Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The precise pathogenesis of human diabetic kidney disease and the factors responsible for the susceptibility to it remain to be established. However, there is now evidence that renal disease clusters in families and that genetic factors are of central importance in determining liability. A predisposition to arterial hypertension has been suggested as playing a contributory role in the development of kidney disease. Genetically controlled hypertrophic processes may be implicated in the susceptibility to arterial wall damage and glomerular injury in diabetes. This suggestion derives from the observation that the fibroblasts of patients with diabetic nephropathy show a higher Na+/H+ antiport activity and a greater 3H-thymidine incorporation into DNA than fibroblasts of diabetic patients without nephropathy. The first sign of renal damage is the appearance of microalbuminuria and of a small elevation in arterial pressure, changes associated with significant mesangial expansion. Microalbuminuria is associated with abnormalities of lipoprotein profiles possibly as a consequence of insulin-resistance-induced hyperinsulinemia. It could be postulated that the environmental changes brought about by diabetes lead in susceptible individuals to increased systemic and intraglomerular pressure on the one hand and mesangial expansion on the other. These two processes would cause proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis. Lipid abnormalities would further aggravate the renal histological damage and, in combination with hypertension, contribute to the accelerated atherosclerosis typical of patients with diabetic kidney disease. A vicious circle would thus be triggered of reduction in renal function, more hypertension, more proteinuria, more glomerular obsolence, more hyperlipidemia and eventually end-stage renal failure or premature cardiovascular death.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of diabetic renal and cardiovascular disease. 207 90

The role of specific risk factors in the development of diabetic nephropathy was examined among noninsulin-dependent diabetic subjects attending the Diabetes Clinic of Christian Medical College Hospital, Vellore during 1986-87. Seventy-three subjects with normal protein excretion (less than 150 mg/24 hr) were compared with 66 microproteinuric (150-500 mg/24 hr) and 61 macroproteinuric subjects (greater than 500 mg/24 hr). The risk factors included family history of diabetes, tobacco use, dietary habits and metabolic control; the latter was assessed from an average of 5 clinic blood sugar determinations done annually per patient. Patients who had developed proteinuria were characterized as mostly men, with increased tobacco consumption and early onset of proteinuria in relation to duration of diabetes. The mean blood sugar value was significantly high in both the proteinuric groups compared to the group with no proteinuria (p less than 0.01). There was a striking increase in the prevalence of ischemic heart disease, hypertension and retinopathy in the macroproteinuric group compared to the other two groups (p less than 0.01). It is concluded that the risk of developing nephropathy was significantly higher in men, in smokers and in those with poor metabolic control (mean postprandial blood sugar more than 200 mg/dL). Furthermore, it was clearly evident from our study that the diabetic subjects with nephropathy had a higher incidence of hypertension, retinopathy, hyperlipidemia and ischemic heart diseases.
...
PMID:Nephropathy in noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: comparative study with normoproteinuric and microproteinuric subjects. 214 34

Hypertension and diabetes mellitus are chronic medical conditions that frequently coexist. In the United States, it is estimated that 10 million persons suffer from diabetes mellitus, 60 million from hypertension, and 3 million from the combination of the two. There may be a causal relationship between hypertension and diabetes. Obesity may be a precipitating factor for both hypertension and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Those with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus generally become hypertensive only with the onset of nephropathy. Glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, and hyperinsulinemia frequently occur with essential hypertension and may be aggravated by hypertension therapy, especially with diuretics and beta-blockers. Hyperinsulinemia may be an important common factor promoting sodium retention, sympathetic nervous system stimulation, and inhibition of the sodium pump. The Working Group on Hypertension in Diabetes has outlined a flexible modified version of the stepped-care approach to the treatment of hypertension in diabetes. Management is complex because diabetes is associated with autonomic neuropathy, sexual dysfunction, hyperlipidemia, and fluid and electrolyte disorders. All these problems can be exacerbated by antihypertensive treatment. Nonpharmacologic measures, which address weight reduction and sodium restriction, are logical, but aggressive antihypertensive medication is invariably necessary. Diuretics and/or beta-blockers were the mainstay of treatment until the introduction of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and calcium channel blockers. These newer agents have no deleterious effects on carbohydrate metabolism and are generally better tolerated. Antihypertensive therapy may slow the rate of deterioration in diabetic nephropathy. This was first shown with diuretics, beta-blockers, and hydralazine and more recently with ACE inhibitors, which provide effective blood pressure control and a significant drop in albuminuria without affecting the glomerular filtration rate adversely. ACE inhibition may also lead to increased insulin sensitivity and glucose disposal rate. Long-term trials are needed to assess the effects of these new agents on the treatment of hypertension in the diabetic population.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and hypertension. 222 Jul 97

