These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Contrasting renal functional reserve in very long-term Type I diabetic patients with and without nephropathy.
    Author: Sackmann H, Tran-Van T, Tack I, Hanaire-Broutin H, Tauber JP, Ader JL.
    Journal: Diabetologia; 2000 Feb; 43(2):227-30. PubMed ID: 10753045.
    Abstract:
    AIMS: This study was to determine whether renal functional reserve (RFR) is present in patients who have suffered long-lasting Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. METHODS: Renal functional reserve was elicited by a 3-h amino acid infusion (4.5 mg x kg(-1) x min(-1)) in 10 patients with nephropathy (DN+) and 10 patients without nephropathy (DN-) who had lived with diabetes for 24 +/- 3 and 27 +/- 3 years, respectively and in 15 healthy control subjects. Renal functional reserve was calculated as the difference between amino acid-stimulated and baseline glomerular filtration rates (GFR). RESULTS: Baseline glomerular filtration rate in DN- patients (106 +/- 8) and control subjects (112 +/- 3 ml x min(-1) x (1.73m2)(-1)) was significantly higher (p < 0.01) than in DN+ patients (79 +/- 7 ml x min(-1) x (1.73m2)(-1)). Renal functional reserve was absent in DN+ patients, whereas it represented 26 +/- 4% of the baseline in DN- patients and 23 +/- 2% in control subjects. Renal vascular resistance decreased statistically significantly during amino acid infusion in DN- patients and control subjects but not in DN+ patients. CONCLUSIONS/HYPOTHESIS: These results indicate that very long-term Type I diabetic patients without diabetic nephropathy still have a normal renal functional reserve. In contrast, this reserve is suppressed in similarly long-term macroalbuminuric and hypertensive patients with overt nephropathy in spite of their remarkably maintained glomerular filtration rate. This opposite impairment supports the interpretation that glomerular hyperfiltration is a determining mechanism in human diabetic nephropathy.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]