Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0162275 (
ketonuria
)
553
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on a 36-year-old patient suffering from chronic hepatitis C. Because of elevated liver enzymes and histology showing chronic inflammation and periportal fibrosis, interferon-alpha (IFN) therapy was started with a dosage of 5 Mio units three times a week. Four months later the patient hat to be hospitalized due to the typical clinical features of a recent onset type 1 diabetes (BG > 300 mg/dl, HbA1c 9.6%,
ketonuria
). In serum samples prior to and following interferon therapy, we analyzed titers of diabetes-related autoantibodies responding to
GAD65
(glutamic acid decarboxylase), IA2c (tyrosine phosphatase) and ICA (islet cell autoantibodies). While ICA were negative before starting therapy, IA2c-antibodies were highly elevated. In contrast.
GAD65
-antibodies were elevated only slightly over the cut-off of the assay before therapy (controlled by a second different RIA assay) and increased 100 fold during IFN-alpha treatment. Additionally thyroid antibodies appeared. After the end of the IFN therapy,
GAD65
- and IA2c antibodies remained on high levels and also ICA could now be found. The patient was positive for HLA-DR4. This case supports the hypothesis that IFN-alpha therapy may lead to an augmented autoimmune reaction against islet cell antigens resulting in the development of diabetes mellitus type 1, especially if there are other predisposing factors before IFN treatment. We further discuss the possible involvement of interferon-alpha in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes with reference to recent studies.
...
PMID:[Augmentation of the immune response to islet cell antigens with development of diabetes mellitus caused by interferon-alpha therapy in chronic hepatitis C]. 1023 96
The simultaneous occurrence of juvenile dermatomyositis (DMS) and diabetes mellitus is described in 2 pediatric patients. Both these patients presented with significant weight loss, polyuria, and polydypsia within a short time of being diagnosed with JDMS, while these patients were taking oral prednisone (40-60 mg/day in divided doses). Laboratory evaluation detected
ketonuria
, significant hyperglycemia (696 and 913 mg/dL) and low serum levels of insulin and C-peptide. Both these patients were treated with high doses of insulin. Islet cell and
GAD65
antibodies were found to be positive in 1 of the patients, pointing toward a diagnosis of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The other patient tested negative for these antibodies and required insulin therapy for approximately 6 months. Steroid-induced diabetes mellitus seemed highly likely in this case. We hypothesize that a common environmental trigger possibly a viral infection might have been responsible in causing 2 different autoimmune pathologies in these genetically predisposed individuals.
...
PMID:Simultaneous occurrence of diabetes mellitus and juvenile dermatomyositis: report of two cases. 1286 53