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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
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Physical training has been generally recommended for patients with diabetes mellitus as a basic therapeutic tool. In the present study the metabolic and endocrinological effects during the training program were examined in patients with non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Moreover the significance of continuous blood lactate monitoring and that of the determination of plasma atrial natriuretic polypeptide (ANP) during exercise loading in diabetics was also studied. (1) The glucose metabolic clearance rate (MCR) during euglycemic insulin clamp was higher in athletes than in patients with NIDDM and control subjects. (2) MCR increased significantly in the training group after the eight weeks program and a significant relationship between the changes of MCR and those of HbAIc observed. Moreover a decrease in the triglyceride level and increase in the HDL cholesterol level in plasma were significantly related with the improvement of MCR. (3) A continuous blood lactate monitoring system was newly developed. This system was simple and showed good reproducibility. The anaerobic threshold (AT) determined using this system corresponded to that obtained by respiratory gas analysis. It was useful for the determination of the exercise intensity without overloading in patients with diabetes mellitus. (4) The increase of plasma ANP during exercise loading was higher in diabetics than healthy controls, and a significant relationship was found between the increment of ANP during exercise and the diastolic function judged from the echocardiogram in diabetics. In conclusion clinical laboratory examinations and medical checkups are important in the practice of physical exercise therapy in patients with diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:[Physical exercise therapy in diabetes mellitus--the role of clinical laboratory examinations]. 130 19

In this article we have focused on the evolving pattern of nutritional management of the person with diabetes. Before the advent of insulin in 1922, it was sufficient to identify a meal plan that would keep people alive until they could be rescued from mortality due to diabetic ketoacidosis (the major killer of the era) by pharmacologic means. Now, the life expectancy of people with diabetes is close to that of the general population and focus has turned to combating the new threats of macrovascular disease and kidney failure. Over recent years the susceptibility of NIDDM patients to macrovascular events has been established and the twofold increase in risk of a heart attack in diabetic men is outshadowed by the four- to fivefold risk in diabetic women and the 13- to 17-fold greater risk in diabetics under the age of 30 years compared with their nondiabetic counterparts. The mechanism behind the susceptibility to macrovascular disease has generated a veritable plethora of investigations focusing on the atherogenic profile of diabetic dyslipidemia. Hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, and overtreatment of the diabetic with insulin have been claimed as contributors to the development of premature atherosclerosis. The hallmark of the diabetic dyslipidemia is the tendency to elevated VLDL triglyceride levels and the closely linked reduction in HDL cholesterol. Although there is some controversy on the relationship between triglyceride levels and the incidence of CAD, there is no doubt that HDL is an independent risk factor. It can now be safely said that elevated triglycerides are a risk factor in women and that in men elevated triglycerides constitute a risk factor if accompanied by a reduced HDL level. For these reasons, any approach to nutritional management of the diabetic must attempt not only to normalize glycemia but to make every effort to reduce the atherogenic profile. In the accompanying algorithm (Fig. 4), we consider the risk factors conducive to a reduction in life expectancy and offer a meal plan that is appropriate for the individual with diabetes. For the 80% of NIDDM patients who are obese, a diet with a reduction of 500 to 1000 kcal is in order and this may be achieved by a periodic VLCD. We examined carefully the controversy related to yo-yo dieting and support the notion that its effects in humans are not all that harmful. Ingestion of simple sugars in the high carbohydrate diet has negative effects both on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The good, the bad, and the ugly in diabetic diets. 131 32

Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] has been added to the list of independent risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD), whose incidence is greater in obese subjects. There are few data available on the serum Lp(a) concentrations in obese individuals with or without insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). We selected 31 obese men with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) tests, 15 obese diabetic men, 14 non obese diabetic men and 17 healthy men as controls. We measured serum total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, glucose, insulin and Lp(a). The mean Lp(a) levels in NGT obese men were 70.00 +/- 13.40 mg/l, which were similar to those found in normal controls (75.98 +/- 24.70 mg/l); significantly higher mean Lp(a) levels were found in obese diabetic men (168.84 +/- 56.43 mg/l) and in non obese diabetic men (240.85 +/- 63.35 mg/l). No significant correlation between Lp(a) levels and age, body mass index (BMI), total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, insulin, was found; only a significant positive correlation between Lp(a) levels and glucose could be revealed (P < 0.05). Since higher levels of Lp(a) were found in NIDDM subjects with or without obesity, we conclude that hyperglycemia may influence the levels of serum Lp(a) facilitating its glycosylation in the liver with the consequence of a decline in its catabolic rate.
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PMID:Serum lipoprotein Lp(a) in obesity. 134 6

