Diabetologia
-
We studied 36 Type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetic patients without occlusive arterial diseases in the lower extremities and 12 age-matched and sex-matched non-diabetic subjects to clarify the association between diabetic polyneuropathy and foot ulcers using 1H- and 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging. ⋯ Our findings indicated that motor nerve dysfunction in diabetic patients was closely associated with impaired energy metabolism, fatty infiltration and increased intracellular pH of plantar muscles and high frequency of foot ulcers. These new techniques could contribute to help clarify the predisposing factors for foot ulcers.
-
The aim of this study was to analyse the conformational and linear epitope profiles of glutamic acid decarboxylase antibody (GAD65-ab)-positive sera to find disease-specific epitope profiles and to study, whether GAD65-ab epitope recognition changes or spreads during the prediabetic period and, thus, can provide markers to differentiate early from later stages of progression to diabetes. ⋯ A maturing autoantibody response, which could spread from EP-1-recognition to other regions of GAD65, resulted in titre-related rather than disease-specific epitope profiles which were not sufficient to predict whether GAD65-ab positive subjects will progress to Type I diabetes, autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome or stiff-man syndrome.
-
Multicenter Study
High frequency of mutations in MODY and mitochondrial genes in Scandinavian patients with familial early-onset diabetes.
To investigate the contribution of mutations in maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and mitochondrial genes to early-onset diabetes with a strong family history of diabetes in a cohort with a high prevalence of Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. ⋯ Among 115 Scandinavian families, mutations in the HNF-1alpha gene represented the most common cause of familial early-onset ( = 40 years) diabetes: MODY3 (5.2 %) more than MODY2 (3.5 %) more than MIDD (2.6 %) more than MODY1 (1.7 %).
-
The aims of this study were to assess the impact of diabetes and associated variables (fasting plasma glucose, blood pressure, antidiabetic treatment, body mass index) on general and cause-specific mortality in an Italian population-based cohort with Type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, comprising mainly elderly patients. The patients (n = 1967) who had Type II diabetes were identified in 1988 with an 80% estimated completeness of ascertainment. In 1995, a mortality follow-up (98% completeness) of the cohort was done amounting to a total of 11153 person-years. ⋯ Cardiovascular disease as a whole (international classification of disease ICD-9 390-459) accounted for 260 of 577 deaths (SMR 1.21, 95% CI 1.07-1.36). In internal analysis, the most important predictors of general mortality were insulin-treatment (relative risk [RR] 1.72, 95% CI 1.19-2.49) and a fasting plasma glucose greater than 8.89 mmol/l ([RR] 1.29, 95 % CI 1.04-1.60), whereas the most important predictors of cardiovascular diseases were insulin-treatment and hypertension. In conclusion, this population-based study showed: 1) slight mortality excess of 35% in Type II diabetes being associated with 2) a 30% increased mortality in subjects with baseline fasting glucose greater than 8.89 mmol/l and 3) a 40% increased risk of death from cardiovascular diseases in hypertensive patients.