Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Kidney cortex sialic acid level, sialidase and sialyltransferase activities have been measured in spontaneously diabetic BB rats and in streptozotocin-diabetic rats (STZ). In untreated diabetic BB rats, at the onset of the disease, sialidase specific activity was found to be increased by 21% when compared with diabetes-resistant BB controls (P less than 0.05) whereas sialyltransferase activity was not significantly modified and bound sialic acid concentration was diminished (P less than 0.05). In diabetic BB rats submitted to a minimal insulin therapy, during 3 months of disease, sialidase activity and sialic acid concentration were similar to those of Wistar age-matched controls. In STZ-diabetic Wistar rats, sialidase specific activity was increased by 76% after 5 months of disease when compared to age-matched Wistar controls (P less than 0.01); in contrast, specific sialyltransferase activity was decreased by 21% (P less than 0.05); these enzymatic alterations were associated with a decrease in bound sialic acid concentration (P less than 0.01); 1 month's insulin therapy, started 4 months after onset of the disease, normalized sialidase activity but had no effect on sialyltransferase activity and sialic acid concentration; treatment with sorbinil prevented cataract development but had no effect on sialidase activity whereas it emphasized the decrease in sialyltransferase activity and sialic acid concentration. The disturbances in the enzyme activities concerned with sialoglycoconjugate metabolism observed in experimental and spontaneous diabetes may be responsible for the decreased bound sialic acid content observed in the rat kidney cortex.
...
PMID:Kidney sialidase and sialyltransferase activities in spontaneously and experimentally diabetic rats. Influence of insulin and sorbinil treatments. 220 Apr 8

Age-related cataract is a condition characterized by multiple mechanisms and multiple risk factors. The mechanisms that bring about a loss in transparency include oxidation, osmotic stress, and chemical adduct formation. Risk factors for cataract include diabetes, radiation (ultraviolet B, x-ray), certain pharmaceutical substances, certain nutritional states, and possibly acute episodes of dehydration. Interaction occurs between and among mechanistic factors and risk factors. Thus nutrition must be considered as one part of a tapestry of intertwined events and responses. Certain experimental models for nutritional cataract have been useful for study of the cataractogenic process but are probably not important factors in the human disease. Little current evidence supports significant roles in human senile cataract for imbalances of tryptophan or other amino acids, deficiencies of calcium or selenium, or excessive intake of selenium. Overconsumption of galactose is likely to be hazardous only in subjects with genetic inability to metabolize this sugar. Vitamins with antioxidant potential (riboflavin, vitamin E, vitamin C, carotenoids) deserve further research scrutiny to ascertain their significance in cataract etiology. Excessive caloric intake needs to receive added emphasis as a factor contributing to cataract. Diabetes increases the likelihood of cataract three- to four-fold. Obesity, defined as more than 20% overweight, is considered a major risk factor for non-insulin-dependent, or type II, diabetes (69, 73). Weight control can be recommended as a prudent, safe, economic, and effective means of lowering risk probability for diabetes and the associated complication of cataract.
...
PMID:Nutritional factors in cataract. 220 Apr 64

Modified peribulbar anesthesia was administered with a 26-gauge, half-inch, insulin needle to 367 eyes of 360 patients in three eye camps in India. The intraocular procedures consisted of cataract extraction in 349 eyes, trabeculectomy in 11 eyes, and combined cataract extraction and trabeculectomy in seven eyes. The overall success rate of the anesthesia technique was 90.2% (supplemental anesthesia was required in 36 eyes). There was good lid and globe akinesia and anesthesia, adequate pupillary dilatation for intracapsular cataract extraction, and excellent hypotony. No significant local or systemic complications were observed, except for mild to moderate chemosis in some eyes, which did not produce any intraoperative or postoperative problems. We found this technique easy to learn, relatively safe, effective, and well tolerated by our patients.
...
PMID:Evaluation of peribulbar anesthesia in eye camps. 223 6