A double-blind, placebo-controlled study was carried out over 120 days to assess the metabolic tolerance and patient acceptability of nicardipine in 20 patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus and slight hypertension. Following a 21-day washout period during which all patients received placebo, 13 men and 7 women (mean age 45 years, systolic blood pressure 150-165 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure 85-100 mm Hg) were randomly assigned to treatment with oral nicardipine 60-90 mg/day (n = 9) or placebo (n = 11). No significant differences were observed between the nicardipine- and placebo-treated groups in terms of fasting and postprandial blood glucose concentrations, fasting plasma insulin levels, or glycosylated hemoglobin A1c after 60 and 120 days' treatment. There was also no change in the plasma levels of total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, and apolipoproteins. Side effects were minor and did not differ significantly between groups. All patients who had received nicardipine for 120 days wished to pursue treatment. Nicardipine, which was well tolerated, appears to be an interesting alternative for the treatment of mild essential hypertension in Type 2 diabetic patients, although further studies are required to establish its effects on renal function in this population.
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PMID:The influence of nicardipine in type 2 diabetic patients with slight hypertension. 136 5

The efficiency of clearance of plasma triacylglycerols (TAG) after fatty meals in non-diabetic Caucasian subjects is believed to determine the plasma level of high-density-lipoproteins-cholesterol (HDL-C). It is unknown if this observation holds in diabetic subjects and in other racial groups. In assessing the factors that determine TAG responses to acute fat loading in a tropical African population with a low prevalence of atherosclerotic disease, twenty (nine obese) non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients with optimal glycaemic control and twelve (six obese) age-matched non-diabetic subjects were given meals containing 50 g fat (in butter) and 75 g carbohydrate (in white bread) over 15 min in the morning after a 12 h overnight fast. The fasting plasma levels of glucose, TAG, total cholesterol (total-C), HDL-C, low-density-lipoprotein-cholesterol, insulin and glycosylated haemoglobin (HBAlc) were estimated; glucose and TAG levels were also measured postprandially for 8 h at 2 h intervals. Postprandial lipaemia was consistently higher in the diabetic patients (about 50-100% more than values obtained in the non-diabetic subjects, even when corrected for differences in body mass) and correlated positively with age and postprandial glycaemia. This defect in TAG clearance was even worse (by about 50%) when glucose tolerance became further impaired after ten of the diabetic patients stopped oral hypoglycaemic treatment for 1 week and the fat-tolerance test was repeated. In the obese non-diabetic subjects, but not those of normal weight, there were significant negative relationships between the postprandial lipaemia and fasting plasma levels of HDL-C and HDL-C: total-C ratio, as reported in Caucasians. It is concluded that age and the ambient glucose concentration appear to be the important determinants of the efficiency of TAG clearance in diabetic subjects. This accords with clinical observations of increased atherogenic liability with increasing age and poorer glycaemic control. The determinants in non-diabetic subjects were less defined, indicating that postprandial lipaemia might be influenced by various factors (obesity as shown here) in different subsets of individuals.
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PMID:Some determinants of postprandial lipaemia in Nigerian diabetic and non-diabetic subjects. 139 Jun

Previous studies indicate that diets rich in digestible carbohydrates improve glucose tolerance in nondiabetic individuals, but may worsen glycemic control in NIDDM patients with moderately severe hyperglycemia. The effects of such high-carbohydrate diets on glucose metabolism in patients with mild NIDDM have not been studied adequately. This study compares responses to an isocaloric high-carbohydrate diet (60% of total energy from carbohydrates) and a low-carbohydrate diet (35% of total energy from carbohydrates) in 8 men with mild NIDDM. Both diets were low in saturated fatty acids, whereas the low-carbohydrate diet was rich in monounsaturated fatty acids. The two diets were matched for dietary fiber content (25 g/day). All patients were randomly assigned to receive first one and then the other diet, each for a period of 21 days, in a metabolic ward. Compared with the low-carbohydrate diet, the high-carbohydrate diet caused a 27.5% increase in plasma triglycerides and a similar increase in VLDL-cholesterol levels; it also reduced levels of HDL cholesterol by 11%. Plasma glucose and insulin responses to identical standard breakfast meals were studied on days 4 and 21 of each period, and these did not differ significantly between the two diets. At the end of each period, a euglycemic hyperinsulinemic glucose clamp study with simultaneous infusion of [3-3H]glucose revealed no significant changes in hepatic insulin sensitivity; and peripheral insulin-mediated glucose disposal remained unchanged (14.7 +/- 1.4 vs. 16.5 +/- 2.3 microM.kg-1.min-1 on the high-carbohydrate and low-carbohydrate diets, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparison of effects of high and low carbohydrate diets on plasma lipoproteins and insulin sensitivity in patients with mild NIDDM. 139 1

