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Query: UMLS:C0011881 (diabetic nephropathy)
10,836 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The objective of the work was to evaluate the basic parameters of zinc metabolism, i.e. serum levels and urinary excretion of zinc (Zn) in insulin dependent diabetes. The authors investigated a group of diabetics with normal renal function (DM) and with chronic renal insufficiency as a result of diabetic nephropathy (RIDM). Two control groups were formed by healthy volunteers (C) and non-diabetic subjects with chronic renal insufficiency (RI). In diabetics without impaired renal functions (DM) the Zn serum levels did not differ significantly from controls, urinary excretion was significantly raised. The authors did not reveal a correlation of serum Zn levels with parameters of compensation of diabetes nor with the insulin dose. Urinary Zn output correlated positively with proteinuria and the average blood sugar level during the collection of urine. The authors did not find a correlation with diuresis, fractional water excretion, glycosuria or urea excretion. The fractional Zn clearance in diabetic subjects was significantly raised and correlated with the mean blood sugar level. This finding suggests a decline of the tubular Zn absorption in hyperglycaemia. In diabetics with renal failure (RIDM) the results did not differ from non-diabetics with the same degree of renal insufficiency: serum Zn levels were, as compared with healthy controls, in both groups significantly reduced, the urinary excretion being normal. Thus insulin dependent diabetes nor its metabolic compensation do not influence in a marked way serum Zn levels but lead to higher urinary Zn losses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Serum levels and urinary excretion of zinc in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes]. 220 24

Diabetic nephropathy is the dominant cause of hypertension in insulin-dependent diabetics, and long-term rigid antihypertensive treatment inhibits the progression of nephropathy, probably even when there is renal insufficiency. In our clinical study 14 insulin-dependent diabetics with diabetic nephropathy and renal failure (glomerular filtration rate [GFR] 0.39 +/- 0.12 ml/sec) underwent rigid blood pressure treatment. Antihypertensive therapy included furosemide, propranolol, dihydralazine and nifedipine. The whole group showed a lowering in mean blood pressures from 150.1 +/- 2.3/91.3 +/- 1.4 mm Hg to 139.8 +/- 3.1/86.5 +/- 2.0 mm Hg (p less than 0.01). During the observation period the mean decline in glomerular filtration rate decreased from -0.022 +/- 0.003 ml/sec per month to -0.010 +/- 0.007 ml/sec per month. In 10 out of 14 patients with very advanced nephropathy the further decline of GFR halted markedly. Thus, vigorous blood pressure control is able to postpone endstage renal disease even in advanced diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:The effect of antihypertensive treatment on kidney function in insulin-dependent (type I) diabetics with renal failure. 233 82

The prevalence of diabetic nephropathy among the German Democratic Republic (GDR) population is substantial, as is true of many other countries. An epidemiologic survey performed in the county of Neubrandenburg revealed increased creatinine values in 44.9% of diabetics with diabetes duration greater than 15 years, and in 24.9% of those with the disease less than 15 years. Given these data, the prevalence of renal insufficiency due to diabetic nephropathy is estimated as 27/100,000 in diabetics with greater than 15 years, and 9/100,000 in diabetics with less than 15 years of diabetes, including only patients up to the age of 49 years; this must be substantially greater when considering all age groups. Only 13% of all patients on chronic hemodialysis are diabetics. Although we offer each of our nephropathic diabetics such kidney replacement therapies as dialysis and transplantation, a substantial number of diabetics are not treated, presumably due to advanced macrovascular complications.
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PMID:Frequency and therapy of end-stage renal disease due to diabetic nephropathy in the German Democratic Republic. 252 38

Four patients reacting with acute renal failure despite using low osmolar contrast media are reported. They all had diabetic nephropathy and renal insufficiency. A retrospective study of 75 consecutive patients examined with angiography showed that 13% had both of these two risk factors.
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PMID:Acute renal failure caused by low-osmolar radiographic contrast media in patients with diabetic nephropathy. 259 31

Diabetic nephropathy (DNP) is associated with increased cardiovascular mortality. This may be contributed to by associated cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction (CAD). The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence of CAD in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) at different stages of DNP. We studied patients with incipient DNP (group 1, n = 10), overt DNP (group 2, n = 20), renal insufficiency (group 3, n = 27), and end-stage renal failure (group 4, n = 12) and compared them with 30 IDDM patients without clinical signs of DNP (group 5) and with 17 nondiabetic controls (group 6). All groups were matched for age and diabetic groups were matched for duration of diabetes. Assessments of CAD included beat-to-beat variation during forced respiration, heart-rate response to standing, heart-rate response to Valsalva maneuver, basal heart rate, and blood pressure response to standing. Clinical evaluation included assessment of the history and an examination for peripheral polyneuropathy. We found mean impairment of heart-rate variation during respiration, in response to Valsalva maneuver, and in heart-rate response to standing in all diabetic groups compared with nondiabetic controls (P less than .01). Heart-rate responses differed significantly between patients with renal insufficiency (groups 3 and 4) and with other patient groups (group 5; P less than .01). CAD was shown to be more prevalent in patients with DNP, more so as DNP progresses. To some extent, it is already present in the early stages of DNP. CAD may be a contributory factor for increased cardiovascular mortality in patients with DNP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Importance of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction in IDDM subjects with diabetic nephropathy. 270 13

