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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (
glucagon
)
26,492
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intraportal injection of 350 to 1,000 isolated islets into streptozotocin-diabetic rats immediately normalized (approximately 24 hours) fasting plasma glucose and insulin levels.
Polyuria
, polydipsia, and hyperglucagonemia disappeared more gradually over a 2-to-12-week period--the time required for normalization varying with the severity of the diabetes and the number of islets transplanted. In long-term islet-transplanted rats (greater than five months), the hepatic insulin and
glucagon
reserves averaged 50 per cent and 25 per cent, respectively, of the corresponding normal pancreatic hormone content.
Glucagon
was increased slightly in the pancreas of streptozotocin-diabetic rats and decreased considerably in transplanted animals. However, total pancreatic
glucagon
(i.e. pancreatic and hepatic reserves) in transplanted animals was the same as the pancreatic content of normal control rats, indicating the presence of feedback control mechanism(s) in the regulation of pancreatic
glucagon
reserves. Long-term transplanted islets demonstrated well-granulated A-, B-, and D-cell movement out of the vascular space and the formation of narrow intercellular spaces and junctional complexes with surrounding hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Metabolic and morphologic studies in intraportal-islet-transplanted rats. 13 76
A new, spontaneously diabetic syndrome has been recognized in nonobese outbred Wistar rats of both sexes. The age at detection of first glycosuria has varied from 48 to 120 days, with a mean of 67 days. Eighteen rats have been studied, 14 untreated and four during and after cessation of insulin treatment. The affected animals have demonstrated a spectrum of severity, with hyperglycemia (252-732 mg./dl.), hypoinsulinemia (0-1 ng./ml.), and hyperketonemia. The severely ketotic rats, with total blood ketone body levels between 6 and 13 mM, showed rapid loss in weight and dehydration over one to six days. The moderately ketotic (1-5 mM) declined gradually in weight over 15 days, with marked
polyuria
and glycosuria. The stable rats, with ketonemia less than 1 mM, sustained their weights,
polyuria
, and glycosuria for longer than 40 days. A relative or absolute increase in plasma immunoreactive
glucagon
and elevated levels of free fatty acids and branched-chain amino acids were observed in relation to the severity of the syndrome. Intraperitoneal arginine or tolbutamide elicited no insulin response, but the
glucagon
response to arginine was exaggerated. Pancreatic insulin content was normal or moderately decreased. Light-microscopic examination of pancreases of ketotic animals at the end stage of the disease showed islets to be very small and rare, consisting virtually of non-beta cells. In stable and earlier ketotic rats, the islets were small, with reduction in beta-cell number and a striking inflammatory cell infiltration. Surviving beta cells showed variable degranulation. This model of spontaneous diabetes in nonobese rats displays insulin deficiency,
glucagon
excess, and ketosis, with a dramatic inflammatory lesion during active beta-cell destruction.
...
PMID:The spontaneously diabetic Wistar rat. Metabolic and morphologic studies. 32 72
We experienced a chronic alcoholic patient in whom a large intake of alcohol led to the development of frank clinical diabetes, and glucose intolerance and insulin deficiency improved perfectly following abstinence from alcohol. The patient was a 31-year-old male with no diabetes among his relatives. He was a heavy drinker since 12 years, and especially had a large intake of alcohol from Dec. 25 '84 to Jan. 3 '85. From the end of Jan. 1985 he complained of thirst, polydipsia,
polyuria
and body weight loss from 94 to 69 Kg. On June 25 1985 he admitted for the treatment of diabetes and had abstinence from alcohol. The blood glucose and HbA1 levels were 291 mg/dl and 14.7%, respectively on admission. His 75 g OGTT was diabetic in type and serum insulin response to glucose decreased markedly. Liver function tests were normal, and islet cell antibody was negative. Blood adrenaline, noradrenaline, growth hormone,
glucagon
, cortisol, T3 and T4 levels were normal. FBS, HbA1 and 75 g OGTT recovered to normal by dietary treatment (1800 kcal) with oral hypoglycemic agents for 8 weeks. This case report suggests that the cause of alcohol-induced diabetes is probably due to impairment of insulin secretion by either alcohol itself or alcohol metabolites.
...
