J Diabetes Sci Technol
August 2024
Background: In-hospital hyperglycemia poses significant risks for patients with diabetes mellitus undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Electronic glycemic management systems (eGMSs) like InsulinAPP offer promise in standardizing and improving glycemic control (GC) in these settings. This study evaluated the efficacy of the InsulinAPP protocol in optimizing GC and reducing adverse outcomes post-CABG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe measured plasma-derived extracellular vesicle (EV) proteins and their microRNA (miRNA) cargos in normoglycemic (NG), glucose intolerant (GI), and newly diagnosed diabetes mellitus (DM) in middle-aged male participants of the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brazil). Mass spectrometry revealed decreased IGHG-1 and increased ITIH2 protein levels in the GI group compared with that in the NG group and higher serotransferrin in EVs in the DM group than in those in the NG and GI groups. The GI group also showed increased serum ferritin levels, as evaluated by biochemical analysis, compared with those in both groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study evaluated the relationship between the zinc-related nutritional status and glycemic and insulinemic markers in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). A total of 82 individuals with T2DM aged between 29 and 59 years were evaluated. The concentration of zinc in the plasma, erythrocytes, and urine was determined by the flame atomic absorption spectrometry method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Inpatient hyperglycemia is associated with adverse outcomes in hospitalized patients, with or without known diabetes. The adherence to American College of Endocrinology and American Diabetes Association guidelines recommendations for inpatient glycemic control is still poor, probably because of their complexity and fear of hypoglycemia.
Objective: To create software system that can assist health care providers and hospitalists to manage the insulin therapy orders and turn them into a less complicated issue.
The impact of dietary fatty acids in atherosclerosis development may be partially attributed to their effect on macrophage cholesterol homeostasis. This process is the result of interplay between cholesterol uptake and efflux, which are permeated by inflammation and oxidative stress. Although saturated fatty acids (SAFAs) do not influence cholesterol efflux, they trigger endoplasmic reticulum stress, which culminates in increased lectin-like oxidized LDL (oxLDL) receptor (LOX1) expression and, consequently, oxLDL uptake, leading to apoptosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To evaluate the impact of screening hyper and hypoglycemia measured by capillary glycemia and standard monitorization of hyperglycemic patients hospitalized in regular care units of Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein.
Methods: The capillary glycemia was measured by the Precision PCx (Abbott) glucosimeter, using the PrecisionWeb (Abbott) software. The detection of hyper and hypoglycemia during the months of May/June were compared to those of March/April in 2009 and to the frequency of the diagnosis of diabetes in 2007.
The objectives of this study were: to characterize the polipharmacy in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2) and to verify the correlation between polipharmacy and number of medications for DM2 complications with depression indicators (Beck Depression inventory (BDI) and urinary cortisol (CORT) levels). A sample composed of 40 patients with DM2 from the Diabetes League of HCFM-USP was analyzed for depression indicators (CORT and BDI) in addition to evaluation for polipharmacy and number of DM2 complications. The results showed oral hypoglycemic agents, insulins, antihypertensives, diuretics, lipid-lowering drugs and thrombolytics are the most frequent medications used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Lat Am Enfermagem
September 2009
Objective: To determine which of two simplified blood glucose monitoring schemes promotes better metabolic control in type 1 diabetic patients during 12 months of participation in educational groups.
Methods: A crossover clinical trial involving 21 patients divided into two groups was conducted. They were submitted to a two monitoring schemes: 2 alternate daily preprandial measurements and 2 alternate daily pre-and postprandial measurements.
Purpose: In this study we analyzed the role played by aerobic exercise training in the plasma lipoprotein profile, prebeta 1-HDL concentration, and in the in vitro HDL3 ability to remove cholesterol from macrophages and inhibit LDL oxidation in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) patients and control subjects, in the fasting and postprandial states.
Methods: Healthy controls (HTC, N = 11; 1 M/10 F) and subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DMT, N = 11; 3M/8F) were engaged in a 4-month aerobic training program, and compared with a group of sedentary subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DMS, N = 10; 4 M/6 F). All groups were submitted to an oral fat load test to analyze all parameters, both at the beginning of the investigation protocol (basal) and at the end of the study period (final).
In this study, we analyzed the effect of aerobic exercise training (AET) and of a single bout of exercise on plasma oxidative stress and on antioxidant defenses in type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and in healthy control subjects (C). DM and C did not differ regarding triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-c), insulin, and HOMA index at baseline and after AET. To measure the lag time for low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation (LAG) and the maximal rate of conjugated diene formation (MCD), participants' plasma HDL(2) and HDL(3) were incubated with LDL from pooled healthy donors' plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study analyzed the occurrence of hypoglycemia and metabolic control of two monitoring schemes in type-1 diabetic patients during 12 months they participated in education groups. Clinical crossed trials were conducted with 21 patients divided into two groups included the monitoring scheme proposed. Glycemic individuals' profiles directed monthly adjustments of insulin doses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To discuss the metabolic syndrome and identify its risk factors, including in the pediatric age group.
Sources: Indexed review articles.
Summary Of The Findings: The metabolic syndrome is characterized by insulin resistance and the presence of risk factors for cardiovascular diseases and diabetes mellitus type 2.
