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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Examination of glucose kinetics, pancreatic alpha and beta cell function, plasma lipids, urinary acidification and calcium excretion has been undertaken in a patient with hereditary fructose intolerance. This case was unusual as it was associated with insulin-requiring diabetes, type IV hyperlipemia, hypercalciuria and renal calculi. He also demonstrated the previously described fructose-induced defect of urine acidification. Glucagon and C-peptide assays showed that the pancreatic alpha cells were stimulated by fructose and that the beta cells did not respond to fructose. It is not known whether the latter was due to his diabetes or to the lack of a beta cell response to this sugar. Primed 14C-glucose infusions were used for the first time to study nonsteady state glucose kinetics in man. They showed that, 24 hours after the last insulin injection and under basal conditions, the glucose concentrations increased because glucose production exceeded glucose utilization. However, after the administration of sorbitol the plasma glucose concentration decreased because glucose production decreased. After the administration of sorbitol there was no change in the metabolic clearance of glucose. This reflects the lack of a peripheral insulin effect and is consistent with the lack of any measurable C-peptide. Glucose utilization also decreased, but this decrease was less than the decrease in glucose production. Because the metabolic clearance of glucose remained unchanged, it was concluded that the change in glucose utilization was solely due to the decrease in glucose concentration. The absence of C-peptide in the plasma indicated that changes in glucose turnover were not related to any changes in endogenous plasma insulin. Furthermore, the plasma glucagon concentration increased and, hence, changes in this hormone could not account for the decrease in glucose production. Therefore, it was concluded that the sorbitol-induced decline in glucose production was due to a direct effect on hepatic metabolism.
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PMID:Studies of glucose turnover and renal function in an unusual case of hereditary fructose intolerance. 1 54

Serum-lipid concentrations and their relationship to blood-glucose and serum-insulin were examined in non-insulin-requiring diabetics, 62 with and 45 without retinopathy. The age, sex-body-weight, and duration of known diabetes was comparable in the two groups. All were treated by diet only or diet and oral hypoglycaemic agents. Patients with retinopathy had higher fasting serumtriglyceride and serum--cholesterol levels than those without. Compared with a non-diabetic population, significantly more diabetics with retinopathy had raised derum-lipids. The lipid concentrations did not correlate with body-weight, serum-thyroid-stimulating-hormone levels, renal involvement, or fasting blood-sugar. While the blood-sugar concentrations were similiar in the two groups the absolute insulin increment and the relative insulin response to a 50 g. oral glucose load were significantly lower in those with retinopathy than in those without. The impairment of insulin response correlated significantly with the frequency of hyperlipidaemia. It is suggested that insulin deficiency with secondary hyperlipidaemia is characteristic of diabetic patients with retinopathy.
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PMID:Plasma-lipids and glucose/insulin relationship in non-insulin-requiring diabetics with and without retinopathy. 4 69

In order to study hyperlipidemia in diabetes mellitus, rats were made diabetic by administration of streptozotocin and the optimal conditions for production of severe and persistent hyperlipoprotenemia determined. Two groups of rats were compared: rats fed sucrose-rich diets and rats fed laboratory chow. The optimal dose of streptozotocin was 45 mg/kg body weight for the sucrose-fed rats. With this dose, plasma glucose reached a maximum of over 600 mg/100 ml., and plasma insulin was reduced by 60 per cent. Plasma triglycerides rose in the sucrose-fed rats to over 1,000 mg/100 ml. two days after the streptozotocin was given and then decreased to over 770 mg./100 ml. 12 days after treatment and then to 585 mg./100 ml. 10 weeks after induction of diabetes. With this dose, ketonuria did not occur nor did any of the animals die, as occurred with higher doses. In the chow-fed rats, plasma triglyceride levels were elevated with the induction of diabetes to levels of approximately 300 mg./100 ml. The concentration of all the plasma lipoproteins increased with the induction of diabetes. The concentration of very-low density lipoprotein (VLDL) protein in the sucrose-fed diabetic increased fivefold, the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) protein increased, and especially striking was the increase in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) protein concentration, which became more pronounced with the duration of the diabetes. The diabetes produced by streptozotocin administration to sucrose-fed rats, thus, provides a useful model for the study of the hyperlipoproteinemia of diabetes.
Diabetes 1976 Jun
PMID:Hyperlipoproteinemia in streptozotocin-treated rats. 13 80

