Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors decrease albuminuria in patients with diabetic nephropathy. To study the change in albuminuria in relation to changes in systemic and renal hemodynamics, nine normotensive patients with type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and persistent proteinuria were given a single oral dose of 25 mg of the ACE inhibitor captopril. Blood pressure, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), effective renal plasma flow (ERPF), and albumin excretion rate (AER) were measured in two periods of 40 minutes before and in four periods of 40 minutes after administration of captopril. A constant water diuresis was maintained. Blood pressure did not decrease significantly (130/79 +/- 4/3 v 124/74 +/- 4/3 mm Hg; mean +/- SEM), median AER decreased from 403 (interquartile range [IQR], 812) micrograms/min to 333 (707) micrograms/min (P < 0.01). GFR did not change (123 +/- 13 v 117 +/- 14 mL/min), but ERPF increased significantly from 609 +/- 56 to 714 +/- 55 mL/min (P < 0.01). Consequently, the filtration fraction (FF; quotient of GFR and ERPF) decreased from 0.20 +/- 0.014 to 0.17 +/- 0.014 (P < 0.01). A strong correlation was found between the decrease of AER and the decrease of FF (rs = 0.75; P < 0.02). No correlation was found between the decrease in AER and changes in GFR or blood pressure. In the normotensive patient with diabetic nephropathy, captopril causes an acute reduction of AER, which is probably mediated by a lowering of the intraglomerular pressure.
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PMID:Captopril acutely lowers albuminuria in normotensive patients with diabetic nephropathy. 146 82

In a population-based study in Taiwan, 11,478 subjects aged 40 years or older were screened for diabetes in one urban and five rural areas. Among the 715 subjects proven to have diabetes, 527 subjects underwent ophthalmoscopy. Diabetic retinopathy was present in 184 of the 527 subjects (35.0%), including background diabetic retinopathy in 157 subjects (30.0%), preproliferative diabetic retinopathy in 15 subjects (2.8%), and proliferative diabetic retinopathy in 12 subjects (2.2%). Diabetic retinopathy was correlated with the duration of diabetes and age at onset of diabetes, type of diabetes treatment, higher serum creatinine levels, and lower serum cholesterol levels. Several other factors, including gender, age, residential area, family income, educational level, control and family history of diabetes, body mass index, physical activity, exercise, cigarette smoking, stroke, ischemic heart disease, leg vessel disease, hypertension, and proteinuria, had no significant association with retinopathy. By multiple logistic regression analysis, duration of diabetes was the most important risk factor related to retinopathy. Diabetic subjects treated with insulin had a higher risk of developing retinopathy than those treated with dietary control (relative risk, 1.57; .05 < P < .10). The univariate analysis disclosed that proliferative diabetic retinopathy was related to older age at examination, older age at onset of diabetes, type of diabetes treatment, and presence of leg vessel disease. Insulin-treated diabetic subjects also had a higher risk of proliferative diabetic retinopathy than patients in whom diabetes was controlled by diet, with a relative risk of 2.51 (.05 < P < .10) in the multiple logistic regression analysis.
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PMID:Prevalence and risk factors of diabetic retinopathy among noninsulin-dependent diabetic subjects. 146 42

Diabetic nephropathy leading to kidney failure is a major complication of type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and is associated with progressive proteinuria. In the present 6-month study, effects of two structurally dissimilar aldose reductase inhibitors (sorbinil and ponalrestat or Statil) were examined on prevention of proteinuria in insulin-dependent spontaneously diabetic BB rats and compared with age-matched BB resistant controls. Prior to aldose reductase inhibitor treatment, all diabetic BB rats exhibited hyperglycemia (> 300 mg/dl), glycosuria (> 2,000 mg/dl) and 24-hour urinary protein excretion ranging from 5.01 to 11.23 mg/day. After daily administration of ponalrestat (20 mg/kg) for 3 months, 24-hour urinary protein excretion was 11.53 +/- 1.76 mg/day in ponalrestat-treated rats, despite persistence of hyperglycemia (444 +/- 31 mg/dl) and glycosuria (> 2,000 mg/dl); by contrast, urinary protein excretion was 17.76 +/- 2.59 mg/day in the control group of untreated BB diabetic rats. Ponalrestat initially protected against excretion of an array of urinary proteins having molecular weights between 30,000 and 100,000 daltons. These effects sustained throughout the 4th month of treatment, tended to change toward valves in control rats by the 5th month. At the end of 6 months, ponalrestat-treated diabetic rats excreted 18.73 +/- 3.20 mg/day of protein, similar to valves in untreated BB diabetic rats; both demonstrated a 4-fold increase in urinary protein excretion when compared to age-matched BB resistant controls. Proteinuria was attributed to an increase in albumin and an array of proteins having molecular weights between 30,000 and 100,000 daltons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparison of sorbinil and ponalrestat (Statil) diminution of proteinuria in the BB rat. 146 75