Background: Diabetes mellitus is associated with atherosclerosis that has, in part, been ascribed to abnormalities in the reverse cholesterol transport system. Methods: We determined, in the fasting and post-alimentary periods, rates of HDL cholesterol esterification and transfer to apoB-containing lipoproteins, cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) concentration, and apoB lipoprotein size in 10 type 1 diabetics and 10 well-matched controls. Autologous HDL was labeled with [14C]cholesterol and incubated at 37 degrees C during a period of 30 min for measurement of the cholesterol esterification rate (CER), as well as for 24 h for measurement of the endogenous HDL [14C]cholesteryl ester ([14C]CE) transfer rate to apoB-containing lipoproteins after 2- and 4-h incubations with the subject's own plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Clin Pharmacol Ther
September 1998
Objective: Patients with predominantly upper body obesity are at greater risk for developing diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. Little is known about the mechanisms involved in the regulation of regional body distribution. It has been accepted that the accumulation of fat into adipose tissue depends on regional metabolic regulation of adipocytes and that glucocorticoids play a role in this mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRates of ester formation from [3H]cholesterol and of [3H]cholesteryl ester transfer from the HDL-containing plasma fraction to lipoproteins of lighter densities (apo B-containing LP) and plasma cholesteryl ester transfer protein concentration (CETP) were measured in normotriglyceridemic Type II diabetics (n = 11) and normal controls (n = 10) both in the fasting state and 4 h after a standard milk-shake test meal (50g of fat/m of body surface). The percent of [3H]cholesteryl ester synthesis was measured in a plasma [3H]cholesterol-HDL containing preparation incubated for 30 min and the [3H]cholesteryl ester transfer was measured upon precipitation of apo B-containing lipoproteins with dextran sulphate/MgCl2 following a 2 h period of plasma incubation with [3H]cholesteryl ester-HDL. The test meal significantly increased the plasma triglyceride concentration and to a similar extent in diabetics and in normal controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypercholesterolemic women (n = 19) sequentially maintained on a long-term saturated (SAT) or a polyunsaturated (PUFA) fatty acid-rich diet, respectively, were studied in the fasting state and after a meal rich in SAT or PUFA. When apo B-containing lipoprotein was excluded from plasma the in vitro HDL-14C-cholesterol esterification rate was identical for the saturated (SAT) and polyunsaturated (PUFA) fatty acid diets, and did not increase during the postprandial period. Rates of transfer of 14C-cholesteryl ester to apo B-containing lipoproteins from HDL were also similar for both diets in the fasting state and increased to the same extent in the postprandial period in parallel with the rise in plasma triglycerides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPositron emission tomography using [18F]deoxyglucose (FDG) as a marker of regional brain metabolism was used to investigate the neural substrate of stuttering. Four patients with severe developmental stuttering were studied while reading aloud to another person (stuttering condition) and while reading aloud in unison with someone else (non-stuttering condition). The patients were also compared with four normal controls reading aloud by themselves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study tests the hypothesis that seriously violent offenders pleading not guilty by reason of insanity or incompetent to stand trial are characterized by prefrontal dysfunction. This hypothesis was tested in a group of 22 subjects accused of murder and 22 age-matched and gender-matched controls by measuring local cerebral uptake of glucose using positron emission tomography during the continuous performance task. Murderers had significantly lower glucose metabolism in both lateral and medial prefrontal cortex relative to controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Psychiatry
September 1994
Eighteen patients with schizophrenia had cerebral metabolic rates assessed with positron emission tomography during a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study of clozapine treatment. Relative metabolic rates were increased in the basal ganglia, especially on the right side. In the frontal lobe, metabolic rates were lowered, more on the left than on the right.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropsychological residua are common particularly in the early stages following a minor traumatic brain injury (TBI), however, a minority of individuals complain of persistent deficits following months or years post-accident. Nine such cases are presented with little or no evidence of brain damage demonstrated according to non-functional neuroimaging (for example CT, MRI), yet their neuropsychological examinations were positive. Since the introduction of positron emission tomography (PET), which captures a functional approach, the question arose as to what extent the two techniques (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn artificial chylomicron-like lipid emulsion doubly labeled with tri[(N)3H]oleoylglycerol ([3H]TO) and cholesteryl [1-14C]oleate ([14C]CO) was infused intravenously into human subjects with the purpose of simultaneously measuring the plasma disappearance rates (residence time, RT) of [14C]CO, which represents solely the splanchnic organ uptake of the remnant chylomicron core, and of [3H]TO, which combines the remnant disappearance with the shedding off of chylomicron triglycerides by the action of lipoprotein lipase. Thus, the fraction of the particle triglyceride content that is removed before the remnant is taken up is expressed as a delipidation index (DI = 1 - RT of [3H]TO/RT of [14C]CO. The present procedure has an advantage over the use of chylomicrons labeled with retinyl ester or radioactive triglycerides alone that represent, respectively, the chylomicron remnant or the whole particle metabolism only.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The cortical-striatal-thalamic circuit modulates cognitive processing and thus may be involved in the cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia. The imaging of metabolic rate in the structures making up this circuit could reveal the correlates of schizophrenia and its main symptoms.
Method: Seventy male schizophrenic patients underwent [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography after a period of at least 4 weeks during which they had not received neuroleptic medication and were compared to 30 age-matched male normal comparison subjects.