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The relationship of survival to systemic and ocular factors in diabetic persons was studied using data collected as part of the Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy. Six years after the baseline examination, 9.5% of 996 insulin-taking people who were younger than age 30 years when their diabetes was diagnosed (younger onset) had died. Of 1370 people whose diabetes was diagnosed after age 30 years (older onset), 35.3% had died. After adjusting for age and sex, longer duration of diabetes, presence of proteinuria, a history of cardiovascular disease, higher blood pressure, diuretic use, a history of smoking, poorer visual acuity, and more severe retinopathy were significantly associated with decreased survival in both groups. Glaucoma was associated with decreased survival in the younger onset group and cataract in the older onset group. These findings suggest that some ocular complications are important risk indicators for death. Their presence in diabetic patients suggests the need for frequent examinations to detect systemic complications and to intervene to minimize their effect.
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PMID:Relation of ocular and systemic factors to survival in diabetes. 291 72

The natural history of brittle diabetes is unknown. We have followed up 13 patients with disabling brittle diabetes unresponsive to continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) for 3-6 yr. All were young, C-peptide deficient females. One patient has died (of hypoglycaemia). In the others, disruption of life has generally lessened, but only one patient is currently considered metabolically stable. Insulin treatment regimens have included long-term intravenous insulin infusions and intraperitoneal insulin, but all but four have now reverted to subcutaneous injections. Eleven patients intermittently required greater than 200 U/day of insulin and two have needed greater than 1,000 U/day. Insulin dosages have fallen significantly during follow-up (from 6.8 +/- 3.1 to 1.4 +/- 0.3 U/kg/day). Diabetic complications, initially present in only 2 cases (1 cataract, 1 proliferative retinopathy), have now developed in 5 others (2 background retinopathy, 1 proliferative retinopathy, 1 mixed peripheral neuropathy and 1 intermittent proteinuria). Psychosocial disturbance and non-compliance were common. We conclude that brittleness generally seems to improve, which probably explains the scarcity of older brittle patients. However, these patients are at considerable risk from diabetes, its complications and its treatment.
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PMID:The natural history of brittle diabetes. 304 51

A 7-year-old boy presented with a history of postprandial vomiting, failure to thrive, hematuria, proteinuria and decreased renal function. Electron microscopy of a renal biopsy specimen demonstrated the typical glomerular basement membrane changes associated with Alport's syndrome. Audiometry revealed a moderate bilateral high-tone sensorineural hearing loss. Bilateral anterior lenticonus and a unilateral cataract were also diagnosed. Achalasia diagnosed radiologically and confirmed by biopsy was corrected by surgery. Evaluations of the parents and three siblings were negative. The patient subsequently developed end-stage renal failure. This case report and a review of the literature suggest that achalasia may be part of Alport's syndrome in some patients.
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PMID:Alport's syndrome and achalasia. 315 32

A thirty-three-year-old male with Lowe's syndrome had cataract; nystagmus, buphthalmos, prominent frontal bossing, growth and mental retardation, aminoaciduria, proteinuria, rickets, areflexia, genu valgum, piercing cry and head-banging being among the presenting features. The rickety changes improved over a period of years with the administration of vitamin D2. Pathological changes include: (1) tubular damage in the kidneys and hypertrophies of Bowman's capsules; (2) small brain with ventricular dilatation with thickened meninges, small corpus callosum, small size of pyramidal tracts and medial leminisci, neurofibrillary tangles in the pyramidal cells of the Ammon's horn and frontal lobe; (3) eye changes of buphthalmos, congenital cataracts and thickening of Descemet's membrane; (4) testicular atrophy--both testes showing peritubular fibrosis with an increase of fibrous tissue in the interstitial tissue. Azoospermia was present linked with poor development of spermatogonia and spermatocytes. The lumina of the seminiferous tubules were filled with foamy exudate.
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PMID:Clinicopathological studies of oculo cerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe, Terrey and MacLachlan. 738 30

Clinical renal abnormalities, including haematuria, proteinuria, abnormal urinary sediment, decreased renal functions and hypertension are relatively common in children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). These findings may be due to renal amyloidosis or administration of drugs that are potentially nephrotoxic. The case of an 11 years old boy diagnosed as JRA at 4.5 months of age and treated with steroids for 10 years is presented. In his history he had hypertension for 5 years and cataract for one year. Renal biopsy was done to evaluate the aetiology for proteinuria, which was overlooked before his admission to our Department. Secondary renal amyloidosis due to JRA was found at biopsy. The importance of investigation for amyloidosis during the long-term follow-up of JRA is reemphasized.
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PMID:Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis and renal amyloidosis (case report). 759 86

