA
levels. Only
IgA
levels of diabetic patients with infections versus diabetic patients without infections were significantly different (P less than 0.05). However,
IgA
levels of uninfected diabetic patients remained significantly higher than those of normal controls (P less than 0.005), hospitalized controls (P less than 0.01), and hospitalized controls with bacterial infections (P less than 0.005). Possible reasons for the isolated elevations of
IgA
are discussed.
...
PMID:Elevation of IgA levels in the non-insulin-dependent (type II) diabetic patient. 675 40
The histopathological characteristics of the kidney using light microscopy and immunofluorescence studies in samples obtained by renal percutaneous biopsy in 19 women and 7 men with
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) (mean of age: 55.07 +/- 9.04 yr and mean of "known" diabetes duration: 7.50 +/- 6.87 yr) were studied. The relationship with age, blood pressure, diabetic retinopathy and other complementary diagnostic methods such as serum creatinine (Cr), creatinine clearance (CrC), renal plasma flow (RPF), proteinuria and filtration fraction (FF) were also determined. Light microscopy studies detected 92.3% of patients with renal lesions of different degrees of severity. The presence and severity of glomerulopathy and arteriolopathy were related to diabetes duration (r: 0.764) and they were related to each other (rs: 0.773). In 2 patients, lesions were not observed and in 11 out of 14 patients with less than 5 yr of diabetes duration, mild lesions were detected. However, the histological changes became worse after that period. The glomerulopathy was also statistically correlated with Cr, CrC, RPF, proteinuria and FF. By immunofluorescence, fibrinogen,
IgA
and C3 were the most frequent and intense precipitates observed. They increased with diabetes duration and were located predominantly in the wall and the periphery of the glomerules and in renal tubules, suggesting that they originated by trapping. There were no precipitates in the mesenchyma, they were scarce in the interstice, Bowman's capsule and arterioles. Statistical correlation between diabetic histopathological renal changes and retinopathy was found. These results confirm that lesions in the kidney and retina in non-insulin dependent diabetic patients generally appear and evolve in a similar manner. Hypertension was diagnosed in 80.76% of patients, without statistical correlation between blood pressure and renal lesions. This suggests that at the onset, in non-insulin dependent diabetic patients hypertension and nephro-pathy are caused by different and independent pathogenic mechanisms. However, at an end stage, it seems that both situations can influence each other in a way that their evolution becomes more severe. Nephropathy in
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
displayed scarce clinical signs and poor laboratory evidence except when the renal lesions become too severe. The lack of correlation between renal lesions and patients' age and blood pressure suggests the participation of diabetes at the onset of kidney structural impairment.
...
PMID:[Histopathological and functional study of the kidney in non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus]. 771 26
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
Islet cell antibodies (ICAs) in Chinese (23 IDDM, 13
NIDDM
and 6 non-diabetic) were characterized for immunoglobulin isotypes and light chain specificity. All ICAs were IgG-type and none were IgM- or
IgA
-type (median titre: 20 JDF units; range 10-160). Light chain specificity showed that 25/36 (69.4%) of the diabetic patients had lambda and kappa chains. Half of the non-diabetic subjects had both lambda and kappa chains. The rest had only lambda chains. Isotyping for ICA-IgG subclass combination with IUIS/WHO reference monoclonal antibodies in the diabetic patients gave the following: IgG1 alone-9 (25%), IgG1+2+3-8 (22.2%), IgG1+2-11 (30.6%), IgG1+3-6 (16.7%), IgG2+3-2 (5.6%). No ICA-IgG4 was detected. The frequency of the subclasses would be: IgG1-94.4%, IgG2-58.3% and IgG3-44.4%. The distribution of ICA-IgG subclasses was not affected by diabetes type (IDDM or
NIDDM
) or duration of disease. Of the 6 non-diabetic subjects only one had a single ICA-IgG subclass (IgG1). Serum levels of IgG subclasses in a subgroup of the patients (n = 16) were not significantly different from normal individuals. Biochemical modification of pancreatic tissue prior to ICA testing showed that acetylneuraminic acid residues, lipid and protein components were associated with binding of ICAs. The co-existence of other autoantibodies was also tested in these 42 ICA-positive sera. Twelve individuals (1 non-diabetic) had thyroid autoantibodies. Antibodies to thyrotrophin receptor, gastric parietal cell and rheumatoid factor were not detected.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-restricted immunoglobulin-G subclass islet cell antibodies in Chinese. 813 59
The study was conducted to estimate the concentration of immunoglobulins in the saliva of diabetic and nondiabetic patients with periodontitis. The salivary immunoglobulins G, A and M (IgG,
IgA
, IgM) were determined in 50 patients with type II or
noninsulin dependent diabetes mellitus
(
NIDDM
) and 50 non diabetic patients with periodontitis. The values were compared with that of 50 age and sex matched controls. IgG,
IgA
were found to be significantly increased in diabetic patients with periodontitis, compared to nondiabetic patients and controls. Though an increase in IgM was found in diabetic patients it was not significant. The altered immune response observed may be due to the response to a greater antigenic challenge which in turn may be responsible for the increased incidence of periodontitis in diabetic patients. Further studies in this field may help to establish this association.
...
PMID:Immunoglobulins in the saliva of diabetic patients with periodontitis. 857 41
To assess the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori in diabetes mellitus, a serological test used to detect antibodies to H. Pylori in patients with diabetes mellitus. Within six months, 45 insulin-dependent, 98 non-insulin-dependent, and a control group of 159 outpatients were enrolled in this study. The age adjusted seroprevalence rate of Helicobacter pylori were determined using a commercial anti-Helicobacter pylori IgC and
IgA
ELISA (Bio-Rad). The prevalence rates increased with age in all age groups until 60-70 years. In diabetic patients, the frequency of Helicobacter pylori infection was higher than control subjects in nearly all age groups, reaching significance in three age categories of
NIDDM
patients and in one age category in IDDM patients. This higher seroprevalence could not be explained by differences in socioeconomic status or use of antibiotics.
...
PMID:High seroprevalence of Helicobacter pylori in diabetes mellitus patients. 944 Jun 39
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