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1.
Are insulin autoantibodies markers for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus?   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Recent studies have shown that insulin autoantibodies occur in patients with newly diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) before exogenous insulin treatment. Our study was designed to test the hypothesis that insulin autoantibodies, like cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies (ICAs), can identify individuals with ongoing autoimmune beta-cell destruction and increased risk of IDDM development. Insulin autoantibodies detected by use of a radioligand-binding assay were found in 1.4% of normal controls, 4% of first-degree relatives of IDDM patients, and in 37% of newly diagnosed IDDM patients. A strong positive correlation between insulin autoantibodies and ICAs was observed. HLA typing of insulin-autoantibody-positive first-degree relatives of IDDM patients, as well as in the general population, revealed a strong association with HLA-DR3 and/or-DR4, suggesting that insulin autoantibodies are restricted to persons genetically susceptible to IDDM. In an ongoing study of beta-cell function in ICA-positive nondiabetic individuals, the additional presence of insulin autoantibodies significantly increased the likelihood of beta-cell dysfunction. After intravenous glucose stimulation, insulinopenia was present in 70% of ICA and insulin-autoantibody-positive individuals in contrast to only 23% of ICA-positive, insulin-autoantibody-negative persons. These data document a significant association between insulin autoantibodies and ICAs and support the contention that insulin autoantibodies, like ICAs, are markers of ongoing beta-cell destruction.  相似文献   

2.
T Kobayashi  T Itoh  K Kosaka  K Sato  K Tsuji 《Diabetes》1987,36(4):510-517
The time course of islet cell antibodies (ICA) and serum C-peptides responses (CPRs) to oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTTs) were studied prospectively up to 60 (mean 35) mo in 32 ICA-positive subjects [28 with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (NIDDM) and 4 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT); mean age 45 yr], 96 matched subjects [56 with NIDDM, 8 with IGT, and 32 normal first-degree relatives of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM); mean age 45 yr] who were negative for ICA at the beginning of the study. In addition, the effects of human leukocyte antigens (HLA) on the time course of ICA and beta-cell function were evaluated. In 10 subjects (8 with NIDDM and 2 with IGT) who were ICA positive, ICA became undetectable, even by sensitive ICA assay, 15 +/- 2 mo (mean +/- SE) after initiation of this study. In these subjects, integrated serum CPR values (sigma CPR) and 2-h blood glucose values in response to OGTTs improved significantly (P less than .05-.01). In contrast, the remaining 22 subjects who were ICA positive were persistently positive for ICA. CPR and blood glucose responses deteriorated progressively in these 22 subjects, and 7 subjects in this group progressed to the insulin-dependent state. Serum CPR and blood glucose responses to OGTTs showed no remarkable changes in 64 patients (56 with NIDDM and 8 with IGT) and 32 normal first-degree relatives of patients with IDDM who remained negative for ICA throughout the study.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Cytoplasmic islet cell antibody-negative (ICA-; less than 20 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units, n = 1670) and ICA+ (n = 42) first-degree relatives of type I (insulin-dependent) diabetic individuals were studied for competitive insulin autoantibodies (CIAAs) with a radioassay. Overall, 3.7% of first-degree relatives (64 of 1712) were CIAA+. Of ICA- relatives, 2.7% (45 of 1670) exceeded the upper limit of our normal CIAA range (greater than 39 nU/ml), and 45% (19 of 42) of ICA+ relatives exceeded this normal range. Follow-up serums for repeat CIAA determination have been obtained from 16 of the nondiabetic CIAA+/ICA- individuals (time between samples, 0.4-5.8 yr). Fourteen of these 16 (87%) CIAA+/ICA- relatives were found to still be positive on follow-up, and 2 of the relatives who were positive on the first determination were negative on their follow-up test. With a mean follow-up of approximately 2 yr, 4 of 45 (9%) of the CIAA+/ICA- relatives, 5 of 23 (22%) of the ICA+/CIAA- relatives, and 12 of 19 (63%) of the CIAA+/ICA+ relatives developed diabetes. Life-table analysis indicated that, overall, 53% of CIAA+ relatives become diabetic after 5 yr of follow-up versus 65% of ICA+ relatives. Also by life-table analysis, the predicted risk after 5 yr of follow-up for progression to diabetes is 17% for CIAA+/ICA- relatives, 42% for ICA+/CIAA- relatives, and 77% for CIAA+/ICA+ relatives. The highest rate of progression to diabetes was found in ICA+ relatives with CIAA levels greater than 150 nU/ml (100% projected to be diabetic within 5 yr, P less than .008 vs. ICA+/CIAA- relatives).  相似文献   

4.
