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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)
...
PMID:[Serum levels and urinary excretion of zinc in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes]. 220 24
We evaluated 100/serum creatinine, 24-hour creatinine clearance, and simultaneously measured creatinine clearance or creatinine clearance estimated by the formula devised by Cockcroft and Gault in comparison with measurements of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using iothalamate among 136 patients with
diabetic nephropathy
. We also evaluated 100/serum creatinine, simultaneously measured creatinine clearance or creatinine clearance estimated by the Cockcroft and Gault formula in comparison with measurements of GFR using inulin among 88 healthy adults, 21 hypercalciuric kidney stone formers and their hypercalciuric relatives, and one man with chronic nephritis. Creatinine clearances measured simultaneously were closely correlated to GFR (r = 0.93) as were creatinine clearances, estimated by the Cockcroft and Gault formula (r = 0.84) when GFR ranged from 16 to 175 mL/min (0.27 to 2.92 mL/s). These observations confirm the clinical use of either creatinine clearances during
water
diuresis or estimates of creatinine clearance by the Cockcroft and Gault formula in the assessment of kidney function.
...
PMID:Use of the serum creatinine to estimate glomerular filtration rate in health and early diabetic nephropathy. Collaborative Study Group of Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibition in Diabetic Nephropathy. 204 60
1. Streptozotocin diabetes was induced in Wistar-Kyoto rats fed a 50% protein diet. Animals were randomized to receive either the ACE inhibitor ramipril, 1 mg/L in drinking
water
(n = 7), or no treatment (n = 7) and were studied for 6 months. Blood glucose, body weight and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were measured at 0, 1, 4, 8 and 16 weeks of diabetes and urinary albumin excretion was measured every 8 weeks. 2. In both groups, GFR increased significantly within 1 week of induction of diabetes (P less than 0.001) and thereafter remained stable. There was no difference in GFR between the treated and untreated groups. 3. Urinary albumin excretion increased progressively in both groups throughout the study. Ramipril treatment reduced albuminuria by approximately 50% at weeks 16 and 24 (P less than 0.01). 4. The amelioration of diabetic albuminuria by ACE inhibition, in the setting of high dietary protein intake, may have important implications for the treatment of human
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Ramipril reduces albuminuria in diabetic rats fed a high protein diet. 252 67
Proximal tubular reabsorption of sodium and
water
was investigated in long-term insulin-dependent diabetic patients with normoalbuminuria (group I, n = 19), microalbuminuria (group II, n = 39),
diabetic nephropathy
(group III, n = 12) and in 13 healthy age-matched subjects. Glomerular filtration rate was measured with the single injection, 51Cr-EDTA technique. The fluid flow rate out of the proximal tubules was assessed by the renal lithium clearance. Although glomerular filtration rate was significantly elevated in the diabetic patients (Group I: 122 +/- 16, Group II: 121 +/- 18, Group III: 110 +/- 17, CONTROLS: 105 +/- 13 ml/min X 1.73 m2), lithium clearance was similar in the four groups (Group I: 19 +/- 6, Group II: 22 +/- 7, Group III: 19 +/- 5, CONTROLS: 23 +/- 4 ml/min X 1.73 m2). Both absolute and fractional proximal reabsorption of sodium and
water
was enhanced in diabetes. Indices of distal tubular function did not differ between controls and patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. Sodium clearance was about the same in the four groups. Our study suggests that the enhanced proximal reabsorption of sodium and
water
in insulin-dependent diabetic patients is still observed despite the presence of incipient or overt
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:The increased proximal tubular reabsorption of sodium and water is maintained in long-term insulin-dependent diabetics with early nephropathy. 259 38
Hypertension may eventually develop in response to chronic slight retention of sodium and expansion of the extracellular fluid volume, either due to intrinsic pathology or to neurohormonal influences of the kidneys. As almost half of all juvenile diabetic patients sooner or later will develop
diabetic nephropathy
and hypertension, data are discussed which tend to indicate that renal sodium metabolism is altered already early during the course of diabetes. Compared to healthy subjects the absolute total tubular sodium reabsorption is increased by approximately 30-40 per cent, as is the filtered sodium load. Insulin may stimulate sodium reabsorption in man through an effect on the distal nephron segment. However, by means of combined lithium and 51Cr-labelled EDTA clearances it has been clearly demonstrated that the excess sodium reabsorption in ambulatory insulin-dependent diabetics exclusively takes place in the proximal tubules, while the distal tubular function appears normal. In these studied patients the extracellular fluid volume was also significantly increased. The increased fractional sodium reabsorption of the proximal tubules remains unaffected by increasing duration of diabetes and is also demonstrable in patients with overt
diabetic nephropathy
. Glucose is reabsorbed in the early portion of the proximal tubules coupled to Na+ transport, utilizing a common carrier protein. An increased load of glucose will therefore be expected to induce an increase in the proximal tubular reabsorption rate of sodium and
water
, at least as long as the proximal tubular reabsorption capacity for glucose is not exceeded to a degree inducing significant osmotic diuresis. This deviation from normal in proximal renal sodium and fluid handling may be relevant to the development of hypertension in long-term insulin-dependent diabetes.
