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)

Proteinuria has been analysed in 334 maturity-onset diabetics and 80 matched controls. Proteinuria measured in the recumbent position exceeded 100 mug/min in 53% of the diabetic population. The percentage of excessive proteinuria increased with duration of the disease. Sex and age had no influence. Out of 55 first year diabetics, 49% had abnormal quantitative proteinuria; this is in contrast to 76 longterm diabetics (over 12 years) of whom 38% had proteinuria under 100 mug/min. Electrophoresis and immuno-electrophoresis showed a glomerular pattern in 40%, a tubular pattern in 15% and a mixed pattern in 8% of all the diabetics. 32% of the diabetics with quantitatively normal proteinuria were abnormal qualitatively, and this may be the first manifestation of diabetic nephropathy. Thirty-eight other patients had a normal electrophoretic pattern in spite of increased proteinuria. Proteinuria levels were significantly associated with hematuria, bacteriuria and reduced GFR, but not with leukocyturia, insulin dependence and hypertension. Upright position increased the proteinuria to a greater degree amongst the patients with normal proteinuria. We discuss the role of increased filtration pressure and glomerular permeability in modifying proteinuria in diabetes. Sensitive quantitative and qualitative proteinuria determinations are important tools both in early diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy in clinical practice and in epidemiological studies.
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PMID:[Proteinuria in mature diabetic patients. Quantitative and qualitative analysis]. 121 95

Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition has shown promising results in diabetic nephropathy, but long-term results on survival are not available. In a cohort of patients receiving antihypertensive treatment predominantly consisting of beta blockers in combination with diuretics, support for an improved survival has been presented. Addition of ACE inhibition to such a combination treatment may be favorable both due to the suggested renoprotective effects of ACE inhibitors and because diuretics activate the renin-angiotensin system. In 10 insulin-dependent diabetic patients with early diabetic nephropathy [urinary albumin excretion rate (UAE) less than 100o micrograms/min], who were receiving continuous therapy with metoprolol and bendroflumethiazide, a double-blind crossover study with four months addition of ramipril 5 mg (Ramace) and placebo was conducted. UAE (radioimmunoassay) and fractional albumin excretion were significantly reduced after the four months of ramipril administration [UAE: 114.1 x/divided by 1.3 (geometric mean x/divided by confidence factor] versus 174.6 x/divided by 1.2 micrograms/min, 2P less than 0.005). Renal plasma flow (clearance of 131I-hippuran) tended to increase [497 +/- 25 (mean +/- SE) vs. 464 +/- 28 ml/min/1.73 m2, 2P = 0.08], while GFR (125I-iothalamate) stayed unchanged (121 +/- 8 vs. 120 +/- 9 ml/min/1.73 m2). Mean arterial pressure during clearance studies fell moderately (95 +/- 3 vs. 101 +/- 1 mm Hg, 2P less than 0.05) and renal resistance was decreased (2P less than 0.03). ACE activity was suppressed in all patients. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure measurements were not significantly different after the two periods (daytime averages: 91 +/- 2 vs. 93 +/- 2, nighttime 80 +/- 2 vs. 84 +/- 3 mm Hg).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of ACE inhibition supplementary to beta blockers and diuretics in early diabetic nephropathy. 135 49

A number of risk factors associated with the development of diabetic nephropathy has been described, such as elevated blood pressure, poor metabolic control, hyperlipidemia, and smoking. Abnormal albuminuria also is associated with progression of renal disease, but has until recently been considered principally a marker of disease activity rather than a risk factor. This article discusses the role of elevated blood pressure versus abnormal albuminuria in a genesis and prediction of renal disease in diabetes. Controversy exists regarding parental disposition to hypertension and early blood pressure elevation in the course of diabetes, but all studies agree that elevated blood pressure--in the presence of abnormal albuminuria--constitutes a risk factor. Because abnormal albuminuria is associated with progression disease, it may itself be a risk factor because increased macromolecular traffic over the glomerular membrane may produce glomerulopathy. Problems related to blood pressure measurement are important, and 24-h recordings of blood pressure may be recommended in some situations. Regarding renal structure, preliminary results suggest that structural lesions precede blood pressure elevation. The solid end point for evaluation of renal disease progression is the fall rate of GFR, with abnormal albuminuria as an intermediate end point, also in drug trials. Abnormal albuminuria may constitute a new indication for antihypertensive treatment, being, as it is, a clear indicator of organ damage, whereas elevated blood pressure with normal AER may not increase risk substantially.
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PMID:Blood pressure elevation versus abnormal albuminuria in the genesis and prediction of renal disease in diabetes. 139 16