To establish whether there is a correlation between the autoimmune response to the islets and beta-cell function during the initial stages of type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes, and islet cell antibody (ICA) titer and C-peptide levels (fasting and glucagon stimulated) were determined in 39 newly diagnosed patients at onset of diabetes and every 3-6 mo for 2 yr. ICAs were detected in 74% of the patients, and beta-cell function was detected in 84% of the patients at onset. The ICA+ and ICA- groups had similar C-peptide values at diagnosis and at 3 mo, but from 6 mo on, the ICA+ group consistently showed a tendency to lose C-peptide secretory capacity more quickly when assessed by fasting and glucagon-stimulated C-peptide levels (ICA+ vs. ICA- fasting C-peptide levels at 18 and 24 mo, P = .013 and .017, respectively; ICA+ vs. ICA- glucagon-stimulated C-peptide levels at 6, 18, and 24 mo, P = .023, .007, and .028, respectively). The initial ICA titer had the highest predictive value on the outcome of beta-cell function (P = .04), and patients with complement-fixing ICAs did not behave differently from the general ICA+ group. This correlation between beta-cell function and ICA titer supports the role of autoimmunity in the pathogenesis of type I diabetes and has important implications for the design of immunotherapy trials.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of immunosuppression on the humoral immune response to islet autoantigens and exogenously administered insulin and the predictive value of islet cell cytoplasmic antibodies (ICAs), insulin antibodies (IAs), and HLA-DR phenotype for remission during immunosuppression were studied in a prospective randomized double-blind trial of cyclosporin administration in 98 newly diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients. HLA-DR phenotype and glycosylated hemoglobin were determined at study entry, and insulin requirement, glucagon-stimulated C-peptide, ICAs, and IAs were measured at entry and after 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 mo of follow-up. Cyclosporin therapy caused significant suppression of the prevalence and serum concentrations of ICAs and IAs. Cyclosporin-treated IDDM patients ICA+ at study entry had higher levels of stimulated C-peptide after 1 mo of study, but the increased beta-cell function was not associated with a higher frequency of insulin-free remission at 1 mo. ICA and IA status at entry did not predict cyclosporin-insulin-free remission as assessed by the prevalence of insulin-free remission or beta-cell function at 3-12 mo of study, and significant decrements in the titers or total disappearance of ICAs were not associated with an increased prevalence or duration of non-insulin-requiring remission or higher stimulated C-peptide values. There was no correlation between the serum levels of ICAs and IAs at entry and beta-cell function at 12 mo of follow-up.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
J K Karjalainen 《Diabetes》1990,39(9):1144-1150
To determine the prevalence and predictive value of islet cell antibodies (ICAs) for the development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in 1212 Finnish children aged 3-18 yr, samples for ICA determination were taken in 1980, and subsequent analyses were performed in originally ICA+ children and in 296 initially ICA- children in 1983 and 1986. All 1212 subjects were followed for 8 yr for the development of IDDM. Fifty children (4.1%) were positive for conventional ICAs (IF-ICAs) in 1980 (range 3-80 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units [JDF U]; median 30 JDF U), of which 12 (1.0%) had complement-fixing ICAs (CF-ICAs) in their serums (range 3-30 JDF U; median 8 JDF U). None were exclusively CF-ICA+. Boys were CF-ICA+ more often than girls (9 of 563 [1.6%] vs. 3 of 649 [0.5%], respectively; P less than 0.05). Over the next 6 yr, 4 of 39 subjects lost their IF-ICAs, and 4 of 12 lost their CF-ICAs without progressing to diabetes. The initial IF-ICA levels in these subjects were lower (range 3-8 JDF U; median 7 JDF U; P less than 0.05) than those in the persistent cases. In the initially ICA- subgroup (n = 296), 7 subjects (2.4%) later became IF-ICA+, and 4 (1.4%) became CF-ICA+. The levels of ICA in these subjects were lower than in the originally ICA+ ones (P less than 0.05), and 3 IF-ICA+ and 2 CF-ICA+ subjects again became ICA- before 1986.