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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0428
    Keywords: Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus ; arterial hypertension ; borderline hypertension ; microalbuminuria ; diabetic nephropathy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Arterial hypertension and poor glycaemic control are central to the development of microalbuminuria in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). Recent consensus has established sensitive criteria for their detection and treatment, although the proportion of patients who may benefit is unclear. Between 1988 and 1990, we measured urinary albumin to creatinine concentration ratio (A/C) in 3,636 adult out-patients with IDDM of more than 3 years duration, serum creatinine under 133 Μmol/l and who were not undergoing antihypertensive treatment. A/C indicating microalbuminuria (≥2.38/ 2.96 mg/mmol, male/female) was found in 620 of 3,451 patients without proteinuria, and associated with hypertension (blood pressure ≥140 and/or 90 mm Hg; p=0.0016; rate: 39.6%), independent of diabetes duration (p=0.0082) and male gender (p=0.0350; relative risk=1.16; 95% confidence interval: 1.01–1.32). Hypertension was less common among those with normal A/C (27.5%, p〈0.0001) but was positively related with diabetes duration. Of the 1,015 patients with A/C〉2.0 mg/mmol 529 were reexamined. Glycated haemoglobin levels exceeded 3 SD above the mean of normal in 84.3% of the 198 microalbuminuric patients (AER=20–200 Μg/min), but were comparably poor (79.2%) in normoalbuminuria. Duration of diabetes was inversely related to glycated haemoglobin only in microalbuminuria (0.05〈p〈0.1). Intervention to lower blood pressure remains mainly restricted to those patients with long-term diabetes and slower development of kidney disease. Near-normalisation of glycaemia remains the priority for the majority of patients with microalbuminuria.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-5233
    Keywords: Diabetic nephropathy ; Hypertension ; Microalbuminuria ; Na+/Li+ countertransport ; Type 1 diabetes mellitus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Elevated erythrocyte sodium-lithium countertransport activity is an intermediate phenotype of essential hypertension among Caucasians, and may also associate with kidney disease in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. Evidence supporting the hypothesis that an inherited predisposition to essential hypertension may thus partly identify with the genetic background of susceptibility to diabetic nephropathy is, however, controversial. This review discusses the possible points of controversy, with emphasis upon the need to standardize the manifest heterogeneity in the current techniques of measurement, as well as upon the clinical concomitants and interpretation of elevated sodium-lithium countertransport activity in type 1 diabetes mellitus. Large family studies may be required in order to single out the independent contributions of genes and environment to sodium-lithium countertransport activity in type 1 diabetes mellitus. However, the original hypothesis that genes underlying elevated sodium-lithium countertransport in essential hypertension and in diabetic nephropathy may also reflect in part a predisposition to diabetic kidney disease cannot be rejected on the basis of current evidence.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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