The mechanisms responsible for hyperfiltration in diabetes mellitus (DM) as well as for the initiation and progression of diabetic nephropathy are not fully elucidated. Enhanced prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production has been invoked in the former and thromboxane (TXB2) and hyperlipidemia in the latter. Fish oil (FO)-enriched diets can favorably alter eicosanoid synthesis and serum lipid profiles. We therefore examined the effects of a FO-enriched diet on glomerular filtration (GFR), proteinuria, glomerular eicosanoid production, and serum lipids in rats with streptozotocin-induced DM (STZ-DM). Groups of 5-8 rats with STZ-DM were maintained on low insulin and then pair-fed with isocaloric diets enriched with either FO (20% w/w) or beef tallow (BT; 20% w/w). GFR was determined in the same animals at onset of diet and after 8 and 20 weeks on the respective diets by [14C]inulin clearance using implanted osmotic minipumps each time. Significant hyperfiltration was present initially and GFR did not change on either diet for 20 weeks, in spite of a significant and greater than 50% decrease in all prostaglandins (PGE2, TXB2, PGF2 alpha, 6-keto, PGF1 alpha) produced by glomeruli isolated from DM/FO as compared to DM/BT or control rats. FO diet completely corrected the hypertriglyceridemia of diabetes and significantly reduced the mild and early proteinuria of DM. The decrease in proteinuria and the correction of hyperlipidemia of DM by a FO-enriched diet may be beneficial in the long term not only for the development of diabetic glomerulopathy, but also for the accelerated atherosclerosis of DM.
...
PMID:Effects of fish oil on glomerular function in rats with diabetes mellitus. 240 55

In an 11-year study of experimental insulin-deficient diabetes (IDDM) induced in rhesus monkeys by streptozotocin or total pancreatectomy, the authors have found that pathophysiologic changes occur in eye and kidney, which closely resemble the early stages of human insulin deficient diabetes mellitus (IDDM). In addition, morphologic changes of thickening of glomerular capillary basement membrane and expansion of mesangial matrix (by light microscopy) appear within 3 years of onset of hyperglycemia. However, progression to irreversible complications of advanced diabetic nephropathy or proliferative retinopathy, have not occurred. This animal model resembles human disease in that the animals tend to become ketotic unless maintained with exogenous insulin; C-peptide production is low to absent, and large amounts of glycosylated hemoglobin develop within a month of onset. The monkeys differ from humans in the absence of hypertension and hyperlipidemia. The authors suggest that the abnormalities in basement membrane form and function caused by hyperglycemia form the necessary background upon which other factors, such as hypertension and hyperlipidemia, then act to cause irreversible complications. The role of pancreatic transplantation is in prevention of these background changes.
...
PMID:The pathophysiology of experimental insulin-deficient diabetes in the monkey. Implications for pancreatic transplantation. 388 Oct 92

The prevalence of hypertension was studied in 374 patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and in 1197 non-diabetic controls. The diagnosis of hypertension was made when the mean systolic pressure of three measurements on different occasions was 151 mmHg or greater, or the mean diastolic pressure was 91 mmHg or greater. The prevalence was 42.8% in the diabetics and 17.8% in the controls. It showed a significant difference over age 31 (p less than 0.05). Proteinuria (p less than 0.001), abnormal ECG (p less than 0.01), hyperlipidemia (p less than 0.05) and hypertensive or sclerotic changes of the retina (p less than 0.001) were more frequently observed in the diabetics than in the controls. Hypertension was found in 71% of those with proteinuria, 48% with diabetic retinopathy, 61% with abnormal ECG and 54% with hyperlipidemia in the diabetics. The incidence of proteinuria was 22.8% in the diabetic hypertensives and was 8.3% in the non-diabetic hypertensives (p less than 0.001). 24 subjects out of 119 diabetics, who were normotensive at their initial visits, became hypertensive within 10 years (N-H), and 95 remained normotensive (N-N). 38% of N-H showed proteinuria already on their initial examinations and 3% of N-N did. 73% of those who showed proteinuria on their initial examination became hypertensive and 13% of those who were free from proteinuria did (p less than 0.001). The results suggest that diabetic nephropathy plays an important role in developing hypertension in diabetics.
...
PMID:Prevalence of hypertension in diabetes mellitus--its relation to diabetic nephropathy. 399 82