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Serum levels of recently discovered circulating forms of adhesion molecules, ICAM-1 and L-selectin, were found to be elevated in IDDM patients and in subjects at risk for developing IDDM compared with 100 normal, nondiabetic blood donors. Both adhesion molecules were determined by sandwich ELISA. Serum concentrations of either clCAM-1 or cL-selectin were > 2SD of normal mean in 10 of 14 recent-onset IDDM patients (P < 0.05). Serum levels of clCAM-1 and cL-selectin did not correlate. In first-degree relatives, elevated adhesion molecule levels were observed in the 6 ICA+ individuals and in the ICA- individuals all (n = 14) with a genetic risk of IDDM (sharing HLA-DR3 and/or-DR4 with the diabetic relative) but not in the HLA-DR3- and/or -DR4- relatives (n = 13). We conclude that elevated clCAM-1 and cL-selectin levels occur independently of ICA status and probably reflect ongoing immune processes in recent-onset IDDM patients and first-degree relatives at risk for IDDM.  相似文献   

8.
Various brief metabolic tests have been proposed as surrogate measures of insulin secretory reserve, which is normally determined by the more complicated and labor-intensive method of glucose potentiation of arginine-induced insulin secretion (GPAIS). This article provides correlations between insulin responses to intravenous arginine (AIRarg) and intravenous glucose (AIRgluc) in 39 normal control subjects in whom insulin secretory reserve was measured by GPAIS. The correlation coefficients were.78 and.77, respectively, both of which were highly statistically significant (P <.001). These results indicate that either AIRarg or AIRgluc, tests that can be performed in less than 15 minutes, can be used as reliable predictors of insulin secretory reserve in normal controls and, presumably, in recipients of islet and pancreas transplantation.  相似文献   

9.
A significant proportion of relatives of patients with insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes with high titers of cytoplasmic islet cell autoantibodies (ICAs) do not progress to overt diabetes with up to 8 yr of follow-up. This may reflect that follow-up of such relatives has not been long enough to observe diabetes, that despite expression of identical ICAs, some relatives will not progress to diabetes; or that there is heterogeneity in what is identified as ICA. We identified a subset of ICA that was restricted in its species (not reacting with mouse islets) and cell-type reactivity within islets (beta-cell specific). Only one of eight relatives whose sera had the restricted pattern of reactivity progressed to overt diabetes, and on sequential evaluation, all but the one relative who progressed to diabetes have maintained normal first-phase insulin secretion to intravenous glucose. In contrast, by life-table analysis, 70% of relatives expressing nonrestricted ICA became diabetic within 5 yr of follow-up (1 of 8 vs. 16 of 25 diabetic at last follow-up, P less than 0.02). Moreover, preliminary data suggest a significant association of the human leukocyte antigen DQB1*0602 allele of DR2 haplotypes with the restricted ICA pattern (4 of 5 DQB1*0602 restricted vs. 0 nonrestricted ICA, P = 0.006). We propose that expression of a genetically determined restricted ICA pattern confers a markedly lower risk for progression to diabetes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