Results of pars plana vitrectomy (PPV) were compared in two groups of patients. The first group was formed from 105 eyes of 87 diabetics without clinical signs of the diabetic nephropathy or nephropathy without decrease of renal functions. The other group was formed from 64 eyes of 50 diabetics suffering from diabetic nephropathy in the stage of the renal insufficiency. In the first group PPV was successful during the mean observatory period of 26 months, in 59 from 105 eyes (56%) and the mean visual acuity was 0.12. In the second group PPV was successful, during the mean observatory period of 18 months, in 34 from 64 eyes (53%) and the mean visual acuity was 0.09. Number of the successfully treated PPV was steadily decreasing according to the prolonged period of the further observations, in both mentioned groups: from 85 (81%) after 3 months on 62 (41%) after the interval of 3 years. The mean visual acuity in both followed groups was, with respect to the length of observation, moderately increased. Diabetic nephropathy in the stage of the renal insufficiency was without negative effect on the prognosis of PPV in complicated diabetic retinopathy. The more advanced organ complications of diabetes were not evaluated as contraindications of PPV and the operation may significantly improve the quality of the life of an otherwise heavily ill diabetic patient.
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PMID:[Is the prognosis of pars plana vitrectomy in diabetic retinopathy dependent on the general status of the diabetic?]. 271 21

Eleven patients with insulin-dependent diabetes, advancing renal insufficiency, and proteinuria were placed on a diet containing 0.6 g/kg per day of high-biologic-value protein. Selected clinical variables were observed over a 2-year interval. The rate of decline in renal function was significantly decreased during the intervals of protein restriction. The rate during the second 12 months of the study, however, was increased, when compared with the first 12-month interval. Urinary protein excretion decreased significantly, from 2.27 +/- 0.49 g/d to 0.57 +/- 0.40 g/d after the first 12 months of the study, but increased to 1.43 +/- 0.63 g/d after the second 12 months of the study. The dietary protein intake estimated from urea nitrogen excretion in urine samples correlated significantly with urinary protein excretion. These findings suggest that dietary protein restriction has a sustained beneficial effect on the course of diabetic nephropathy, if compliance to the diet can be maintained.
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PMID:Prolonged dietary protein restriction in diabetic nephropathy. 271 6

We studied the profile of nephropathy in 250 patients, 177 males and 73 females, with type 2 diabetes mellitus. The mean age was 55.9 +/- 8.8 years. Therapy for control of diabetes included diet alone in 1.6%, oral hypoglycaemic agents in 90.6% and insulin in 7.8%. Glycaemic control was satisfactory in 4.8%, fair in 41.2% and poor in 54.0%. Blood sugar values were normal without any therapy in 33 out of the 206 patients (16%) after the onset of renal insufficiency. The mean interval between the onset of diabetes and the appearance of proteinuria was 9.5 +/- 7.05 years. Proteinuria appeared within one year in 23 patients (9.2%), 1-5 years in 32 (12.8%), 6-10 years in 86 (34.4%) and more than 10 years in the remaining 109 patients (43.6%). Proteinuria was of nephrotic range in 17.6% of patients. Renal insufficiency was present in 206 (82.4%) patients and occurred 10.5 +/- 7.5 years after the detection of diabetes. Hypertension was present in 61.2% and was first detected 7.5 +/- 7.4 years after onset of diabetes. Endstage renal disease occurred 11.8 +/- 6.8 years after the onset of diabetes mellitus. Thus, clinical evidence of diabetic nephropathy is present in most patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus within a decade after the detection of diabetes. Subsequent progression to end-stage renal failure is rapid in the face of poorly controlled hypertension and hyperglycemia in the economically poor countries.
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PMID:Nephropathy in type 2 diabetes mellitus in Third World countries--Chandigarh study. 278 52

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 antihypertensive efficacy and renal effects of enalapril maleate therapy were evaluated in 13 hypertensive patients with chronic renal failure. Enalapril was administered as follows: alone; added to furosemide, clonidine hydrochloride, or atenolol; or in combination with any of the aforementioned drugs. Three patients did not complete the study; uncontrolled hypertension was the cause in two of these patients. In the remaining ten patients, short-term (mean +/- SD, 63 +/- 9 days) enalapril maleate therapy decreased the patient's seated blood pressure from 161/98 +/- 19/8 to 130/80 +/- 13/7 mm Hg. Furosemide was administered to eight patients; the dose of concomitant sympatholytic therapy was decreased in five of five patients. Serum potassium concentration increased from 4.1 +/- 0.3 to 4.5 +/- 0.3 mmol/L. Levels of urinary total protein excretion decreased from 2.23 +/- 2.05 to 1.08 +/- 1.45 g/d. Renal function (creatinine clearance, 0.58 +/- 0.21 mL/s) did not change from baseline. During long-term therapy, the rate of progression of renal insufficiency seemed to slacken in three of four patients with diabetic nephropathy. Thus enalapril can reduce blood pressure and proteinuria in hypertensive patients with chronic renal insufficiency. The possibility that enalapril can slow the progression of diabetic nephropathy remains to be confirmed by future studies.
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PMID:Efficacy and renal effects of enalapril therapy for hypertensive patients with chronic renal insufficiency. 284 67


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