...
PMID:Renal sodium metabolism in relation to hypertension in diabetes. 269 46
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)
...
PMID:[Disorders of fluid and electrolyte metabolism in elderly diabetics]. 279 74
Favourable results with the use of inhibitors of the angiotension I-converting enzyme in the therapy not only of high-renin but also normo-renin and low-renin hypertension revived interest in research in the area of the renin-angiotensin (RAS) system. The use of classical radioimmunological, radiohistochemical receptor studies as well as of recent methods of molecular biology and pathology revealed that for the regulation of blood pressure and the extracellular volume and pathogenesis of hypertension not only RAS components in systemic blood are important but also local tissue RAS with an autocrine and paracrine action at the site of its origin. Cerebral RAS participates in the central cardiovascular regulation, in the control of the salt and
water
intake, the secretion of antidiuretic hormone and ACTH. In the cardiovascular apparatus RAS is responsible not only for vasoconstriction but it acts also as a growth factor promoting the development of cardiac and vascular hypertrophy. In the kidneys RAS decides on the blood flow, its distribution, glomerular filtration. Its excessive stimulation may contribute in arterial hypertension,
diabetic nephropathy
and in residual nephrons during chronic renal failure, to the change from functional hyperfiltration to irreversible structural damage of the nephron. Inhibitors of the converting enzyme not only reduce the peripheral vascular resistance in arterial hypertension but influence also the tissue production of angiotensin II and thus the regression of cardiovascular hypertrophy and progression of renal damage.
...
PMID:[Renaissance of the renin-angiotensin system in the pathogenesis and therapy of arterial hypertension]. 280 32
To evaluate whether hypertension is a cause or just an association with diabetic renal disease, diabetes was induced in both normotensive Wistar-Kyoto and spontaneously hypertensive rats (WKY and SHR). Animals were assessed monthly for 8 months before sacrifice. When compared to normotensive diabetic rats (WKY-STZ), hypertensive diabetic rats (SHR-STZ) had an earlier and more rapid rise in urinary albumin excretion. In addition, SHR-STZ had increased glomerular basement membrane thickness when compared to WKY-STZ or SHR. In a separate experiment, Enalapril therapy (35 mg/L) was administered in drinking
water
to WKY-STZ and SHR-STZ. Enalapril significantly reduced blood pressure in both animal groups, and this was associated with a decrease in urinary albumin excretion. The SHR-STZ model has accelerated nephropathy as determined by both functional and structural parameters. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition is associated with a reduction in albuminuria in both hypertensive and normotensive models of
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Genetic hypertension accelerates nephropathy in the streptozotocin diabetic rat. 283 66
In 83 diabetic patients (23 of them were insulin-dependent) and 34 healthy subjects the influence of
water
immersion (WI) for 2 hrs on plasma renin activity (PRA), plasma aldosterone and vasopressin (AVP) level was examined. In both examined groups WI exerted a suppressive effect on PRA, plasma aldosterone and AVP level. In this respect only quantitative but not qualitative differences between diabetics and normals were observed. Presence of moderately advanced
diabetic nephropathy
and autonomic neuropathy influenced only slightly WI induced alterations of the renin-aldosterone system and AVP secretion. In all diabetic patients a defective volumetric mechanism of both the renin-aldosterone system and AVP secretion was stated. In addition in diabetic patients with late diabetic complications a defective osmotic mechanism of AVP secretion was observed. These findings suggest participation also of factors other than hypervolemia and decrease of the plasma osmolality in the mechanism of the observed WI induced suppression of the renin-angiotensin system and AVP secretion in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:[Effect of water immersion on plasma renin activity, vasopressin and aldosterone level in diabetics]. 331 Apr 25
The renal response to volume expansion produced by
water
immersion to the neck at 35 degrees C was examined in eight young normotensive uncomplicated insulin-dependent diabetic subjects and in eight matched normal control subjects. Both the diabetic and normal subjects manifested a renal response of natriuresis and kaliuresis on immersion, but the natriuretic response was reduced in the diabetic group. Thus the induced excretion of sodium over the 4 h of immersion was 40 +/- 5 mmol (mean +/- SEM) in the normal group compared with 22 +/- 4 mmol in the diabetic group (P less than 0.02). In the normal subjects creatinine clearance did not change during immersion compared with pre-immersion control values while in the diabetic group it rose from pre-immersion control values of 112 +/- 11 ml/min to a mean value of 127 +/- 11 ml/min during immersion (P less than 0.01). The diabetic subjects thus excreted less sodium despite an increased filtered load during
water
immersion. Fractional excretion of sodium was significantly reduced in the diabetic subjects compared with the normal control subjects (P less than 0.05). The suppression of plasma renin and aldosterone was similar in normal and diabetic groups. Tubular sodium retention could be an early functional change in the diabetic kidney, and be implicated in the development of
diabetic nephropathy
.
...
PMID:Impaired sodium excretion in response to volume expansion induced by water immersion in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 353 Jun 11
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