First-degree relatives of individuals with type 2 diabetes are at increased risk of developing hyperglycemia. To examine the prevalence and pathogenesis of abnormal glucose homeostasis in these subjects, 531 first-degree relatives with no known history of diabetes (aged 44.1 +/- 0.7 years; BMI 29.0 +/- 0.3 kg/m(2)) underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Newly identified diabetes was found in 19% (n = 100), and impaired fasting glucose (IFG) and/or impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) was found in 36% (n = 191). Thus, only 45% (n = 240) had normal glucose tolerance (NGT). The homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was used to estimate insulin sensitivity; beta-cell function was quantified as the ratio of the incremental insulin to glucose responses over the first 30 min during the OGTT (DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30)). This latter measure was also adjusted for insulin sensitivity as it modulates beta-cell function ([DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30)]/HOMA-IR). Decreasing glucose tolerance was associated with increasing insulin resistance (HOMA: NGT 12.01 +/- 0.54 pmol/mmol; IFG/IGT 16.14 +/- 0.84; diabetes 26.99 +/- 2.62; P < 0.001) and decreasing beta-cell function (DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30): NGT 157.7 +/- 9.7 pmol/mmol; IFG/IGT 100.4 +/- 5.4; diabetes 57.5 +/- 7.3; P < 0.001). Decreasing beta-cell function was also identified when adjusting this measure for insulin sensitivity ([DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30)]/HOMA-IR). In all four ethnic groups (African-American, n = 55; Asian-American, n = 66; Caucasian, n = 217; Hispanic-American, n = 193), IFG/IGT and diabetic subjects exhibited progressively increasing insulin resistance and decreasing beta-cell function. The relationships of insulin sensitivity and beta-cell function to glucose disposal, as measured by the incremental glucose area under the curve (AUCg), were examined in the whole cohort. Insulin sensitivity and AUCg were linearly related so that insulin resistance was associated with poorer glucose disposal (r(2) = 0.084, P < 0.001). In contrast, there was a strong inverse curvilinear relationship between beta-cell function and AUCg such that poorer insulin release was associated with poorer glucose disposal (log[DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30)]: r(2) = 0.29, P < 0.001; log[(DeltaI(30)/DeltaG(30))/HOMA-IR]: r(2) = 0.45, P < 0.001). Thus, abnormal glucose metabolism is common in first-degree relatives of subjects with type 2 diabetes. Both insulin resistance and impaired beta-cell function are associated with impaired glucose metabolism in all ethnic groups, with beta-cell function seeming to be more important in determining glucose disposal.  相似文献   

11.
The onset of insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes is predictable before hyperglycemia by the presence of islet cell autoantibodies (ICAs) and competitive insulin autoantibodies (CIAAs). CIAA+ICA+ first-degree relatives of individuals with type I diabetes have increased numbers of CD4 cells bearing the CD45R antigen and reciprocal depressions of the CD4 cells bearing the CD29 determinant. In addition, depressed CD4/CD8 ratios are present. In this study, we investigated the correlation between autoantibody levels and T-lymphocyte changes in the prediabetic state. The data demonstrate a clear linear relationship between rising CIAA levels, a marker of disease rate, and rising elevations in the CD4+CD45R+/CD4+CD29+ ratio in 37 CIAA+ICA+ and CIAA+ICA- relatives (r = 0.93). In marked contrast, the degree of CD4/CD8 depression found in individuals with prediabetes or long-term diabetes failed to correlate with either CIAA (r = 0.32) or ICA (r = 0.29) levels. The investigation of T-lymphocyte changes in siblings of individuals with type I diabetes with different stable autoantibody patterns (CIAAs and/or ICAs), and thus varying risks for diabetes, revealed differences in the prediabetic groups. Fifteen CIAA+ICA- relatives with high CIAA levels (greater than 80 nU/ml) had high CD4+CD45R+/CD4+CD29+ ratios (P = 0.03) and depressed CD4/CD8 ratios (P = 0.008). In contrast, CIAA+ICA- relatives with low CIAA levels (39-80 nU/ml), and thus low risk of diabetes, had no alteration in their CD4/CD8 ratio (P = 0.75) or CD4+CD45R+/CD4+CD29+ ratio (P = 0.33). Nineteen CIAA-ICA+ siblings with a predicted intermediate risk for diabetes showed heterogeneity in the presence of T-lymphocyte abnormalities.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
