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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Basal and reactive peripheral hyperinsulinism recorded in alcoholic hepatic disease may result from decreased hepatic breakdown or pancreatic hypersecretion. C-peptide (
CPR
) and insulin (IRI) concentrations were measured in 3 groups of 8 alcoholic patients--steatosis, compensated and decompensated
cirrhosis
--and compared with 8 normal subjects in order to determine the importance of these two possibilities. At basal state, the molar ratio
CPR
/IRI was near the normal (8.7 +/- 0.9) but is diminished in the 8 hyperinsulinaemic patients (5.9 +/- 0.6). After i.v. glucose tolerance test and tolbutamide stimulations, an hyperreactivity of IRI and
CPR
may be noted in cirrhotics. A relative insensitivity of the B-cell to glucose appeared after comparison with the effect of tolbutamide. Thus basal hyperinsulinism resulted of decreased hepatic breakdown and stimulated hyperinsulinism resulted of hypersecretion. Glucose intolerance and anomalies of the insulin secretion were more apparent with severe hepatic disease.
...
PMID:[Insulin secretion in alcoholic hepatopathy: analysis by measurement of C-peptide (author's transl)]. 73 68
Of the many information obtainable from the urine of diabetic patients, urinary C-peptide (
CPR
), albumin and anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) were representatively described using my clinical and experimental data. C-peptide excretion in 24h collection of urine is a good estimate of insulin secretion from the pancreas and thus low in IDDM patients and even in NIDDM patients at a later stage, but high in pathological conditions including Graves' disease, obesity,
liver cirrhosis
and Cushing's syndrome. Urinary albumin excretion in small amounts (microalbuminuria) is usually observed in diabetic patients who have been under a poor control state of diabetic hyperglycemia for over 5 years and provides a good tool for monitoring early diabetic nephropathy. The grade of microalbuminuria (30-300 mg/day) is positively correlated with the HbA1 level in diabetic patients, showing that microalbuminuria is reversible along with an improvement of diabetic control at least in an early phase of diabetic nephropathy. As the albumin level measured in a spot urine sample correlates well with the value in the 24h collection of urine, the albumin measurement is conveniently feasible with a spot urine sample at every patient's visit. The amount of ADH excreted in urine is 7-10% of that secreted from the posterior pituitary. The excretion of ADH in a day was in the urine of diabetic patients positively correlated with HbA1, urinary osmolarity and concentration of sodium in urine, although the pathological meaning of the observed ADH hypersecretion in the development of diabetic complications is currently unknown.
...
PMID:[Pathophysiological analysis of diabetes mellitus and complications from the urine of diabetic patients]. 150 92
Plasma level of immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and C-peptide (
CPR
), and their responses to intravenous administration of glucagon were studied in 37 patients with cirrhotic portal hypertension during hepatic vein catheterization. IRI and
CPR
in peripheral vein and hepatic vein were compared with development of portal vein collaterals measured by indocyanine green disappearance tests and portal venograms. In additional 2 cases, the values were compared with those of portal vein blood obtained by percutaneous transhepatic catheterization. Plasma IRI of peripheral vein in cirrhotic patients, those who had only esophageal varices but did not have remarkable amount of portal vein collateral blood flow, revealed the changes closely resembling the controls. On the contrary, peripheral vein IRI elevated significantly in cirrhotics with large shunt and the values exceeded those of hepatic vein, although responses to the glucagon test were normal. In experimental study using dogs, peripheral IRI revealed significant increase after the portocaval anastomosis diverting the portal blood containing high IRI into the inferior vena cava, and the values exceeded those of hepatic vein. It is important to know the development of portal vein collaterals as a major cause of hyperinsulinemia in
liver cirrhosis
.
...
PMID:[Clinical and experimental studies on elevated plasma level of insulin in cirrhotic patients with portal hypertension and portosystemic collateral circulation]. 637 13
In order to clarify the mechanism of insulin secretion, responses of insulin (IRI) and C-peptide (
CPR
) in plasma to various stimuli were investigated in normal subjects and patients with diabetes mellitus,
liver cirrhosis
, chronic nephritis or insulinoma. The response of plasma IRI and
CPR
to oral glucose load was less marked in the mild and moderate diabetes groups than in the normal controls. Neither IRI nor
CPR
in the severe diabetes group responded to oral glucose. The patients with
liver cirrhosis
revealed an exaggerated and delayed response of IRI and
CPR
, and a lowered
CPR
/IRI ratio, indicating a remarkable response of IRI to glucose. In contrast, the patients with chronic nephritis showed a prominent rise of
CPR
alone. In the insulinoma patients, both plasma IRI and
CPR
increased after glucose load. In the response to glucose, there was approximately 30-min lag time between the peaks of IRI and
CPR
in the normal controls and the patients with various diseases. Following arginine infusion, plasma IRI and
CPR
increased in the normal subjects and the patients with moderate diabetes. In the normal subjects, plasma IRI reached a peak at 6 min and 3 min in response to tolbutamide and glucagon, respectively, which elicit an abrupt and sharp rise of insulin from B-cells. However, diabetic patients showed a minimal change in plasma IRI and
CPR
, whereas there was an exaggerated response of plasma IRI and
CPR
in insulinoma patients. In analysis of responses of plasma IRI and
CPR
to tolbutamide or glucagon, there was a lag time longer than 10 min in the normal subjects. The present study confirms the concurrent release of C-peptide from the B-cells in the secretion of insulin. In addition, it was suggested that insulin and C-peptide are mainly handled in the liver and the kidney, respectively. Furthermore, a longer lag time between the peaks of IRI and
CPR
in response to tolbutamide or glucagon did not necessarily indicate a simultaneous release of insulin and C-peptide from the B-cell, but a delayed release of the latter.
...
PMID:Analysis of insulin secretion based on changes in plasma insulin and C-peptide in man. 676 99