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Query: UMLS:C0039730 (
thalassemia
)
10,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Evaluation of diabetic control was performed by using fasting plasma
glucose
, hemoglobin A1 and fructosamine in 139 patients with diabetes mellitus, and 36 normal controls. A linear correlation of fasting plasma
glucose
with fructosamine and hemoglobin A1 was found. Using fasting plasma
glucose
alone was found to be inadequate to define good control. HbA1 and fructosamine had an acceptable sensitivity and specificity in assessment of diabetic control, although fructosamine was slightly less sensitive than HbA1. In patients with
thalassemia
, hemoglobin A1 levels were elevated in 18 of 19 patients. Fructosamine levels also gave misleading results since 6 to 19 patients had an elevated level and one patient had a decreased level. Patients with hypoproteinemia had a decreased fructosamine and hemoglobin A1 level compared to normal control. HbA1 and fructosamine should be cautiously interpreted in patients with
thalassemia
and hypoproteinemic states. Using these methods in combination with other measure such as home monitoring of blood
glucose
would be more precise particularly in diabetic patients with hypoproteinemia, abnormal hemoglobin and other hemolytic disorders.
...
PMID:Evaluation of diabetic control by using hemoglobin A1 and fructosamine. 238 Jun 44
Blood
glucose
and serum immunoreactive insulin levels were measured following an oral
glucose
load in 20 unrelated children with multiple transfused
thalassaemia
. Results suggest that even though overt diabetes and glucose intolerance are uncommon before the age of 13 years, the presence of insulin resistance is evident, especially in those who have been splenectomized.
...
PMID:Glucose tolerance test and insulin levels in children with transfusion-dependent thalassaemia. 241 72
Diabetes mellitus in patients receiving hypertransfusion for thalassemia major is usually attributed to damage to beta cells. To determine whether iron overload leads to insulin resistance before the development of insulin deficiency, insulin was infused (by euglycemic insulin-clamp technique) into 12 children with
thalassemia
(4 of whom were prepubertal, and 8 pubertal) who had normal or only moderately impaired glucose tolerance and who were receiving chelation therapy. Although insulin-stimulated
glucose
metabolism in the prepubertal children with
thalassemia
was similar to that in controls (normal prepubertal children) (319 +/- 23 vs. 314 +/- 41 mg per square meter of body-surface area per minute, P not significant), the response to insulin was markedly impaired in the pubertal children with
thalassemia
(155 +/- 18 vs. 224 +/- 15 mg per square meter per minute in normal pubertal controls, P less than 0.01). Plasma insulin levels rose excessively after oral
glucose
administration in the pubertal subjects with
thalassemia
, but not in the prepubertal patients (P less than 0.001). Furthermore, in response to a standard hyperglycemic stimulus, insulin levels in the pubertal patients rose to two to three times greater than normal and C-peptide levels became significantly elevated. Our data suggest that insulin resistance and increased insulin secretion develop in older children with
thalassemia
treated with long-term hypertransfusion therapy before the development of diabetes.
...
PMID:Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia in patients with thalassemia major treated by hypertransfusion. 328 Oct
In order to evaluate the influence of haemosiderosis on the
glucose
metabolism we studied tissue sensitivity to insulin and the metabolic clearance rate (M.C.R.) of this hormone by means of euglycemic clamp technique using an artificial endocrine pancreas in 8 patients with
thalassaemia
intermedia and 8 control subjects. During the steady-state of euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp (40 mU/m2/min) plasma insulin values were significantly lower and the insulin M.C.R. was significantly higher in thalassaemic patients compared to the controls. To achieve a comparable steady-state insulin concentration to the controls, we performed for a second time the euglycemic clamp in the thalassaemic patients increasing the insulin infusion rate to 80/mU/m2/min. The insulin M.C.R., the M index and the M/IRIs-s ratio were significantly higher in the thalassaemic patients compared to the controls. These results are indicative of an increased tissue peripheral sensitivity to insulin as well as the metabolic clearance rate of this hormone.
