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Query: UMLS:C0011881 (
diabetic nephropathy
)
10,836
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The association of arterial hypertension and diabetes mellitus is frequent: one third of patients attending a diabetic clinic. Excess hypertension frequency is marked in type II, non insulin-dependent diabetes, a condition often associated with other vascular risk factors such as obesity and lipid disorders. Insulin resistance is a common feature between type II diabetes, hypertension and other risk factors. In type I, insulin-dependent diabetes, hypertension is often linked to
diabetic nephropathy
. There is a genetic basis for
diabetic nephropathy
, which may share a common background with
familial hypertension
. Apart from possible genetic predispositions to hypertension diabetes association, chronic hyperglycaemia can lead to alteration in functional and structural properties of blood and vessels, which both contribute to elevated vascular resistance and blood pressure. From a therapeutic viewpoint, blood pressure values above 140/90 mmHg are not tolerable in diabetic subjects under 40 years of age. Due to their renal haemodynamic effects, angiotensin I converting enzyme inhibitors may be of special interest to protect kidney function in diabetic subjects.
...
PMID:Hypertension and diabetes mellitus. 821 50
Alterations in the renal dopamine [DA] system have been suggested to contribute to the development of hypertension and
diabetic nephropathy
. To identify early abnormalities in renal handling of DA and sodium we challenged 16 normotensive patients with uncomplicated insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM), 18 normotensive nondiabetic subjects with familial borderline hypertension, and 16 healthy controls, 14-29 years old, with a high-sodium diet (HSD). Systolic blood pressure was slightly higher in subjects with familial borderline hypertension than in the other groups on a normal sodium diet (NSD) (P < 0.05). Blood pressure and 24-h urinary measurements were performed on a NSD and after 3 days on a HSD. Twenty-four-hour urinary DA excretion was similar in all groups on NSD. A significant rise in DA excretion was noted after HSD in control subjects (P < 0.01), but not in subjects with a family history of hypertension or with IDDM. Urinary sodium excretion increased in all groups. A correlation between the change in DA and sodium/creatinine ratio after HSD was seen in healthy controls (r = 0.57, P = 0.02) but not in those with familial borderline hypertension (r = 0.18, P = 0.47) or with IDDM (r = 0.40, P = 0.15). A rise in systolic (but not diastolic) pressure was noted only in the IDDM group after HSD (P = 0.02). In conclusion, an impairment in the renal DA and sodium system can be detected early in IDDM and in individuals with
familial hypertension
. We speculate that this impairment may contribute to the development of hypertension and microvascular disease in both conditions.
...
PMID:The dopaminuric response to high salt diet in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and in family history of hypertension. 909 Jun 56
It has been suggested that hereditary risk for hypertension and cardiovascular disease (CVD) as well as intrauterine growth may be involved in the pathogenesis of
diabetic nephropathy
. In the present study, we investigated the influence of familial and perinatal risk factors on the occurrence of micro- and macroalbuminuria in young IDDM patients. A cohort of 1,150 young patients with > or =5 years' duration of IDDM was screened for microalbuminuria. Data on family history of hypertension, CVD, IDDM, and NIDDM; perinatal factors such as birth weight, gestational age, and duration of breastfeeding; and maternal education, smoking, hypertension, and proteinuria during pregnancy were collected. We identified 75 patients with an albumin excretion rate > or =15 microg/min in more than two overnight urinary samples and compared them in a nested case-control study with three normoalbuminuric control subjects per patient from the same cohort, matched for diabetes duration. Perinatal factors were analyzed in all patients born at term (+/- 2 weeks), 59 of the 75 patients and 155 of the 225 control subjects. In univariate analysis, hypertension in parents (odds ratio [OR] 4.21), CVD in parents and grandparents (OR 1.26), maternal smoking during pregnancy (OR 3.21), and a low level of maternal education (OR 2.33) were significantly associated with the development of micro- and macroalbuminuria. When adjusted for other familial and perinatal factors, current mean blood pressure, HbA1c, smoking, BMI, sex, age, and postpubertal diabetes duration, using logistic regression analyses, only parental hypertension in all patients and maternal smoking during pregnancy and low level of maternal education in full-term patients were independent risk factors. When patients with poor glycemic control were analyzed separately, familial CVD, poor metabolic control, parental hypertension, maternal smoking during pregnancy, and level of maternal education were independent risk factors, with the adjusted OR markedly increased, compared with the matched subgroup with better HbA1c. In conclusion,
familial hypertension
and CVD, maternal smoking during pregnancy, and low level of maternal education may independently increase the risk for incipient nephropathy in full-term offspring who later develop IDDM. Current poor glycemic control seemed to increase the effect of these risk factors.
...
PMID:Familial and perinatal risk factors for micro- and macroalbuminuria in young IDDM patients. 964 37