PMID:[A chronic alcoholic patient with the development of frank diabetes after heavy drinking and perfect improvement following abstinence from alcohol]. 152 26
Outbred Wistar rats were randomly assigned to three experimental groups: GI, 10 nondiabetic control rats; GII, 10 alloxan-diabetic control rats; GIII, 25 alloxan-diabetic rats that received pancreaticoduodenal transplantation (PDT) from normal donor Wistar rats and were immunosuppressed with cyclosporin A. For 7 prior and 4, 7, 14, 21, and 30 days posttransplantation (during which the animals were housed in metabolic cages for periods of 24 hours) body weight, water and food intake, urine output, blood and urinary glucose, plasma insulin, and
glucagon
were recorded. These parameters were also concurrently recorded for diabetic and nondiabetic control rats. Animals were sacrificed after 30 days and histological and immunohistochemical studies of the pancreas were performed. Pancreatic transplants consistently and significantly improved the metabolic abnormalities of the diabetic rat (P less than 0.01) by restoring body weight gain, and by immediate relief of hyperglycemia, glucosuria,
polyuria
, polydipsia, and also the low levels of plasma insulin. The plasma
glucagon
, elevated in diabetic control rats, did not change after transplant.
...
PMID:Metabolic effect of pancreaticoduodenal transplantation in diabetic rats. 159 82
A 29-year-old nullipara was admitted at 31 weeks' gestation because of toxemia. She noted gradually
polyuria
, severe thirst, malaise, nausea and anorexia. A water-deprivation test and administration of aqueous vasopressin confirmed the diagnosis of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. At 33 weeks' gestation, blood chemistry studies revealed moderately elevated transaminase levels and hyperuricemia. Male twins were delivered by vacuum extraction at 35 weeks' gestation. After delivery, she became drousy and icterus appeared. Acute hepatic failure with marked hyperuricemia was diagnosed. She was treated with glucose solution with
glucagon
and soluble insulin, branched chain amino acids, gabexate mesilate, lactulose and famotidine. Her consciousness cleared rapidly and all laboratory data became normal by 15 days postpartum. The urine volume was about 5 liters per day from the first to sixth postpartum day. The diuresis decreased after the eighth postpartum day. Rare pregnancy complicated by transient nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and acute hepatic failure is discussed.
...
PMID:Transient nephrogenic diabetes insipidus associated with acute hepatic failure in pregnancy. 365 42
The mechanisms by which the beta cells of pancreatic islets are destroyed in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) are poorly understood. In this report the pancreatic histo- and immunopathology of two children, both HLA-DR 3/4, DQ 2/8 positive and who both died from cerebral oedema within a day of clinical diagnosis of IDDM, were investigated. Patient 1, a 14-month-old girl, had a 4-week history of polydipsia and
polyuria
. Patient 2, a 3-year-old boy, had 2 days of illness. Both patients had a similarly severe loss of insulin cells but differed markedly as to the extent of lymphocytic islet infiltration (insulitis). Apart from insulitis, marked islet macrophage infiltration was demonstrated in both patients with the HAM-56 monoclonal antibody. Neither patient showed aberrant expression of HLA class II antigens on insulin-immunoreactive cells, but allele-specific HLA-DQ8 expression was evident on endothelial cells. Glutamic acid decarboxylase immunoreactivity was detected in both insulin- and
glucagon
-immunoreactive cells. It is concluded that the heterogeneity of islet pathology, especially insulitis, may reflect different dynamics and extent rather than different pathomechanisms of immune destruction of islets in IDDM.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of islet pathology in two infants with recent onset diabetes mellitus. 769 19
Two weeks after intraportal transplantation of 2,000 neonatal pancreatic islets, recipient rats completely recovered from streptozotocin-induced diabetes. The reversal of diabetes could be documented by the normalization of blood glucose levels, by a restored weight gain, by normal
glucagon
and insulin levels in blood, and by a disappearance of
polyuria
and polydipsia. The reversal remained stable for at least 9 months. This study determined whether intraportally transplanted pancreatic islets were reinnervated after transplantation and whether the secretion of insulin and
glucagon
from pancreatic islets might be modulated by the vegetative innervation of recipient livers. Predominantly catecholaminergic but also cholinergic nerve fibers were detected not only within the portal tracts around hepatic arteries, portal veins, and bile ducts, but also at the borderline of hepatocytes and beta-cells and in islet cell complexes between beta-cells. Corresponding electron micrographs showed beta-cells in close contact with axons of nonmyelinated nerve fibers. Isolated livers were single pass perfused via both the hepatic artery and the portal vein. An increase in glucose level from 5 to 14 mmol/l enhanced hepatic glucose uptake and increased insulin secretion from transplanted islets with a biphasic secretion profile but had no effect on
glucagon