The authors investigated the incidence of different disorders of the lipid metabolism and their age dependence in a group of 67 patients with type 2 diabetes hospitalized at the First Medical Clinic in Kosice. Some disorder of the lipid metabolism was recorded in 67% of the patients. The most frequently encountered disorder was hypertriglyceridaemia (21%). Hypercholesterolaemia was recorded in 16%, combined hyperlipidaemia in 18% and hypoalphalipoproteinaemia in 12% of the patients. Patients with diabetic nephropathy had significantly elevated mean triglyceride levels and reduced HDL-cholesterol levels, as compared with patients without nephropathy. In diabetic women a significantly higher incidence of combined hyperlipidaemias was recorded, as compared with men and the mean total cholesterol and triglyceride levels were also significantly higher in women with type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:[Disorders of lipid metabolism in type 2 diabetics]. 145 58

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.
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PMID:[Insulin resistance and arterial hypertension. Hyperinsulinism as a basic etiopathogenic factor in essential arterial hypertension and associated phenomena]. 148 85

The postprandial (PP) elevations in triglyceride rich lipoproteins (TRL) are potentially atherogenic. We compared PP lipemia in non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) with hypoalphalipoproteinemia (HA) and patients with primary HA. Eight males in each group, mean age +/- SD 54 +/- 10 years, were studied for 12 hours after the ingestion of a fat load (65 g of fat/square meter of body surface). Plasma glucose, triglycerides (TG) and cholesterol (C) in plasma and in the different lipoprotein fractions were measured. The PP triglyceridemia was significantly greater in NIDDM patients with HA and correlated with the fasting TG concentrations. The curve pattern of the lipemia (% delta) was otherwise similar in the patients with secondary or primary HA; only the triglyceridemia persisted for a longer period of time in the latter but was otherwise similar to that of the NIDDM patients with lower basal triglyceride values. Patients with primary HA may have a disturbed metabolism of triglyceride rich lipoproteins which have a delayed depuration during the postprandium. Basal HDL-C in patients with HA cannot predict the PP triglyceridemia.
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PMID:[Postprandial lipemia in subjects with primary hypoalphalipoproteinemia and hypoalphalipoproteinemia associated with diabetes]. 148 77

In a 3-year prospective study, the prevalence of albuminuria and its relationship to macrovascular disease, pre-existing vascular risk factors and mortality rate were studied in a random cohort of 290 patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus in general practice. Newly occurring micro- or macroalbuminuria was associated with significantly (p less than 0.05) higher systolic blood pressure: median (IQ range) 157 (140-170) vs 150 (130-160) mmHg, in addition to higher serum triglycerides: median (IQ range) 2.71 (1.84-4.25) vs 1.84 (1.35-3.14) mmol l-1, and C-peptide levels: median (IQ range) 1.30 (0.98-2.16) vs 1.10 (0.82-1.58) nmol l-1, at 3-year follow-up. Patients with macroalbuminuria at final examination had significantly higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure, serum triglyceride and beta 2-microglobulin levels, decreased HDL-cholesterol, and a significantly higher prevalence of carotid artery stenoses and peripheral vascular disease. Patients dying from vascular causes showed significantly higher urinary albumin levels at entrance as compared to the surviving patients: median (IQ range): 42.2 (11-249.7) vs 10.4 (4.6-28.0) mg l-1, p less than 0.008, and overall mortality rate was significantly linked with the presence of macroalbuminuria (26% vs 5% in normoalbuminuric patients). A comparison between the results of the initial and the final examination indicated an overall worsening of renal variables (albuminuria: median (IQ range): female 9.5 (4.5-21) vs 13.4 (5.1-39.7) mg l-1, (p less than 0.05); male 13.8 (4.7-34.1) vs 32.6 (8.1-78.7) (p less than 0.001), despite a significant improvement in metabolic variables.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Morbidity, mortality, and albuminuria in type 2 diabetic patients: a three-year prospective study of a random cohort in general practice. 151 72


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