From June, 1960, to January, 1976, 157 patients 65 years or older had elective operations with cardiopulmonary bypass. Ninety-three patients had one or two valves replaced, 47 had coronary artery surgery, and 17 had both. The operative mortality rate was 22.6 percent (21 of 93), 19.1 percent (nine of 47), and 5.8 percent (one of 17), respectively. The over-all mortality rate was 19.7 percent (31 of 157). The mortality rate of patients of 65 to 69 years of age was 20 percent (22 of 110) and 19 percent (9 of 47) in patients 70 years or more. Ninety-four of these operations were performed within the last 3 years, with a reduction in patients' mortality rate to 9.6 percent (nine of 94). A retrospective study revealed a significant correlation between operative mortality rate and preoperative heart size. We could find no correlation between operative mortality rate and diabetes, smoking history, or hyperlipidemia. The major causes of death were myocardial infarction (68 percent-21 of 31), pulmonary complications (35 percent-11 of 31), infections (29 percent-nine of 31), and renal failure (29 percent-nine of 31) or combinations thereof. The patients who died had 2.5 times the number of complications of the survivors. Ninety percent of our patients in the past 3 years have survived their operation. Therefore, elective cardiac operations can be performed with an acceptable mortality rate in patients over the age of 65 years.
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PMID:Cardiac surgery in geriatric patients. 13 63

The biological lipid levels and hyperglycaemia measured in patients of varying ages with retinal detachment have shown that:--in 59.7% there is a hyperlipaemia or hyperlipoproteinaemia. This is more usually a hyperpre-beta-lipoproteinaemia (37.1%);--in 32% a disturbance of lipid metabolism was associated with a disturbance of glucose metabolism: diabetes or a pre-diabetic state;--49% of patients affected with hyperlipidaemia present with a clinical vascular condition;--42% of all the patients present with a clinical vascular condition. The numbers are considerable and they show the frequency of atherogenic factors in retinal detachment.
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PMID:[The frequency of alterations of the lipid and hydrocarbon levels in retinal detachment]. 14 60

The female patient initially showed the acquired type of total lipoatrophy at about 8 years of age. At 12 years of age, the onset of diabetes mellitus was speculated from advanced pyodermia and dedentition. At 29 years of age, glucosuria was found, and she developed proteinuria, ascites, and pretibial edema. The physical examination revealed: hepatosplenomegaly, complete absence of subcutanous fat, cutaneous xanthomas, and emaciated facies with pronounced zygomatic arches. Diabetic retinopathy was revealed in the ophthalmological examination, and nephropathy was evident in renal biopsy specimens. She also had peripheral diabetic neuropathy. No adipose tissue was found in the mesenterium under peritoneoscopy. The hepatic biopsy specimen revealed advanced portal liver cirrhosis. Laboratory findings included: hyperlipidemia, elevation of BMR without evidence of hyperthyroidism, impaired renal function, and undetected anti-insulin antibodies and anti-insulin antibodies. Endocrinological examinations revealed normal value, except for an impaired hGH response in the arginine test. C-peptide immunoreactivity was high. Her condition was fairly well controlled by 140 units of insulin injection daily.
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PMID:Lipoatrophic diabetes. Report of a case. 15 92