...
PMID:The euglycemic clamp in patients with thalassaemia intermedia. 330 77
An increased incidence of diabetes mellitus and glucose intolerance has been reported in
thalassaemia
major treated with a high transfusion programme (HTP). To investigate beta-cell function, serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI), C-peptide (CP) and
glucose
were measured fasting and at 3, 6 and 10 min after i.v. administration of 1 mg glucagon in 20
thalassaemia
patients treated by many transfusions and in nine healthy control subjects. Fasting C-peptide concentrations (mean +/- SEM) were higher in the thalassaemic group (2.15 +/- 0.17 ng/ml) than in the controls (1.41 +/- 0.13 ng/ml). After stimulation with glucagon, C-peptide concentrations were consistently higher (P less than 0.01) by approximately 50% in the thalassaemic than in the control group (5.29 +/- 0.31 vs 3.36 +/- 0.21 ng/ml, at 3 min; 5.22 +/- 0.30 vs 3.53 +/- 0.21 ng/ml at 6 min and 4.69 +/- 0.27 vs 3.30 +/- 0.17 ng/ml after 10 min). Plasma IRI concentrations increased in both groups after glucagon stimulation but were not significantly different. The
glucose
values were approximately 15% higher at each sampling time in the thalassaemic group than those of the normal subjects. It is concluded that disturbances in carbohydrate metabolism in
thalassaemia
major treated with HTP are the consequence of hepatic cirrhosis which accompanies secondary haemosiderosis, and possibly iron deposition in the beta-cells of the pancreas.
...
PMID:A study of beta-cell function after glucagon stimulation in thalassaemia major treated by high transfusion programme. 332 97
Exocrine and endocrine pancreatic functions were studied in 30 patients with homozygotic beta-
thalassaemia
. All were treated with continuous subcutaneous deferoxamine infusions for a mean period of 30 months. Three patients (aged 18-22 years) had insulin-dependent diabetes, two before and one shortly after the onset of deferoxamine administration. There was no improvement during the treatment. An abnormal
glucose
tolerance test was demonstrated in 14 patients (47%) before and in seven (23%) during deferoxamine infusion. Enzyme activity of alpha-amylase and lipase as an expression of exocrine pancreatic function was normal in all during the observation period. Improvement in endocrine pancreatic function was apparently age-dependent: the younger the patient at the onset of treatment the more likely is normalization of the oral
glucose
tolerance test.
...
PMID:[Continuous subcutaneous deferoxamine infusions in thalassemia major. Improvement in glucose tolerance]. 348 6
We studied 29 patients with
thalassaemia
major who had received intensive chelation for between 6.2 and 8.8 years. All patients had normal oral
glucose
tolerance tests before subcutaneous chelation therapy was introduced and 22 of 29 patients had normal liver function tests. At the end of the period of study 12 patients still had normal oral
glucose
tolerance (7 with normal liver function tests and 5 with chronic active hepatitis). On the other hand, 11 patients had developed impaired glucose tolerance tests (3 patients had normal liver function tests, 5 with chronic active hepatitis and 3 with cirrhosis), and 6 patients had developed frank diabetes mellitus (one with chronic active hepatitis and 5 with cirrhosis). Patients with chronic active hepatitis showed 91% positivity for one or more hepatitis B markers whilst all patients with cirrhosis were positive. Ferritin levels before subcutaneous chelation in patients with normal oral
glucose
tolerance tests were lower than in those patients with abnormal oral
glucose
tolerance or diabetes (P less than 0.05) but none had normal serum ferritin levels. In addition, a positive correlation was found between
glucose
area under the curve after chelation therapy and serum ferritin levels (r = 0.47, P less than 0.01). It is apparent that long term chelation therapy does not prevent the development of abnormal oral
glucose
tolerance in chronically transfused patients. More intensive chelation therapy is needed to prevent tissue damage. Chronic liver disease may have an important role to play in the deterioration of
glucose
tolerance.
