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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (
proteinuria
)
24,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to measure components of the renin angiotensin system in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus, with and without nephropathy, to study the renal sensitivity to angiotensin II in uncomplicated type 1 diabetes and to investigate the short and long-term renal effects of angiotensin II reduction with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors in patients with diabetic nephropathy. In patients with type 1 diabetes without complications, plasma renin activity, angiotensin II and aldosterone levels were normal. In patients with diabetic nephropathy, renin levels were elevated, probably partly as a result of diuretic treatment. However, renin levels were also elevated compared to patients with other renal diseases who had similar treatment and degree of azotemia. The renal sensitivity to angiotensin II was normal in patients with uncomplicated diabetes. The reduction in glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow and increases in filtration fraction during A II infusion were equal to those in healthy controls. Nine days' captopril treatment in 15 patients with diabetic nephropathy induced an increase in renal plasma flow and a decrease in filtration fraction. The glomerular filtration rate remained unchanged. During 8 weeks' randomised enalapril or metoprolol treatment in 40 patients with diabetic nephropathy, enalapril treatment reduced
proteinuria
to half the initial value.
Metoprolol
treatment had no effect on
proteinuria
. Furosemide was also used and the dosage was adjusted to give equally effective blood-pressure control in both groups. During long-term treatment with captopril in patients with diabetic nephropathy, the rate of decline in kidney function over time was reduced to one-fourth the initial value even though the blood pressure was only slightly reduced. The renin angiotensin system appears to be functionally intact in diabetes mellitus and interruption by ACE inhibition reduces
proteinuria
both by blood pressure reduction and by an effect independent of systemic blood pressure. Long-term treatment might protect kidney function in diabetic nephropathy to a greater extent than would be expected from the blood-pressure-lowering effect alone.
...
PMID:The renin angiotensin system in diabetes mellitus. A physiological and therapeutic study. 219 80
Urinary albumin excretion rate (radial immunodiffusion), glomerular filtration rate (GFR) (single-shot 51Cr-EDTA technique), and arterial blood pressure (BP) were measured in 12 juvenile-onset, insulin-dependent diabetic patients with persistent
proteinuria
(greater than 0.5 g/day) due to diabetic nephropathy. Mean age of the patients was 30 yr. All patients had a diastolic blood pressure greater than or equal to 95 mm Hg.
Metoprolol
, hydralazine, and furosemide or thiazide were used as antihypertensives. During the 12-mo treatment period, BP decreased from 151/104 to 133/85 mm Hg (P less than 0.001), the urinary albumin excretion rate diminished from 1447 to 613 micrograms/min (P less than 0.005), and GFR declined from 96 to 89 ml/in/1.73 m2 (P less than 0.01). A linear relationship between mean blood pressure and the logarithm of the albuminuria was found (r = 0.48, P less than 0.01). Arterial hypertension is an early feature of diabetic nephropathy in young insulin-dependent patients. Early and aggressive treatment of that condition decreases albuminuria, probably due to reduced intraglomerular filtration pressure. Whether sustained reduction in arterial blood pressure to near-normal levels during several years also reduces the rate of decline in GFR in diabetic nephropathy remains to be established.
...
PMID:Reduced albuminuria during early and aggressive antihypertensive treatment of insulin-dependent diabetic patients with diabetic nephropathy. 704 30