Experimental work in our laboratory has confirmed the protective activity of vanadium compounds on hyperglycemia and glycosuria in streptozotocin (STZ) diabetes. Furthermore, diabetic cataract has also been partially prevented. Nevertheless, the combination of a natural antioxidant, vitamin E, with Na3 VO4 has not further enhanced this ameliorating effect. Our experimental approach has been an attempt to block the prooxidant activity of both STZ and vanadate, with the purpose of eliciting the best possible antidiabetic protection. More recently, a lipid soluble synthetic antioxidant U-78517F, a 2-methylaminochroman, has been reported to have a significant protective effect against brain injury and ischemia. This compound inhibits the iron-dependent lipid peroxidation 100 times more effectively than vitamin E. This investigation has introduced a combination of the vanadium compound plus the aforesaid lazaroid, as its (-) enantiomer, U-83836E, in order to improve the insufficient protection when vitamin E was used. For twelve weeks, male Wistar rats, rendered diabetic with STZ, were administered Na3VO4 in drinking water along with the lazaroid carried by the food. Four, eight and twelve weeks after the beginning of the protective treatment, fluid and food intake, diuresis and excreted feces, glycosuria and proteinuria were determined on biological samples obtained in metabolic cages; body weight and glycemia were also recorded. At weeks 6 and 12 of the treatment, the opaqueness of the eye lenses was controlled and registered. At the end of the experiment, circulating glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), fructosamine, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), and fluorescent peroxides were evaluated. Within the first month of treatment, protection by the combination paralleled that elicited by vanadate alone. At subsequent steps, U-83836E significantly improved the protective effect of vanadate alone on polydipsia and polyuria, but especially on hyperglycemia and glycosuria. The further ameliorating effect of the lazaroid was also observed on HbA1c and NAG, and, most important, on the cataract. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that the lazaroid U-83836E succeeds in further protecting the most important symptoms of diabetes treated with vanadate, and that this antioxidant acts effectively even when it is administered orally in food, in a non invasive manner.
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PMID:Amelioration of diabetes and cataract by Na3VO4 plus U-83836E in streptozotocin treated rats. 782 6

Sixty-three patients, (52 males and 11 females) from 28 kindreds of hereditary nephritis (Alport's syndrome) were identified over a 14-year period from 1977 to 1991. Group I included 51 patients with (a) positive family history of haematuria with or without chronic renal failure, (b) characteristic GBM changes on electron-microscopy, (c) characteristic ocular signs, and (d) high-frequency sensorineural deafness. Group II included 12 patients with a negative family history. All of them had evidence of renal disease with characteristic ocular signs and deafness and four had characteristic GBM changes on electron-microscopy. The main clinical features were haematuria in 96.8%, deafness in 82.5%, and diminished visual acuity in 66.7% of affected subjects. Hypertension was present in 71.4% patients. Pure tone audiometry revealed high-frequency sensorineural deafness in 96.8%. Ocular examination showed bilateral anterior lenticonus in 37.8%, retinal flecks in 22.2%, cataract in 20%, and keratoconus in 6.7% patients. Proteinuria (> 2.0 g/24 h) was detected in 31.8%. Sixteen (57.1%) of the 28 index patients (all males) were diagnosed for the first time when they presented with end-stage renal disease. Serum creatinine in the overall group ranged from 0.9 to 18.7 mg/dl(7.81 +/- 5.37 mg/dl). Adequate renal tissue was obtained by biopsy in 14 patients. Light-microscopy revealed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in five, mesangial proliferation in four, chronic interstitial nephritis in three, and mesangiocapillary and crescentic glomerulonephritis in one each. Electron-microscopy showed characteristic changes in the GBM in seven specimens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hereditary nephritis (Alport's syndrome)--clinical profile and inheritance in 28 kindreds. 841 53

