Publications by authors named "H Keilacker"

Cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies, glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies, spontaneous insulin autoantibodies, and insulin-induced antibodies were analyzed in a 1-year follow-up study of 12 newly diagnosed patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus aged 14 +/- 2 years (range 7-20 years) who had been initially treated with either multiple injections of insulin alone (control group) or, in addition, anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody/prednisolone (treatment group). Despite individual variations in islet cell antibody titers, there were no significant differences in the prevalence or changes in the mean titers between the two groups. Glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies remained almost unchanged, but correlated with levels of islet cell antibodies.

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To answer the question whether insulin or proinsulin would be the true antigen for both insulin and proinsulin autoantibodies, displacement experiments of 125I-insulin and -proinsulin binding with both unlabeled antigens were performed in sera of four groups of antibody-positive probands: first-degree relatives of Type 1 diabetic patients, pre-Type 1 diabetic persons, recent-onset Type 1 diabetic patients, insulin-treated Type 1 diabetic patients. In subjects who were primarily screened to constitute these groups, prevalences of insulin and proinsulin autoantibodies were nearly identical. In antibody-positive sera, 125I-insulin and -proinsulin binding values in general were closely correlated to each other with regression coefficients near 1.

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Using horseradish peroxidase- or alkaline phosphatase-conjugated secondary antibodies, an immunohistochemical assay was established for the detection of islet cell cytoplasmic antibodies (ICA). Determination of end-point titers showed a significant correlation between the conventional immunofluorescence and either immunocytochemistry assay. The assays with the enzyme-conjugated antibodies were more sensitive than the indirect immunofluorescence assay.

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There is little information in the literature about the actual diabetes risk of children of Type 1 diabetic parents. In a follow-up study of 48 children born from 35 Type 1 diabetic parents between 1955 and 1989, we have recorded all data relating to the incidence of Type 1 diabetes and of appearance of signs of subclinical diabetes by June, 1992. Information about the state of health was obtained during repeated stays of the patients in our hospital or by interviewing them by letter.

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The disease association of autoantibodies to proinsulin and insulin was compared in patients with Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus and first-degree relatives. Following the recommendation of the Fourth International Workshop on the Standardization of insulin autoantibodies, autoantibodies were determined by fluid-phase radioimmunoassay using equimolar concentrations of mono-125I-A14-insulin or -proinsulin to detect insulin or proinsulin autoantibodies, respectively. A higher prevalence of proinsulin autoantibodies vs insulin autoantibodies was found in 97 patients with Type 1 diabetes prior to insulin treatment (34.

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