Inheritance of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is polygenic, and at least one of the genes conferring susceptibility to diabetes is tightly linked to the MHC. Recent studies have suggested that DQB1 of humans and I-A beta of mice are closely associated with susceptibility and resistance to IDDM. For further characterization and localization of the MHC-linked diabetogenic gene, we studied the genomic sequence of the A beta gene of the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse, an animal model of IDDM, in comparison with those of its sister strains, nonobese nondiabetic and cataract Shionogi (CTS) mice, and the original strain, outbred Imperial Cancer Research (ICR) mice. Genomic DNAs from these strains were amplified in vitro by the polymerase chain reaction with thermostable Taq polymerase. The amplified sequences were analyzed by restriction endonuclease digestion, hybridization with allele-specific oligonucleotide probes, and direct sequencing. The unique I-A beta sequence of NOD mice was observed in the sister strain, CTS mice, and in one mouse of the original strain, outbred ICR mice. These data together with the results of MAb typing of MHC molecules and restriction mapping of the I-A region suggest that the unique class II MHC of NOD mice is not the result of a recent mutation, but is derived from the original strain. Since class I MHC of CTS mice is different from the MHC of NOD mice at both the K and D loci, CTS mice are a naturally occurring recombinant strain with NOD type class II MHC and non-NOD type class I MHC. Thus, breeding studies in crosses of NOD with CTS mice should provide biological information on whether the unique class II MHC of NOD mice is diabetogenic.
...
PMID:Major histocompatibility complex-linked diabetogenic gene of the nonobese diabetic mouse. Analysis of genomic DNA amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. 229 94

We examined 96 patients (111 eyes) who underwent extracapsular cataract extraction with the implantation of a posterior chamber intraocular lens. Of 96 patients 24 (29 eyes) with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus had no or simple retinopathy; 72 patients (82 eyes) served as non-diabetic controls. The central corneas of all subjects were photographed by a specular microscope preoperatively and three, six, and 12 months postoperatively. No significant differences in the endothelial cell density, coefficient of variation, or cell loss were noted between diabetic patients and age matched non-diabetic subjects during the observation period.
...
PMID:Corneal endothelial changes after posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation in patients with or without diabetes mellitus. 235 29

Nineteen children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus were assessed for microangiopathic complications in the University Department of Paediatrics, Singapore. Of 17 who underwent nerve conduction studies, all showed impaired nerve conduction velocities, with more sensory than motor nerve involvement. The extent of neuropathy was significantly correlated with the duration of disease. Of five children who showed significant proteinuria, two had impaired creatinine clearance, two had cataract formation, and two retinopathy, in one background and in one proliferative. Our study showed a high prevalence of microangiopathic complications in these diabetic children and it is hoped that improved blood glucose control, with the aid of home blood glucose monitoring, may minimize or arrest the microangiopathic complications.
...
PMID:Microangiopathy in Singapore diabetic children. 241 47

Four successful cases of pregnancy after combined pancreas-kidney transplantation at four different centers are summarized. The techniques used for the pancreas transplantations were duct obstruction in one patient and enteric exocrine diversion in two patients; in all three patients the insulin delivery was to the systemic circulation. In one patient exocrine diversion was to the stomach and the vascular anastomosis to the splenic vessels, thus accomplishing portal insulin delivery. Immunosuppression consisted of cyclosporin and prednisolone in two patients; cyclosporin alone in one patient; and cyclosporin, azathioprine, and prednisolone in one patient. In all a cesarean section was performed, due to deteriorating renal function in two patients, a fall in fetal growth in one patient, and fear of inducing pancreas-graft pancreatitis during normal delivery in one patient. In all four women, perfect metabolic control was retained throughout the pregnancy, and despite the proximity of the pancreas graft to the growing uterus in three of the women, the pancreas grafts did not suffer any damage during the pregnancy. However, in one patient the pancreas graft was lost in acute rejection after delivery. This pancreas had functioned normally for 3 yr before this occasion. Of the offspring, one was completely normal, one had a bilateral cataract, and two were small for date. The latter two subsequently showed normal growth development. At follow-up at 3, 5, 7, and 28 mo, all kidney grafts and three of the pancreas grafts remained functional. We conclude that after combined pancreas-kidney transplantation, successful conception and pregnancy can be obtained. Despite reduced islet mass (segmental grafts), normal metabolic control can be retained throughout the pregnancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pregnancy after combined pancreas-kidney transplantation. 264 57

