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)

To assess whether urinary N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) could be used as a predictor of diabetic nephropathy, renal tubular enzymes such as NAG and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma GTP), albumin, total protein and beta 2-microglobulin (BMG) in urine and/or serum were measured in various stages of diabetic nephropathy. As a predictor of diabetic nephropathy, urinary NAG was the most useful indicator among of them. Urinary gamma GTP had no clinical benefit on early detection of diabetic nephropathy although in cis-platin induced nephrotoxicity both urinary gamma GTP and NAG increased in parallel. Increase of urinary NAG appeared in diabetic patients prior to clinical proteinuria. With appearance of proteinuria, urinary NAG more increased. Urinary NAG correlated significantly with HbAlc and BMG in serum (sBMG). It is therefore needed for clinical application of urinary NAG as a predictor of diabetic nephropathy that control states of blood glucose in the patients should be considered. However, the results of sequential measurements of urinary NAG, sBMG and HbAlc in 78 diabetic patients for 18-month period showed that only urinary NAG was a responsible factor for elevation of sBMG known as an indicator of deterioration of renal function. These results indicate that renal tubular damage may already exist in early-stage of diabetic nephropathy, and that increase of urinary NAG activity is a useful predictor of diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase on prediction of diabetic nephropathy]. 135 Jul 71

Urinary enzyme activities (N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase [NAG], alkaline phosphatase [ALP], leucine aminopeptidase [LAP], gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase [gamma-GTP]) were investigated to determine their clinical significance in diabetic nephropathy. There were correlations among ALP, LAP, and gamma-GTP, though no correlation existed between NAG and the other three enzymes. Activities of NAG isozymes (both A and B) were higher than in normal controls. It has been reported that NAG isozyme A might be associated with glomerular diseases, and isozyme B might be associated with proximal tubular damage. The results of our study suggest that NAG reflects lysosomal dysfunction of both glomerular and proximal tubular epithelial cells, which may be caused by poor glycemic control, and that ALP, LAP, and gamma-GTP reflect brush border damage of proximal tubules, which may be caused by diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:Clinical significance of urinary enzymes in diabetic nephropathy. 168 60

The effectiveness and tolerance of the new sulphonyl urea antidiabetic gliquidone (commercial name Glurenorm) was tested by three-month administration of this preparation in a group of 39 type 2 diabetics. Gliquidone proved a medium-strength beta-cytotropic antidiabetic preparation. As to side-effects, the authors noted only dyspepsia in one patient (2.5%). Symptomatic hypoglycaemia did not develop in any of the patients. In the subgroup of six patients with diabetic nephropathy the indicators of renal functions did not deteriorate. In a sub-group of 6 patients with concurrent hepatopathy the originally elevated gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity receded. The authors confirmed thus the good tolerance of gliquidone in diabetes associated with nephropathy and diabetes with hepatopathy.
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PMID:[Multicenter study with gliquidone in type 2 diabetes mellitus]. 177 8

In order to evaluate tubular damage in diabetic patients, the activity of renal proximal tubule derived enzymes excreted in 24-hour urine were recorded in 5 groups as follows: (i) 48 noninsulin-independent diabetic patients with normal renal function and a urinary albumin excretion rate within the normal range; (ii) 45 noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients with normal renal function and a high urinary albumin level; (iii) 26 noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients with renal failure; (iv) 40 patients with essential hypertension and normal renal function, and (v) 48 normal control subjects. Regardless of whether cases were noninsulin-dependent diabetics with normal or high urinary albumin excretion rate or cases with renal dysfunction, urinary dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase excretions were significantly higher than in healthy subjects, and urinary gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase excretion was significantly lower than in healthy subjects. No significant changes in urinary enzyme excretions showed specific variations in the essential hypertensive patients. These results suggest that there is tubular damage in the early stages of noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients with normal renal function and normal urinary albumin excretion rate. Detection of urinary excretion of dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase may be especially useful for the early diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:Diagnostic significance of urinary enzymes for diabetes mellitus and hypertension. 858 4