Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011881 (diabetic nephropathy)
10,836 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Disorders of fluid and electrolyte metabolism in elderly diabetics were studied. High frequency of hyperkalemia (20.8%), hypomagnesemia (14.6%), hypocalcemia (13.7%), hyperphosphatemia (8.6%), hyponatremia (8.1%) and hyperchloremia (7.2%) was observed among 332 elderly diabetics. Furthermore, hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hyponatremia, hyperchloremia, hypercalcemia and hypermagnesemia were more frequent in diabetics with renal insufficiency (serum Cr greater than or equal to 1.5 mg/dl) than in diabetics with normal renal function (serum Cr less than or equal to 1.4 mg/dl). In addition, statistically significant negative correlation were observed between plasma glucose levels and serum levels of sodium and chloride in diabetics with normal renal function. These results clearly demonstrated that the most important causal factor of electrolyte disorders in elderly diabetics might be the renal dysfunction due to diabetic nephropathy and/or nephrosclerosis. Moreover, glucose intolerance is also one of the causal factors for hyponatremia and hypochloremia. Disorders of fluid and electrolyte metabolism were manifest in 31 diabetic patients with hyperosmolar non-ketotic coma. The frequency of patients with abnormally elevated serum levels of sodium, potassium and chloride, and patients with abnormally lowered serum levels of calcium was high in this morbid state. Water and sodium deficit, examined in 11 cases of hyperosmolar non-ketotic coma, was 4780 +/- 2100 ml (107 +/- 43 ml/kg body weight) and 290 +/- 170 mEq (6.8 +/- 4.2 mEq/kg body weight), respectively. However, no significant deficit of potassium was observed in the patients. Statistically significant positive correlations between water deficit and serum Cr levels and with serum effective osmolarity were observed. However, there were no significant correlations between water deficit and plasma glucose levels, serum sodium levels and serum osmolarity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Disorders of fluid and electrolyte metabolism in elderly diabetics]. 279 74

The charts of 70 successive patients presenting for dialysis therapy for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) were evaluated for their serum electrolyte values. The "classical" pattern of low total CO2 (tCO2), elevated anion gap ("delta"), and normal chloride was found in a minority of patients (14 of 70, or 20%). Hyperchloremia was noted in 46%; in 21 patients (30%), this was associated with a normal delta and in 11 (16%), hyperchloremia was accompanied by an elevated delta. Fourteen patients (20%), most with diabetic nephropathy, had normal serum electrolytes. Patients with chronic glomerulonephritis had a hyperchloremic pattern as often as not, and two of four patients with interstitial nephritis demonstrated hyperchloremia without an elevated delta. We conclude that the previously held thesis that hyperchloremia is a rare or absent finding by the time renal failure progresses to ESRD is no longer tenable. Furthermore, a significant minority of ESRD patients may require the initiation of dialysis at a time when their serum electrolytes are still normal.
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PMID:Serum electrolyte patterns in end-stage renal disease. 309 Aug 75

Metabolic acidosis is almost invariably a consequence of advanced renal failure, although its severity can vary widely. To evaluate the determinants of the severity of metabolic acidosis, with special interest in determining if there is any difference in the prevalence and severity of metabolic acidosis between patients with and without diabetes, 113 predialysis patients with renal failure were studied. Criteria for inclusion onto the study were: creatinine clearance (Ccr)/1.73 m2 less than 30 mL/min, no alkali therapy within the previous 30 days, and the absence of respiratory diseases. Forty-eight patients had diabetes (33 patients with diabetic nephropathy). The following data were analyzed: demographics; cause of renal failure; hematocrit; serum urea, creatinine, uric acid, albumin, glucose, hemoglobin A1c, bicarbonate, sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, phosphorus, and alkaline phosphatase levels; anion gap; urinary protein excretion; Ccr/1.73 m2; half of the sum of creatinine and urea clearances (Ccr-Cu); protein-equivalent nitrogen appearance (PNA); and whether the patients received diuretics (75 patients), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (54 patients), and/or calcium channel blockers (55 patients). After the exclusion of eight patients because of hypochloremia (three patients with and five patients without diabetes), mean serum bicarbonate levels were significantly greater in patients with diabetes than in the rest of the patients (20.7 +/- 2.3 v 18.2 +/- 2. 3 mmol/L; P = 0.0001). The mean anion gap (mmol/L) was also significantly less in patients with than without diabetes (19.70 +/- 3.65 v 22.35 +/- 3.64; P = 0.003). Eleven of 105 patients had serum bicarbonate levels of 23 mmol/L or greater (9 patients with and 2 patients without diabetes). Pure elevated anion gap followed by mixed (high anion gap and hyperchloremia) were the most common types of metabolic acidosis observed in both groups. There were no differences in PNA, diuretic treatment, or vomiting history between patients with and without diabetes. By multiple logistic regression analysis, the best determinants for a serum bicarbonate level greater than 19 mmol/L were: the diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy (odds ratio, 0.107; P = 0.0002), Ccr-Cu (odds ratio, 0.824; P = 0. 014), and age (odds ratio, 0.966; P = 0.046). In conclusion, patients with diabetes with advanced renal failure showed a less severe metabolic acidosis, which cannot be explained by gastrointestinal hydrogen ion losses, drugs, or reduced protein catabolic rate. Patients with diabetes may have a more efficient extrarenal generation of bicarbonate than end-stage renal failure patients without diabetes.
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PMID:Metabolic acidosis in advanced renal failure: differences between diabetic and nondiabetic patients. 1021 45