A Norwegian family showed 20 cases of verified or suspected diabetes in 5 generations, 13 being females and 7 males. In 12 patients the diagnosis was established at 26 years of age or earlier. Fourteen patients were definitely non-insulin-dependent. A high frequency of severe diabetic ophthalmopathy was noted, five patients were blind, two had proliferative retinopathy, and one simplex retinopathy and cataract. Five patients from the last 3 generations were islet cell antibody negative and C-peptide positive. In selected patients the serum insulin response to oral glucose was markedly reduced. HLA determinations in these patients showed absence of DR3 and DR4, and presence of DR2. The inheritance of diabetes in this family is compatible with an autosomal, dominant trait, and the majority of cases fulfilled the criteria of maturity-onset diabetes of the young. The high frequency of severe ophthalmopathy underscores that this disease may have an unfavourable evolution.
...
PMID:Maturity-onset diabetes of the young. Studies in a Norwegian family. 264 41

We measured how much glycated protein there was in rat eye lenses with different degrees of cataract, using an antibody against glucitol-lysine. Streptozotocin-diabetic (STZ) rats were in some cases treated with insulin (STZ + INS); control rats were normal. We graded the cataracts from 0 (transparent) to 3 (entirely opaque). STZ rats had significantly more grade 3 cataracts, and STZ + INS rats more grade 1 cataracts, than other groups. Grade 3 lenses had significantly more glycated protein than those of grade 0 (10.8 +/- 2.7 vs. 1.0 +/- 0.4 nmol/mg protein), grades 1 and 2 being intermediate. Glycosylated hemoglobin levels correlated similarly with severity of cataract. These data are consistent with the greater incidence of cataract among diabetics than among non-diabetics, and suggest that lens protein glycation contributes to the development of cataract.
...
PMID:Lens protein glycation and the subsequent degree of opacity in streptozotocin-diabetic rats. 269 28

The author describes his findings pertaining to spontaneous diabetes mellitus in BB rats and the method and results in juvenile alloxan diabetes in neonatal and adolescent Wistar rats of his own inbreeding F8-10. The author presents also the results of attempts to treat juvenile alloxan diabetes in rats by intrafamilial renal-subscapular allotransplants of 2-5 neonatal collagenase nondigested pancreases. Six of eleven BB females developed latent or manifest insulin dependent diabetes mellitus during the third to fourth month of life. An intraperitoneal injection of alloxan to 2-5-day-old rats causes, after two months of prediabetes, latent or manifest disease, in particular in males. In one-two-month adolescent fasting F6--10 inbred rats (Wistar strain) intravenous injection of 50 mg/kg alloxan causes diabetes mellitus with hyperglycaemia (20-60 mmol/l), glycosuria, polyuria, arrested growth, development of cataract and early death due to pulmonary or intestinal infection. The author tries to prevent these sequelae and complications by insulin therapy or intrafamilial allotransplantations of 2-5 neonatal, collagenase nondigested pancreases beneath the renal capsule, using two-three--week immunosuppression with Cyclosporin A combined with Azathioprine. The author proves permanent cure, histologically and functionally, by repeated allotransplantation which, however, due to the intense thymolymphatic immunological barrier in adolescent rats is less frequent than cure repeatedly achieved by the author in adult diabetic rats.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous and experimental models of human juvenile diabetes mellitus]. 275 53


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>