Exercise is frequently recommended in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. Nevertheless, its use has been limited in clinical practice, and concerns about safety and efficacy persist. We have reviewed a 10-yr experience with 255 patients enrolled in a comprehensive diabetes program that emphasized physical training. A low maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) was found in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus compared with sedentary control subjects. This was not accounted for by autonomic neuropathy and is unlikely to be due to subtle differences in life-style. Exercise-related proteinuria was common and occurred in 29% of patients and was associated with higher blood pressure levels at rest and during exercise, impaired VO2max, and decreased R-R interval variation. Regular exercise was associated with a modest decrease in resting and exercise blood pressure. Glycosylated hemoglobin levels and plasma triglycerides improved only in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Insulin requirements were significantly reduced in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Compliance for up to 3 mo in the program was acceptable but longer-term compliance was poor. Serious complications during the program were rare. Our experience suggests a program of regular aerobic training can be safely and effectively used in an outpatient population with diabetes mellitus for up to 3 mo.
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PMID:Ten-year experience with an exercise-based outpatient life-style modification program in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. 146 18

To clarify the morphological changes in renal proximal tubules at the onset of diabetic nephropathy, we observed 177 biopsy samples from patients with Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetics (NIDDM) using light and electron microscopy. Group I had no proteinuria (p.u.), group II had p.u. < or = 0.5 g/day, group III had p.u. > 0.5 g/day, group IV had serum creatine level (Cr) > 1.5 mg/dl. Twenty age-matched normal patients and 80 patients with IgA nephropathy were used as controls. In groups I and II, the following features were significantly different from those in the controls: spherical enlargement of mitochondria (MT) in proximal tubule cells, hypertrophy of proximal tubule cells and their nuclei, and thickening of both the proximal tubule basement membrane (TBM) and the glomerular basement membrane (GBM). Among the histological changes observed in group I, the thickness of the GBM and TBM indicated that the disease would lead to diabetic nephropathy. MT enlargement was positively correlated with nuclear and cytoplasmic enlargement of the proximal tubule cells in diabetic patients (p < 0.05), but was not correlated with other morphological changes or disease prognosis. Glomerular nodular lesions, glomerular sclerotic change, and cortical tubulointerstitial fibrosis became evident in groups III and IV. From the above, we concluded that MT enlargement and thickening of the TBM are possible causes of reduced active transport in the proximal tubules, causing microalbuminuria in diabetics, and initial impairment of post-tubule transport.
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PMID:Mitochondrial enlargement and basement membrane thickening of renal proximal tubules, possible initiators of microalbuminuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetics (NIDDM). 147 27

In this study, 52 nonproteinuric Japanese patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) were followed from 1985 to 1990 to investigate the rate of development and progression of microalbuminuria and the factors which influence it. In 1985, 34 patients were normoalbuminuric, and 18 patients were microalbuminuric. Five years later, 11 of 34 initially normoalbuminuric patients (32.4%) developed microalbuminuria, and 6 of 18 initially microalbuminuric patients (33.3%) developed overt proteinuria. At the beginning of the study, hypertension existed more frequently in the patients who later developed microalbuminuria (8 of 11, 72.7%) than in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (4 of 23, 17.4%). Age-adjusted values of mean blood pressure (+/- SEM) at the beginning of the study in the patients who developed microalbuminuria (98.2 +/- 3.4 mm Hg, n = 11) were significantly higher than those in the patients who stayed normoalbuminuric (87.3 +/- 2.4 mm Hg, n = 23). In six patients who developed overt proteinuria, initial urinary albumin excretion rates (AER) were higher than those in the patients who stayed microalbuminuric, and four patients who presented with initial AER greater than 100 micrograms/min all developed overt proteinuria. These results indicate that, in Japanese patients with NIDDM, the rate of development of microalbuminuria is faster than that reported in Caucasian IDDM, and preexisting hypertension with relatively poor control of blood pressure may be a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria.
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PMID:High blood pressure is a risk factor for the development of microalbuminuria in Japanese subjects with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 147 44