An intravenous injection of 40 or 65 mg/kg streptozotocin induced not only diabetes but also severe hypertension in rats. Whereas the hyperglycemia developed fully within a few days after the injection of streptozotocin, the hypertension progessively advanced and reached maximum level several weeks after the treatment and lasted more than 20 weeks. Twenty mg/kg streptozotocin did not induce hyperglycemia but significantly increased blood pressure several weeks after the treatment. Arrest of growth, polyuria, glycosuria, hyperlipemia and lenticular cataracts developed in the animals treated with 40 or 65 mg/kg streptozotocin, but in none of the animals treated with 20 mg/kg. In histological examinations in the 24th week after the treatment, degranulation and necrosis in the pancreatic beta-cells, and vacuolization and deposition of PAS-positive materials in the renal proximal tubules were found in the animals treated with 40 or 65 mg/kg streptozotocin.
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PMID:Chronic hypertension induced by streptozotocin in rats. 15 77

221 patients with arterial hypertension were investigated as outpatients. 198 patients were found to have primary and 23 patients to have secondary hypertension. The results of urinary analysis were pathological in 25% of patients and renal function tests were abnormal in 20% of cases. Significant bacteriuria was recorded in 19% of urinary cultures. Intravenous pyelography showed true pathological findings in 12% of cases, false positive findings in 7% and false negative findings in 5%. Isotopic nephrograms showed true positive findings in 52%, false negative in 3% and 45% showed normal results. In 53% of patients angiography of the kidneys showed normal results, whilst this investigation proved pathological in 44% of cases and gave false negative results in 3% of patients. An additional search for coronary heart disease risk factors revealed that 73% of these hypertensive patients were overweight, 47% had hyperlipidaemia, 33% suffered from diabetes mellitus and nicotine abuse was present in 21% of cases. A relevant yet inexpensive screening programme for the investigation of hypertension is formulated on the basis of the results of this investigation.
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PMID:[The value of different investigation procedures in arterial hypertension (author's transl)]. 15 88

A female patient with the following symptoms has been observed: complete absence of subcutaneous fat on the arms and legs, well developed adipose tissue on the trunk and face, severe hyperlipidemia, eruptive xanthomas, insulin resistant diabetes mellitus with lack of ketoacidosis, hepatomegaly and elevated basal metabolic rate. The patient thus exhibited all characteristics of lipatrophic diabetes (Lawrence type of diabetes). The mother and a sister of the patient were found to have the same peculiar appearance and a slight hyperlipidemia but no diabetes mellitus. The combination of this type of partial lipodystrophy with severe hyperlipidemia, insulin resistant diabetes mellitus without ketoacidosis and elevated basal metabolic rate was further observed in 2 unrelated patients without known familial occurrence. Thus partial lipodystrophy of the extremities is another, previously undescribed, syndrome associated with the Lawrence type of diabetes mellitus. In the 1 family the syndrome of lipodystrophy and hyperlipidemia is dominantly inherited. Besides the autosomal recessively inherited syndrome of congenital generalized lipodystrophy there is a heterogenous group of dominantly inherited syndromes with various types of lipodystrophy.
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PMID:Lipodystrophy of the extremities. A dominantly inherited syndrome associated with lipatrophic diabetes. 17 Jan 90

We investigated the possibility of a drug interaction between the antilipemic agent halofenate and sulfonylureas. Twelve young, healthy men were given 1 g of tolbutamide by mouth before and after 12 days of double-blind treatment with 1 g per day of halofenate, or placebo. There was a significant increase in serum tolbutamide at eight, 10 and 12 hours (P less than 0.01) and a significant (P less than 0.01) decrease in serum glucose at one, four and six hours after halofenate treatment, but not after placebo. In a long-term, double-blind study of halofenate or clofibrate treatment of patients with Type IV hyperlipoproteinemia, diabetic patients receiving a sulfonylurea and halofenate either required a reduction in the dose of the sulfonylurea or demonstrated significantly improved control of hyperglycemia (P less than 0.05) or both. No appreciable decrease in serum glucose levels was noted in diabetic patients receiving sulfonylurea and clofibrate. This interaction between halofenate and sulfonylureas is clinically important, especially in view of the association of hyperlipemia and diabetes.
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PMID:Potentiation of hypoglycemic effect of sulfonylureas by halofenate. 17 74


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