Not all patients with diabetes develop clinically significant nephropathy and, for this reason, attention has begun to focus on the risk factors for development of this serious complication. These risk factors have not been quantified to the same degree as those factors associated with more common progressive vascular diseases, such as atherosclerosis. However, studies of pathogenesis and clinical and epidemiological surveys of diabetic nephropathy point to numerous risk categories. Glycemic control, genetic and familial predispositions, renal and glomerular enlargement, glomerular hyperfiltration, and capillary and systemic hypertension can be invoked as contributors to this disease process. This review focuses on hemodynamic alterations and their role in the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy. Increases in GFR, largely driven by increases in plasma flow and capillary pressure, appear in early IDDM and NIDDM. This abnormality of renal vascular control probably is derived from alterations in several vasoactive control systems. In addition, the elevations in capillary pressure may be damaging to the glomerular capillaries. Arterial hypertension is not necessarily present before clinical nephropathy appears; however, it is a usual concomitant of progressive diabetic renal disease. The strongest evidences for the roles of altered systemic and renal hemodynamics in the progression of diabetic renal disease are clinical and experimental studies demonstrating attenuation of the disease process by lowering systemic and capillary pressures with antihypertensive agents, and dietary and glycemic modifications. Thus, although multiple factors probably interact to determine risk for the development of diabetic nephropathy, hemodynamic forces are a particularly important contributor and are especially amenable to therapeutic intervention.
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PMID:Diabetic nephropathy. Metabolic versus hemodynamic considerations. 139 17

In 110 diabetics type I and type II and in 30 control subjects the total serum activity of NAG as well as of its isoenzymatic forms A and B was determined. In cases with diabetic nephropathy the GFR and serum creatinine was also analysed. It was found that NAG activity is correlated to the degree of clinical symptoms of diabetic vascular changes. Therefore it could be suggested that NAG plays a role in development of microangiopathy. NAG determination may also serve as an index differentiating the diabetic microangiopathy from other forms of microvessels.
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PMID:[Serum N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) activity in patients with diabetes mellitus with reference to diabetic microangiopathy]. 140 37

The effects of early glycosylation products (Amadori Products, AP) were investigated in male Munich-Wistar rats to establish whether AP play a role in the pathogenesis of glomerular hyperfiltration of early diabetic nephropathy. To mimic such a condition, normal rats were transfused with blood containing in vitro glycated serum (Group GLYC) to achieve plasma levels of Amadori products similar to those measured in rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Rats transfused with normal blood were used as control (Group CON). Glomerular hemodynamics was evaluated in basal condition (B) and during acute hyperglycemia (HG). Blood transfusion did not alter basal hemodynamics. In Group CON, HG determined a rise of single nephron GFR (41.4 +/- 3.2 vs. 32.1 +/- 1.8 nl/min, P less than 0.005), secondary to the increase of afferent effective filtration pressure (EFPa, +19% vs. B, P less than 0.01). Rats of Group GLYC, in B, had values of SNGFR higher than those of Group CON B (46.8 +/- 3 nl/min, P less than 0.05, ANOVA). This increase was mediated by a significant reduction of glomerular afferent arteriole (Ra, -38% vs. Group CON B, P less than 0.05), a rise in hydrostatic gradient pressure in glomerular capillaries (delta P, +17%, P less than 0.05) and of EFPa (+31%, P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Early glycosylation products induce glomerular hyperfiltration in normal rats. 145 82

The offspring of essential hypertensive parents have been found to exhibit abnormalities in renal hemodynamics and sodium handling before the eventual occurrence of hypertension. The reported abnormalities represent a wide spectrum of changes including increased GFR, normal or decreased RPF, slight increase in blood pressure (although within the normal range), and an exaggerated natriuresis response to a sodium load. The heterogeneity of these abnormalities may reflect the specific conditions of the studies, the lability of the changes, or different subgroups of subjects with genetic predisposition to essential hypertension. Several lines of evidence have suggested a relationship between hypertension and the development of diabetic nephropathy in insulin-dependent diabetics. This laboratory has found that recent-onset insulin-dependent diabetics can exhibit renal hemodynamics abnormalities very early in the course of diabetes according to a positive or negative family history of essential hypertension. These changes include increased GFR and mean arterial pressure, but no differences in renal sodium and lithium handling in diabetics with a genetic predisposition to essential hypertension. In addition, diabetics with a positive family history of essential hypertension exhibited a more-marked vasodilative response to an acute interruption of the renin-angiotensin system, further suggesting inadequate angiotensin modulation of renal vascular tone. The significance of these abnormalities in relation to the development of diabetic nephropathy requires further investigation.
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PMID:Predisposition to essential hypertension and renal hemodynamics in recent-onset insulin-dependent diabetic patients. 145 59

A placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial has been initiated to determine whether angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) therapy with captopril (25 mg three times daily) slows the progressive loss of renal function in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus. Entry criteria include; (1) ages 18 to 50 yr; (2) onset of insulin-dependent diabetes before the age of 30 yr, insulin dependent for at least 7 yr; (3) 24-h urine protein excretion > 500 mg, plus: (a) diabetic retinopathy or (b) if no retinopathy, a renal biopsy diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy; (4) serum creatinine (SCr) < 2.5 mg/dL; (5) informed consent. Patients follow strict medical management protocols. Systemic blood pressure is controlled to predefined goals (< 140-90 mm Hg). The primary outcome of the Study is a doubling of the patients' entry SCr to at least 2 mg/dL confirmed by a > 50% decrease in GFR by radioactive iothalamate clearance technique. Baseline characteristics of the cohort at entry into the Study are (mean +/- SD): male/female, 52%/48%; age, 35 +/- 8 yr; duration of diabetes, 21 +/- 7 yr; duration of proteinuria, 2.8 +/- 3.3 yr; duration of retinopathy, 4.5 +/- 4.1 yr; 50% of cohort presented with hypertension, duration, 4 +/- 4.7 yr; blood pressure, 139/86 +/- 19/12; SCr, 1.35 +/- 0.44 mg/dL; GFR 78 +/- 32 mL/min; BUN, 24 +/- 11 mg/dL; proteinuria, 3.1 +/- 3.3 g/day; cholesterol, 236 +/- 50 mg/dL; total glycosylated hemoglobin, 11.1 +/- 2.1%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A controlled clinical trial of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition in type I diabetic nephropathy: study design and patient characteristics. The Collaborative Study Group. 145 67

Plasma concentrations of lipids and apolipoproteins (Apo) were determined in 34 patients with long-standing type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. Twenty-four patients had renal insufficiency (GFR 4 to 55 ml/min) due to diabetic nephropathy, while 10 patients had no clinical signs of nephropathy. Results were compared with those in 42 non-diabetic patients with comparable degree of renal insufficiency and with asymptomatic control subjects. Diabetic patients without nephropathy had plasma lipid and apolipoprotein concentrations similar to those of the control subjects. Diabetic patients with renal insufficiency had a significant increase in triglycerides (TG) and, to a lesser extent, in total cholesterol (TC). The patients also had reduced levels of ApoA-I and ApoA-II, increased levels of ApoC-II and ApoC-III, while increases in levels of ApoB and ApoE were statistically significant in patients with GFR < 20 ml/min. These lipids and apolipoprotein abnormalities were accentuated with decreasing renal function. The reduction in the ApoA-I/ApoC-III ratio characteristic of renal insufficiency was found in normo- and hyper-TG diabetic patients with nephropathy; this ratio was correlated with the GFR levels. Patients with higher HbA1C values had higher levels of ApoC-II and ApoC-III. The findings in the diabetic patients corresponded with those in non-diabetic patients with renal insufficiency. However, diabetic patients had higher ApoC-III and ApoE levels. The abnormalities of lipid metabolism in diabetic renal insufficiency seem to reflect primarily metabolic impairments characteristic of renal insufficiency, but may be further accentuated by the diabetic state and the metabolic control.
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PMID:Dyslipoproteinemia in diabetic renal failure. 147 69

Glomerular hyperfiltration has been claimed to be a risk factor for the development of diabetic nephropathy. Protein intake and hyperglycemia can both increase GFR in diabetic and normal subjects. Our study was designed to explore the relative importance of short-term changes in protein intake and glycemia on the modulation of renal hemodynamics in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients with and without glomerular hyperfiltration. The renal hemodynamic response to a protein challenge was studied in eight hyperfiltering (HF) and eight normofiltering (NF) patients after a three week period of low or normal protein diet (LPD, NPD), each study being conducted twice, in random order, under conditions of prevailing hyperglycemia (H) and euglycemia (E). In HF patients GFR failed to increase significantly in response to protein challenge during NPD under conditions of either H or E (Baseline vs. 2 hr H: 151 +/- 4 vs. 155 +/- 6, NS; E 147 +/- 4 vs. 157 +/- 7 ml/min/1.73 m2, NS). A more normal response was restored following LPD with GFR increasing in all but one patient after challenge during H and in all patients during E (Baseline vs. 2 hr H: 130 +/- 7 vs. 145 +/- 8, P less than 0.07; E: 127 +/- 7 vs. 143 +/- 7 ml/min/1.73 m2, P less than 0.01). Changes in RPF paralleled the changes in GFR and filtration fraction remained stable under all study conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Protein intake and blood glucose as modulators of GFR in hyperfiltering diabetic patients. 150 18


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