A number of fine bands which occur in positions between the beta- and pre-beta-lipoproteins in polyacrylamide gell electrophresis are called mid-bands (MB). In this study, the relationship between the occurrence of these MB and metabolic abnormalities or vascular complications was evaluated in 181 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). The incidence of MB in diabetic patients was significantly higher than that in 149 healthy control subjects (35 vs. 20%, p < 0.01). Analysis according to the type of MB revealed that the incidence of the central type in diabetic patients was significantly higher than that in healthy control subject (11 vs. 5%, p < 0.05). When the values of HbAlc were elevated, the incidence of MB and its central type slightly increased. The occurrence of the lower type of MB showed no relationship with the levels of HbAlc. The incidence of MB and its central type were significantly higher in patients with type IIb hyperlipidemia (86 and 41%, respectively) and with type IV hyperlipidemia (63 and 25%) than in those with normolipidemia (21 and 5%) (p < 0.01 of all). The incidence of the lower type of MB was significantly higher in patients with type IIa hyperlipidemia (25%) and with type IIb hyperlipidemia (36%) than in those with normolipidemia (11%) (p < 0.05, p < 0.01, respectively). There was no significant difference in the occurrences of MB and of the central and lower types of MB between the normolipidemic patients and healthy control subjects. The incidence of MB and its central type were significantly higher in patients with nephropathy (54 and 23%, respectively) than in those without nephropathy (32 and 9%) (p < 0.05 of all). There was no significant difference in the incidence of lower type of MB between patients with and without nephropathy. These results indicate that the incidence of central type of MB may be high in NIDDM, and that the occurrence of central type may be associated with abnormal metabolism of glucose or lipid and with diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:Three types of "mid-band" lipoproteins in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: relation to metabolic abnormalities and vascular complications. 781 88

In addition to factors such as protein intake or hyperlipidemia, hypertension contributes to the progressive deterioration of renal function in experimental animal models of renal disease, and has a prominent role in the imbalance of intrarenal hemodynamics. Reduction of arterial pressure was shown to alter the course of human chronic renal disease. In patients with diabetic as well as nondiabetic nephropathy, the lowering of proteinuria by angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors is greater than that observed with other antihypertensive drugs and appears to be independent of blood pressure control alone, whereas albuminuria may be unaffected or worsened during nifedipine treatment. Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors may afford better protection than conventional treatment at various stages of diabetic nephropathy and prevent the evolution from incipient to overt nephropathy. In patients with nondiabetic renal disease, no unequivocal evidence exists for such a protective effect. In renal transplant recipients receiving cyclosporine, converting enzyme inhibitors and calcium antagonists are equally effective in the control of hypertension and both leave unaltered the glomerular filtration rate. It remains to be demonstrated, using adequate study designs, whether a particular class of agent is superior to another in patients with chronic renal disease.
...
PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors versus calcium antagonists in the progression of renal diseases. 781 39

Patients with diabetes mellitus are more frequently hypertensive than age-matched non-diabetic subjects. They are confronted with a markedly increased risk of coronary vascular disease, of progressive nephropathy and renal end-stage diseases. The most common type of hypertension in type I and type II diabetics is essential hypertension, probably as a consequence of insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia. Hyperglycemia and hypertension are both significantly involved in the progression of diabetic nephropathy. Hence, the modern therapeutic concept consists of optimal blood glucose control and strict blood pressure control. Progression of the nephropathy may be halted in most of the cases by adhering to set limits in mean arterial blood pressure, glycated hemoglobin and urinary albumin excretion rate. Furthermore, a significant decrease in cardiovascular mortality may be achieved. In case the blood pressure targets cannot be met by non-drug therapies and life-style modifications, antihypertensive drug therapy has to be initiated. The selection of antihypertensives should be based on the concomitant diabetes mellitus with its additional cardiovascular risk factors hyperlipidemia and hyperinsulinemia. In general, preference should be given to so-called metabolic neutral substances such as ACE inhibitors or calcium antagonists or to alpha-blockers which may have positive metabolic effects. Meanwhile, data from several prospective studies claim that ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists exert nephroprotective effects beyond their beneficial blood pressure lowering effects, thereby preventing the progression of diabetic nephropathy. However, these drugs should not be uncritically used and we should be aware of their potential adverse effects. The differential therapy of hypertension in diabetes mellitus requires mature consideration before initiation of therapy, an individualized concept of therapy, and careful monitoring during treatment.
...
PMID:[Hypertension, microalbuminuria and insulin resistance in diabetes mellitus]. 784 97

The effect of 3 months feeding with diets of different protein and sucrose content (9% casein + 70% sucrose vs. 18% casein + 61% sucrose) on the development of diabetic nephropathy and changes in serum lipid spectrum was investigated in rats with insulin-dependent diabetes (streptozotocin 45 mg.kg-1). Metabolism of diabetic animals (before the nutritional regimen) was characterized by hyperglycaemia, moderate hyperlipidemia, lipid accumulation in the liver and elevated creatinine concentration in the blood. Kidney weight and protein content were not significantly changed. Histological picture of kidneys showed initial changes of glomerular structure. After three months hyperlipoproteinaemia was more accentuated in animals given either of the two diets, the kidneys were hypertrophic with a higher protein content and displayed morphological changes of diabetic nephropathy. Animals given the low-protein diet developed smaller morphological changes both in glomeruli and tubuli. The study indicates that dietary protein and not hyperlipoproteinaemia is the major factor, which may significantly influence the progress of diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:The effect of dietary protein and sucrose on the diabetic rat kidney. 805 34


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>