Publications by authors named "Eva Ruzicska"

In the past decade several novel findings point to the critical role of the skeleton in several homeostatic processes, including energy balance. The connection begins in the bone marrow with lineage allocation of mesenchymal stem cells to adipocytes or osteoblasts. Osteoblasts and adipocytes produce factors affecting insulin homeostasis.

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Angiotensin II (ANGII) plays a central role in the enhanced sodium reabsorption in early type 1 diabetes in man and in streptozotocin-induced (STZ) diabetic rats. This study investigates the effect of untreated STZ-diabetes leading to diabetic nephropathy in combination with ANGII treatment, on the abundance and localization of the renal Na(+),K(+)-ATPase (NKA), a major contributor of renal sodium handling. After 7 weeks of STZ-diabetes (i.

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Identification of ghrelin started with the discovery of growth hormone secretagogues, continued with the description of ghrelin receptors and ended with the elucidation of the chemical structure of ghrelin. However, several issues concerning the role of ghrelin in physiological and pathophysiological processes are still under investigation. Most of the ghrelin produced in the body is secreted in the stomach, but it is also expressed in the hypothalamus, pituitary, pancreas, intestine, kidney, heart and gonads.

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Type 1 diabetes is usually associated with other autoimmune diseases. Parietal cell antibodies (PCA) are found in 20% of type 1 diabetic patients which might be an early sign of autoimmune gastritis and pernicious anemia. PCA destroy the gastric H+/K+ ATP-ase.

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Background: Little is known about the pathophysiology of ghrelin secretion in growth hormone-deficient adults treated with growth hormone, and the relationship between plasma ghrelin and hyperinsulinemia induced by an oral glucose load has not been investigated in these patients.

Objective: In the present study we examined the relationship between plasma ghrelin, insulin, C-peptide and leptin after an oral glucose load in growth hormone-deficient adults receiving treatment with growth hormone.

Methods: Plasma ghrelin, leptin, insulin, C-peptide and blood glucose were measured before and then at 30, 60, 90 and 120 min after the ingestion of glucose (75 g orally) in 20 growth hormone-deficient adults (12 women and 8 men), who had been treated with growth hormone for 7.

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Diabetes is known to increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia via oxidative stress and inflammation. There are speculations that SSAO activity might be related to the development of AD. Our aim was to investigate whether changes of soluble SSAO activity, oxidative stress and inflammation markers are related to each other in diabetes.

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Immunoglobulin A (IgA) nephropathy can rarely be associated with thyroid disease. We present a case of a young lady with nephrotic range proteinuria, microscopic hematuria, a creatinine clearance of 67 ml/min, biopsy proven IgA nephropathy, in whom hypercholesterolemia persisted after immunosuppressive therapy induced remission of glomerulonephritis. Fluvastatin was given but rhabdomyolysis developed.

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Background: Hyperglycemia-induced oxidative stress and left ventricular hypertrophy is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Our aim was to determine the relationship between left ventricular hypertrophy and the total scavenger capacity (TSC) in diabetic rats.

Material/methods: Control animals (n=30) were compared to streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats (n=38) and diabe-tic rats receiving insulin treatment (n=30) for 22 days.

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Objective: To gain insight into the cardiac adaptive mechanisms in diabetes, we studied whether angiotensin II (Ang II) alters expression of the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) and adrenomedullin (AM) genes in the left ventricle of the diabetic rat heart.

Methods: Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin (STZ; 60 mg/kg body weight intravenously). During the last 24 h of 2.

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Introduction: In diabetes the heart rate variability is decreased because of the autonomic neuropathy and parallel with this phenomenon the overnight blood pressure fall is lost. Presumably this change in the hemodynamic parameters is connected with the fact that the cardiovascular complications in type 1 diabetic patients are 2-4 times more frequent than in healthy patients. The volatility, as a new factor, is the dispersion of the proportion of the blood pressure values following each other.

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