output. Stimulation of the nerve plexus around the hepatic artery and the portal vein (7.5 Hz, 2 min), which activates primarily the sympathetic system, not only reduced glucose uptake and perfusion flow but also completely reversed the glucose-stimulated increase in insulin secretion. Nerve stimulation did not influence
glucagon
secretion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intraportal transplantation of pancreatic islets into livers of diabetic rats. Reinnervation of islets and regulation of insulin secretion by the hepatic sympathetic nerves. 792 10
The phenomenon of clinical improvement of diabetes mellitus after occurrence of pituitary insufficiency has been reported occasionally in the medical literature, as a human counterpart of Houssay's experiment with hypophysectomized diabetic animals. We report the case of a 76-year-old woman who developed diabetes in 1928, at the age of 14, and was treated with low doses of insulin. At the age of 29, during the 7th month of her second pregnancy, she suddenly developed severe headaches and soon afterwards an intense
polyuria
which subsided under treatment with posterior pituitary extract. Her pregnancy followed to term but uterine stimulants had to be used at delivery because of lack of contractions. She was unable to nurse her baby and a permanent amenorrhea ensued. She continued using the posterior pituitary powder for several years, after which she discontinued it without adverse effects. The dose of insulin was decreased gradually until its replacement by chloropropamide in 1967 and glibenclamide in 1970. The present dose of glibenclamide is 2.5 mg daily, on which she has occasional mild hypoglycemic reactions. When the medication was discontinued for 5 days glycemia rose to 450 mg/dl but responded immediately to 2.5 mg of the drug with a mild hypoglycemia. She never required thyroid hormone therapy. Glucocorticoid substitution was instituted recently because of evidence of mild adrenocortical insufficiency. Basal hormone levels were normal for thyroxin, thyrotropin, FSH, LH, prolactin, hGH and cortisol; the responses to pituitary stimulation with TRH and LHRH were subnormal or nil. Cortisol stimulation with ACTH was normal. Insulin levels rose moderately after stimulation with
glucagon
, and with glibenclamide, with simultaneous marked decrease in glycemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Houssay's phenomenon in man]. 820 16
Pathomorphologic studies were carried out on three cases of bovine diabetes mellitus with clinical signs of polydipsia,
polyuria
, severe emaciation, glycosuria, persistent hyperglycemia, and decreased glucose tolerance. At necropsy, two animals had atrophy of the pancreas, whereas other visceral organs, including the endocrine organs, showed no significant changes. Microscopically, there was atrophy and reduced numbers of pancreatic islets accompanied by interlobular and interacinar fibrosis and compensatory enlargement of some remaining islets. Lymphocytes were observed commonly around and within atrophic islets and occasionally around and within enlarged islets. Vacuolar degeneration with occasional accumulation of glycogen granules was observed in the beta-cells of these enlarged islets. Immunohistochemical studies of atrophic islets demonstrated complete loss of beta-cells or only a few small beta-cells. There also was a corresponding decrease in the number of cells that stained with anti-
glucagon
(alpha-cells) or anti-somatostatin (delta-cells) antibodies. The vacuolated cells in the enlarged islets stained strongly with anti-insulin antibody (beta-cells). Ultrastructurally, the majority of cells in the atrophic islets had reduced cytoplasmic volume and few secretory granules, features consistent with alpha-cells. In contrast, enlarged islets that had prominent immunohistochemical staining for insulin (beta-cells) consisted of beta-cells with cytosolic edema, mitochondrial swelling, dilated smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and reduced numbers of or degranulated secretory granules. These pathomorphologic features found in cattle are similar to those found in juvenile-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in human beings and suggest autoimmune involvement in diabetes.
...
PMID:Spontaneous diabetes mellitus in young cattle: histologic, immunohistochemical, and electron microscopic studies of the islets of Langerhans. 844 27
Tumor-associated hypoglycemia has been reported in dogs with pancreatic beta-cell tumors, hepatic tumors, and, rarely, with other neoplasms. This article describes 4 dogs with marked hypoglycemia associated with smooth muscle tumors (jejunal leiomyoma, gastric leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma, and splenic leiomyosarcoma). Presenting clinical signs included grand mal seizures, lethargy, weakness, ataxia, and, in 1 dog,
polyuria
/polydipsia. The serum insulin concentration was low in 1 dog and normal in the other dog evaluated. Immunohistochemical staining for insulin was negative in the 4 tumors; the 3 tumors arising from the stomach and jejunum stained diffusely positive for
glucagon
. Blood glucose concentrations rapidly returned to normal after complete surgical resection of the tumors, and clinical signs associated with hypoglycemia resolved. Long-term follow-up available in 3 of the 4 dogs found no recurrence of clinical signs related to hypoglycemia at 15, 31, and 38 months after surgery, respectively.
...
PMID:Hypoglycemia in four dogs with smooth muscle tumors. 855 89
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