This study attempted to determine whether postprandial hypotension (PPH) is associated with diabetes mellitus by 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (24-h ABPM) and by monitoring blood pressure during 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (75-g OGTT) in 15 normal subjects and 35 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. When we defined PPH as a postprandial decrease in systolic blood pressure of greater than 20 mmHg, the incidence of PPH in diabetics was 37% by 24-h ABPM and 20% by 75-g OGTT. The incidence of proliferative retinopathy and proteinuria was greater in diabetics with PPH than in those without PPH. All of the patients with PPH had somatic and autonomic neuropathy. The C-peptide response was lower in diabetics with PPH than in those without PPH. We revealed the presence of PPH in diabetics, and found that PPH was closely related to disease severity, especially diabetic autonomic neuropathy.
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PMID:Postprandial hypotension in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 147 51

The author treated since 1985 on a long-term basis (for more than one year) 228 diabetic patients with an insulin pump. She gives an account for her experience of three years' treatment of 32 diabetics type 1 and 2, incl. 5 treated already for a period of 5 years. Eight type 1 diabetics treated on account of a great lability of the disease are free from specific complications. In 10 type 1 diabetics treated on account of developing nephropathy and neuropathy the condition has stabilized and does not develop further. In 14 type 2 diabetics progression of complications which led to the indication of pump treatment did not occur. Treatment had the most favourable effect on sensitive neuropathy and incipient nephropathy where a reduction of proteinuria was recorded. From the total number of 228 patients treated on a long-term basis in 31, on failure of the pump, decompensation occurred. Five of these patients developed ketosis which called for hospitalization. Clinically severe hypoglycaemia was observed only once.
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PMID:[Long-term treatment with an insulin pump. 3 years' experience]. 148 76

Non-insulin-dependent diabetes is associated with a 2-3 fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease. The poor relationship between this risk and either glycaemic control or diabetes duration suggests that some other aspect of the diabetic state, and not hyperglycaemia per se, mediates this risk. This other aspect of diabetes does not comprise alterations in recognized cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure or lipids, as the major component of the excess risk is in those diabetics with low levels of the other risk factors. It thus appears that there may be some factors that predispose both to diabetes and to cardiovascular disease. In insulin-dependent diabetics most of the excess risk of cardiovascular disease occurs in subjects with proteinuria, and microalbuminuria or proteinuria in non-insulin-dependent diabetics also substantially increases cardiovascular risk. Although changes in recognized risk factors in diabetics with nephropathy may partly explain these observations, we and others have shown that microalbuminuric non-diabetics also have a markedly increased prevalence of cardiovascular disease and substantially increased cardiovascular mortality. The observations that in insulin-dependent diabetics nephropathy shows family clustering and that these patients have elevated sodium lithium counter-transport rate, a possible genetic marker for the vascular complications of hypertension, have led to the suggestion that microalbuminuria may be a marker of a genetic predisposition to vascular disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Microalbuminuria: a genetic link between diabetes and cardiovascular disease? 148 48

The most serious complication of diabetes mellitus is clinical nephropathy. The development of persistent proteinuria (urinary excretion of more than 300 mg albumin/24 hours) implies an extremely high risk of early death. Renal failure is the most frequent cause of death but the mortality of cardiovascular diseases is also increased. Besides the link between albuminuria (nephropathy) and atherosclerosis in coronary arteries, albuminuria is also a predictor of microangiopathy in other organs than the kidneys. The annual incidence of proliferative retinopathy in early nephropathy is 10-15% compared to only 1% in patients without nephropathy. Also signs of cardiomyopathy have been demonstrated in early nephropathy. Further we have described markers of universal endothelial damage in these patients, and we hypothesize that albuminuria not only is a predictor of renal disease but also of widespread vascular disease. Long-term improvement of metabolic control by use of insulin infusion pumps and early antihypertensive treatment seem to stop the further progression of early diabetic nephropathy and to significantly improve the prognosis of clinical nephropathy.
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PMID:Diabetic retinopathy, nephropathy and neuropathy. Generalized vascular damage in insulin-dependent diabetic patients. 149 Jun 95


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