...
PMID:The development of diabetes mellitus and chronic liver disease in long term chelated beta thalassaemic patients. 354 13
Insulin and glucagon secretion were studied during an oral
glucose
tolerance test and arginine infusion in 11 patients with
thalassaemia
intermedia, who showed laboratory evidence of iron overload. Mean blood
glucose
concentrations in patients with
thalassaemia
intermedia were significantly higher than normal and 3 of 11 patients had impaired glucose tolerance. The principal abnormality appears to be a deficiency in insulin and glucagon from the pancreas in response to oral
glucose
tolerance and arginine stimulation tests. Several factors, such as iron overload, chronic hypoxia, zinc deficiency and increased catecholamine production secondary to anaemia, might play a part in the pathogenesis of these abnormalities. Each of these factors affect individual cases to a varied degree. Our data emphasize the mildness of carbohydrate defect as compared to the degree of insulinopenia and indicate the necessity for prescribing measures which prevent excessive iron deposition and improve iron excretion in thalassaemic patients with iron overload.
...
PMID:Alpha and beta cell evaluation in patients with thalassaemia intermedia and iron overload. 390 15
High Hb level transfusion scheme for treatment of
thalassemia
mayor has improved life prognosis but has increased also the incidence of Diabetes Mellitus. 10 patients with thalassemia major have been followed with OGTT for a period 4 years long (1979-1982). In 1979 we changed from low to high level transfusion regimen, and we began to use the pump for slow subcutaneous administration of desferrioxamine to treat iron overload. The results we obtained show a progressive increase of the average values in the insulinemic and glycemic plasma concentration from year to year. At the beginning of the follow-up period, insulinemic and glycemic values after OGTT showed a primitive pancreatic damage which evolved towards a better pancreatic function with the appearance of a peripheral insulin resistance. It is probable that both chronic hypoxia (low Hb level) and the iron overload (high Hb level) may cause, with different processes, an impairment of
glucose
metabolism.
...
PMID:[Beta-pancreatic function in subjects with thalassemia. A 4-year follow-up]. 391 49
Certain aspects of the metabolism of centrifuged young and old erythrocytes in hemoglobin H disease have been examined and compared with similar studies of beta thalassemia and normal cells. Glycolysis,
hexose
monophosphate shunt activity (HMPS), potassium flux, and glutathione (GSH) content were measured. The distributions of hemoglobins H and F, as well as the activities of erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) and glutamic oxalacetic transaminase (GOT), were utilized for estimations of the relative ages of the cell samples. The young erythrocytes in hemoglobin H disease differed in several respects from older hemoglobin H cells. They contained more soluble hemoglobin H and GSH and, after splenectomy, fewer inclusions. HMPS activity was subnormal in hemoglobin H young cells and rose to normal activity in old cells. Potassium flux tended to increase in old cells when inclusions were present.Beta thalassemia young cells contained less hemoglobin F and, after splenectomy, more inclusions than old cells. In addition, they had markedly increased glycolysis and HMPS activity. GSH was randomly distributed. Potassium flux was increased in younger cells and particularly increased when inclusions appeared in younger cells after splenectomy. The results are interpreted to indicate that inclusion formation is associated with increased erythrocyte cation permeability in the
thalassemia
syndromes. This is not related to the level of intracellular GSH. The decreased HMPS activity in young hemoglobin H cells may be due to the presence of the extra thiols of soluble hemoglobin H which can act as a reducing agent. The substitution of hemoglobin H for glutathione in this capacity would then spare the NADPH-requiring glutathione reductase system. As a consequence, HMPS activity would decline. However, in older cells the oxidized hemoglobin H precipitates; these must rely upon GSH and glutathione reductase activity for thiol reduction capacity. Accordingly, HMPS activity increases to normal in the old cell population.
...
PMID:Influence of hemoglobin precipitation on erythrocyte metabolism in alpha and beta thalassemia. 576 25
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