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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seven middle-aged men with manifest
type II diabetes mellitus
underwent an endurance training programme for 10-15 weeks. The maximal aerobic capacity, as well as the endurance capacity, was improved by 10% (p less than 0.05). The intramuscular glycogen store increased by more than 80% (p less than 0.05) from 350 mumol/g dw (dry weight), and the activities of citrate synthase and 3-hydroxy-acyl-CoA dehydrogenase increased by more than 50% (p less than 0.05) and 30% (p less than 0.05). The activity of glycogen synthase was decreased by approximately 20% (p less than 0.05), whereas lactate dehydrogenase remained unchanged. Capillaries/fibre and fibre area increased by more than 50% (p less than 0.05) and 30% (p less than 0.05) leaving the area of supply constant. Training did not influence fasting blood lipids and glucose, glycosylated
hemoglobin
, oral glucose tolerance, and insulin response to an oral glucose load measured 72 hours post-exercise. It is concluded that patients with manifest type II diabetes, as normoglycaemic individuals, adapt to physical training. However, no persistent effect on glucohomeostasis and lipaemia is produced by short-term training in the diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle adaptations to physical training in type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 336 17
The relative value of fructosamine as an alternative to glycosylated
hemoglobin
(HbA1) and other measures of glycemic control was assessed in 100 insulin-dependent (IDDM) and 104 non-insulin-dependent (
NIDDM
) diabetic patients. We measured HbA1 (by electrophoretic and affinity methods), plasma glucose, glycosylated plasma proteins, and fructosamine in blood taken at a single clinic visit. The values were compared both by correlation analysis and by considering whether the various indices of glycemic control placed the patients in the same clinical decision categories as they were in by the HbA1 (affinity) result. Fructosamine correlated moderately well with HbA1 (affinity; r = .8) and placed 71% of IDDM and 72% of
NIDDM
patients in the same clinical category of good, moderate, or poor control. Differences can probably be partly attributed to the different periods over which HbA1 and fructosamine reflect average glycemia and partly to imprecision.
...
PMID:Comparison of fructosamine with glycosylated hemoglobin and plasma proteins as measures of glycemic control. 339 Oct 95
Clarification of the extent and mechanisms of damage to the central nervous system in diabetes is a frontier of current neurological research. Our aim was to obtain ample electrophysiological documentation of possible neurological abnormalities in both insulin-dependent (IDDM) and non-insulin-dependent (
NIDDM
) diabetic patients with a short duration of disease and without overt complications, taking into account metabolic control. Group 1 comprised 11 IDDM patients, and group 2 included 14
NIDDM
patients treated with diet alone; the duration of disease was less than 4 yr, and no concomitant clinical complications were present. Age- and sex-matched normal subjects formed groups 3 and 4. Pattern visual evoked potentials (VEP), brain stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP), and somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP; after the stimulation of both median and tibial nerves) were recorded in all subjects, and metabolic control was evaluated in terms of glycemia and glycosylated
hemoglobin
. In group 1, significant abnormalities were found in the latency values of VEP, median SEP, and tibial SEP compared with control subjects. Similar latency abnormalities were shown in group 2 for VEP, median SEP, and tibial SEP values and for wave I latency of BAEP. Glycosylated
hemoglobin
values were correlated with BAEP and SEP abnormalities in many patients in both groups. Furthermore, in group 2, glycemic values correlated with SEP abnormalities. We therefore conclude that neurophysiological abnormalities are present at different levels in IDDM and
NIDDM
patients only a few years after clinical diagnosis and before the appearance of overt complications, and these abnormalities seem to be correlated with metabolic control status.
...