On the whole, diabetic microangiopathy can be understood as the clinical renal-retinal syndrome. About 10% of all diabetics die of end-stage renal failure, more frequent in IDDM. With an incidence of 14% diabetic retinopathy is one of the major causes of blindness in adulthood. In the non-proliferative state, the pathological changes are limited to the retina, whereas the alterations affect both retina and vitreous in the proliferative state. Photocoagulation is the treatment of choice. If photocoagulatory treatment is not possible because of cataract, vitreous surgery (pars-plana vitrectomy) could improve visual prognosis. The clinical features hypertension, proteinuria and finally renal failure define the term "diabetic nephropathy". The increased intraglomerular pressure is the main pathological alteration of incipient nephropathy. Microalbuminuria essentially determines the prognosis: in IDDM it concerns the incidence of a manifest nephropathy, in NIDDM the excessively increased incidence of cardiovascular mortality. Sonographically, the kidneys are large with bright and wide parenchyma. Along with the development of end-stage renal disease the kidney size diminishes. According to Mogensen, nephropathy is divided into five stages: Stage 1, the early stage, is defined by hypertrophy and hyperfiltration. Stage 2 shows incipient structural changes without any clinical findings. Stage 3 is characterised by persistent microalbuminuria. Stage 4 leads to increasing renal failure and stage 5 to end-stage renal disease and the necessity of dialysis treatment. Incipient nephropathy demands a strict treatment of both hypertension and diabetes. In the meantime, ACE inhibitors are the treatment of choice. In case of dialysis treatment continuous ambulant peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) is usually preferred.
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PMID:[Diabetic microangiopathy]. 847 38

The outcome of kidney transplantation was evaluated in 246 nondiabetic, CsA-treated recipients of primary cadaver transplant, divided into 4 groups according to length of time on dialysis: group < or = 2, 0-24 months; group 2-5, 25-60 months; group 5-15, 61-180 months; group > 15, over 180 months. The 4 groups did not differ in graft survival, proteinuria (g/die), or estimated GFR values at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 years after grafting. They did not differ in the frequency of cataract, hip osteonecrosis, tumors, or posttransplant diabetes mellitus at 3 years after grafting. Ocular hypertone (p < 0.02), tendon ruptures (p < 0.001), arterial occlusive disease of lower limbs (p < 0.01), cholelithiasis (p < 0.05), and chronic hepatitis--which occurred only in anti-HCV and/or HBs Ag-positive patients--(p < 0.001), were more frequent in group > 15, and in all these cases but ocular hypertone a linear trend of increasing frequencies with increasing dialytic age was statistically significant. Group 5-15 had the lowest patient survival (p < 0.02). Moreover, a progressive decline of patient survival with increasing dialytic age was noted in groups < or = 2, 2-5, and 5-15. Unexpectedly, group > 15 had remarkably good survival, and this finding denies the hypothesis of a purely linear decline of patient survival after transplantation with increasing dialytic age.
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PMID:Influence of length of time on dialysis before grafting on kidney transplant results. 872 66

Experimental work from our laboratory has confirmed the protective power of vanadium compounds on hyperglycemia and glycosuria in streptozotocin (STZ) diabetes. Furthermore, the diabetic cataract too has been partially prevented. The protection slightly increased, when vanadium was administered in combination with vitamin E. This investigation has introduced a combination of Na3VO4 plus the lazaroid U-83836E, a liposoluble antioxidant much more efficacious than tocopherol, in order to improve the insufficient protection when vitamin E was used. Male Wistar rats, rendered diabetic with STZ, were treated for 12 weeks with Na3VO4 in drinking water, U-83836E carried by the food, or both. The most significant metabolic parameters (food and fluid intake, diuresis and excreted feces) were studied monthly by means of metabolic cages. Body weight, glycemia, glycosuria and proteinuria were also recorded. At week 6 and 12 of the treatment, the opaqueness of the eye lenses was controlled. Circulation glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), fructosamine, N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) and fluorescent peroxides were evaluated at the end of the experiment. After the first month of treatment U-83836E improved significantly the protective effect of vanadate alone on polydipsia and polyuria, but more efficiently on hyperglycemia and glycosuria. The further ameliorating effect of the lazaroid was observed also on HbA1c, NAG and, most important, on the cataract. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that the lazaroid U-83836E succeeds in further protecting the most important symptoms of diabetes treated with vanadate, and that this antioxidant acts effectively even when it is administered per os, in a non invasive manner.
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PMID:[Protective effect on nephropathy and on cataract in the streptozotocin-diabetic rat of the vanadium-lazaroid combination]. 899 28


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