PMID:Early detection of neurological involvement in IDDM and NIDDM. Multimodal evoked potentials versus metabolic control. 340 2
To determine the effects of very-low-calorie diets on the metabolic abnormalities of diabetes and obesity, we have studied 10 obese, non-insulin-dependent diabetic (
NIDDM
) and 5 obese, nondiabetic subjects for 36 days on a metabolic ward during consumption of a liquid diet of 300 kcal/day with 30 g of protein. Rapid improvement occurred in the glycemic indices of the diabetic subjects, with mean (+/- SEM) fasting plasma glucose falling from 291 +/- 21 to 95 +/- 6 mg/dl (P less than 0.001) and total glycosylated
hemoglobin
from 13.1 +/- 0.7% to 8.8 +/- 0.3% (P less than 0.001) (normal reference range 5.5-8.5%). Lipid elevations were normalized with plasma triglycerides reduced to less than 100 mg/dl and total plasma cholesterol to less than 150 mg/dl in both groups. Hormonal and substrate responses were also comparable between groups with reductions in insulin and triiodothyronine and moderate elevations in blood and urinary ketoacid levels without a corresponding rise in free fatty acids. Electrolyte balance for sodium, potassium, calcium, and phosphorus was initially negative but approached equilibrium by completion of the study. Magnesium, in contrast, remained in positive balance in both groups throughout. Total nitrogen loss varied widely among all subjects, ranging from 70 to 367 g, and showed a strong positive correlation with initial lean body mass (N = 0.83, P less than 0.001) and total weight loss (N = 0.87, P less than 0.001). The nondiabetic group, which had a significantly greater initial body weight and lean body mass than the diabetic group, also had a significantly greater weight loss of 450 +/- 31 g/day compared with 308 +/- 19 g/day (P less than 0.01) in the diabetic subjects. The composition of the weight lost at completion was similar in both groups and ranged from 21.6% to 31.3% water, 3.9% to 7.8% protein, and 60.9% to 74.5% fat. The contribution of both water and protein progressively decreased and fat increased, resulting in unchanged caloric requirements during the diet. This study demonstrates that short-term treatment with a very-low-calorie diet in both obese diabetic and nondiabetic subjects results in: safe and effective weight loss associated with the normalization of elevated glucose and lipid levels, a large individual variability in total nitrogen loss determined principally by the initial lean body mass, and progressive increments in the contribution of fat to weight loss with stable caloric requirements and no evidence of a hypometabolic response.
...
PMID:Metabolic consequences of very-low-calorie diet therapy in obese non-insulin-dependent diabetic and nondiabetic subjects. 351 Sep 22
Since February 1, 1980, the identical standardized Greenville Gastric Bypass has been performed in 397 morbidly obese patients with an operative mortality rate of 0.8%. The operation effectively controlled weight and maintained satisfactory weight loss even after 6 years (mean weights and ranges: Preoperative: 290 lbs (196-535); 18 months: 175 lbs (110-300); 72 months: 205 lbs (140-320). The gastric bypass favorably affected non-insulin-dependent diabetes (
NIDDM
), hypertension, physical and role functioning, and several measures of mental health. Rigorous follow-up (97.5% over 6 years) revealed that health problems were common in postoperative patients; there were nine late deaths. Abnormal glucose metabolism was present in 141 (36%) of 397 patients before surgery:
NIDDM
was present in 88 patients (22%) and 53 patients (14%) were glucose impaired. Of these, all but two became euglycemic within 4 months after surgery without any diabetic medication or special diets. The most recent 42 morbidly obese patients with
NIDDM
were studied intensively. In that cohort, fasting blood glucose, fasting insulin, and glycosylated
hemoglobin
returned to normal after surgery; insulin release, insulin resistance, and utilization of glucose improved sharply. The normalization of glucose metabolism after gastric bypass may not be related solely to weight loss and restriction of caloric intake, but may also be due to the bypass of the antrum and duodenum.
...
PMID:The control of diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) in the morbidly obese with the Greenville Gastric Bypass. 363 94
Zinc is required for normal immune function and taste acuity and enhances the in vitro effectiveness of insulin. Impaired immune function and taste have been reported in diabetic subjects, and decreased serum zinc levels and hyperzincuria occur in some diabetic subjects and animals. Subjects with type II diabetes were examined to determine whether the similar effects of zinc depletion and diabetes are causally related. Low serum zinc levels were found in 16 of 180 subjects (9 percent). There was no correlation between serum zinc and glycosylated
hemoglobin
levels. Natural killer cell activity did not differ between diabetic subjects (n = 28) and control subjects (n = 38) and did not correlate with serum zinc levels. T lymphocyte response to phytohemagglutinin was lower in diabetic subjects than in control subjects (70 +/- 10 versus 103 +/- 7 X 10(3) counts per minute) but was not lowest in those with the lowest zinc levels. Taste thresholds for hydrochloric acid, sucrose, sodium chloride, and urea were elevated in diabetic subjects (n = 28) versus control subjects (n = 10), but thresholds did not correlate with glycosylated
hemoglobin
or serum zinc levels. Zinc supplementation in nine diabetic subjects had no effect on the glycosylated
hemoglobin
level, natural killer cell activity, or taste thresholds, but it did increase mitogen activity in those with the lowest initial phytohemagglutinin responses. It is concluded that zinc deficiency occurs in a subset of subjects with type II diabetes but is not related to diabetes control and does not explain decreased taste acuity. Zinc deficiency may play a role in abnormal immune function in
type II diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Role of zinc supplementation in type II diabetes mellitus. 372 55
Despite reports of reduced serum insulin-like growth factor (IGF) levels in experimentally diabetic animals, human diabetic patients have been reported to have decreased, normal, or even elevated levels. This study was a cross-sectional examination of the effect of age on immunoreactive IGF-I levels in adult patients with insulin-dependent or noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM and
NIDDM
) attending a diabetes out-patient clinic. The patients and normal subjects studied were divided into the age ranges 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, and over 60 yr. For all ages combined, the mean IGF-I level (+/- SD) was 0.84 +/- 0.26 U/ml (202 +/- 62 ng/ml) in 133 normal subjects, significantly reduced to 0.41 +/- 0.17 U/ml in 121 IDDM patients, and 0.49 +/- 0.19 U/ml in 46
NIDDM
patients (both P less than 0.001). In both groups there was a marked decline in IGF-I with increasing age (P less than 0.01). Except for
NIDDM
patients aged 21-30 yr (only two patients), IGF-I levels in both IDDM and
NIDDM
patients were significantly lower in every age range than those in age-matched normal subjects, but did not differ between the two diabetic groups. Glycosylated
hemoglobin
levels correlated inversely with IGF-I levels only in younger patients with IDDM (r = -0.486; P less than 0.05 for patients aged 21-40 yr). We conclude that factors common to IDDM and
NIDDM
, perhaps related to relative nutritional deficiency at the cellular level, cause a reduction in serum IGF-I levels, and that this reduction occurs independently of age-related changes in IGF-I.
...
PMID:Serum insulin-like growth factor I levels in adult diabetic patients: the effect of age. 373 35
Diabetes mellitus type II
(currently known as non-insulin-dependent diabetes) is apparently the result of genetically imposed insulin resistance. Type II diabetes is far more common than insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes, which is probably an autoimmune disease resulting in inadequate insulin production. The decade of the '80s has seen several changes in the management of type II diabetes, including: more widespread use of glycosylated
hemoglobin
and home blood glucose monitoring as surveillance tools; modification of the dietary regimen by advocating increased amounts of complex carbohydrates; use in this country of the second-generation oral sulfonylureas; and therapeutic trials of tricyclic antidepressants for relief of painful diabetic neuropathy.
Diabetes mellitus type II
is potentially preventable through encouragement of weight loss and regular screening for those genetically at risk.
...
PMID:Type II diabetes mellitus update: diagnosis and management. 374 79
The synthesis of labile
hemoglobin
A1 in vivo was studied in subjects with
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
, impaired and normal glucose tolerance. The labile
hemoglobin
A1 index defined as delta labile
hemoglobin
A1 divided by delta plasma glucose at 30 min after oral glucose load, representing the rate of labile
hemoglobin
A1 synthesis in vivo, was low in diabetic subjects and high in normal subjects, showing an inverse correlation with the amount of preexisting
hemoglobin
A1. The study on the synthesis of labile
hemoglobin
A1 in vitro showed a lower initial rate of synthesis and a smaller increase in labile
hemoglobin
A1 at saturation in red blood cells from diabetic subjects with a relatively large amount of preexisting
hemoglobin
A1, as opposed to red blood cells from normal subjects. Although the further study is necessary in which delta plasma glucose levels are kept relatively constant in each of 3 groups by glucose-clamp methods, our data suggest that the synthesis of labile
hemoglobin
A1 is limited in vivo and in vitro in diabetic subjects by the preexisting
hemoglobin
A1 due to the saturability of its synthesis.
...
PMID:Limited synthesis of labile hemoglobin A1 in vivo and in vitro by the preexisting hemoglobin A1 in diabetic subjects. 375 14
The prevalence of diabetic complications is reported from a cross-sectional study of rural diabetic subjects in Western Australia. Logistic-regression analysis has been used to discover potential risk factors associated with each complication. A distinction has been made between time-related variables (age, age at diagnosis, duration of diabetes) and other risk variables. We have attempted to identify the major time-related risk variables for each complication and then examined the effect of other risk variables after accounting for the major time-related variables. The important time-related variables were found to be duration of diabetes for retinopathy, age for macrovascular disease, duration and age at diagnosis of diabetes for sensory neuropathy, and age for renal impairment. When matched on these important time-related variables, the overall prevalences of complications for insulin-dependent (IDDM) compared with non-insulin-dependent (
NIDDM
) diabetic patients were essentially the same. An exception is renal impairment, for which IDDM patients had a higher prevalence than did
NIDDM
patients of the same age. After allowing for time-related variables, the analysis also demonstrates positive independent associations between diabetic control (glycosylated
hemoglobin
) and retinopathy and between diabetic control and macrovascular disease. Plasma cholesterol (positively) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (negatively) were related independently to both macrovascular disease and renal impairment. Very few differences in the risk-factor profiles for complications were found for IDDM compared with
NIDDM
patients after allowing for time-related variables.
...
PMID:Prevalence of diabetic complications in relation to risk factors. 377 Mar 11
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