More than 71,000 relatives of type 1 diabetic patients have been screened for cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies (ICAs), GAD65 autoantibodies (GAAs), and ICA512 autoantibodies (ICA512AAs). Among those 71,148 relatives, 2,448 were cytoplasmic ICA+, and the remainder were ICA-. Of the ICA+ group, 1,229 (50.2%) were positive for GAAs and/or ICA512AAs. Among ICA- relatives, 1,897 (2.76%) were positive for GAAs and/or ICA512AAs. Given the large number of relatives positive for cytoplasmic ICA and negative for "biochemically" determined autoantibodies, and the converse, we analyzed the proportion of ICA+ relatives found eligible to participate in the intervention phase of Diabetes Prevention Trial-Type 1 (DPT-1). To be eligible for the parenteral insulin DPT-1 trial, a relative had to have first-phase insulin secretion below the 1st percentile of cut-points (for parents) or below the 10th percentile (for siblings and offspring). To be eligible for the oral insulin trial, a relative had to have first-phase insulin secretion above cut-points (>1st percentile for parents, >10th percentile for siblings/offspring) and be positive for anti-insulin autoantibodies. For both trials, DQB1*0602 was an exclusion criteria, cytoplasmic ICA positivity had to be confirmed, and an oral glucose tolerance test had to result in nondiabetic levels. Of 572 relatives found to be eligible for trial entry, 442 (77.3%) were positive for GAAs and/or ICA512AAs, although overall only 50.2% of ICA+ relatives were positive for GAAs and/or ICA512AAs. The positive predictive value for trial eligibility for ICA+ relatives with GAAs or ICA512AAs who completed staging was 51.0%. In contrast, only 11.9% of ICA+ but GAA- and ICA512AA- relatives were found to be eligible by DPT criteria for trial entry. Positivity for biochemically determined autoantibodies among cytoplasmic antibody-positive relatives is associated with eligibility for the DPT-1 study.  相似文献   

13.
The highest risk for the development of type I diabetes resides with first-degree relatives of the diabetic proband, this risk being in the order of 2.9%, 6.6% and 4.9% for parents, siblings and children of the proband, respectively. The major genetic markers associated with the development of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is the possession of the HLA alleles DR3/DR4 and more recently the absence of aspartate in the 57th position on the beta-chain of the HLA DQ gene (HLA DQ beta Asp 57 negative). The most important auto-immune marker for predicting preclinical IDDM is the presence of high titres (greater than 40 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units) of islet cell antibodies (ICA), while the finding of insulin auto-antibodies (IAA) is a good predictive marker in children less than 5 years of age. The presence in a susceptible individual of ICA plus IAA is a better predictor of impending IDDM than the presence of either of these two markers alone. Antibodies which precipitate an islet membrane protein (MW 64K) are highly sensitive and specific markers of preclinical IDDM. The presence of 64K antibodies may well be the most important predictive marker of impending IDDM in the future. The progressive decline of the first phase of insulin secretion in response to an intravenous glucose challenge is associated with the onset of IDDM within 18 months. Of the immunotherapeutic agents at present used in clinically manifest IDDM, azathioprine has been shown to be ineffective in increasing the remission phase, while the value of nicotinamide is controversial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The goal of the Fourth International Workshop for Standardization of ICA Measurements was to determine the specificity of ICA assays and their ability to distinguish between control sera (n = 57) and sera from IDDM-related individuals--representing relatives of IDDM patients (n = 21), healthy individuals who later developed IDDM (n = 8), or newly diagnosed IDDM patients (n = 23). Results from 28 laboratories were analyzed. The mean specificity (percentage of control sera reported as negative) among 27 laboratories was 91%, including 6 laboratories with 100% specificity. Nevertheless, 78% of laboratories found at least one control sample > 0 JDF U. Among samples from first-degree relatives, the mean concordance was 86%, including three sera found negative (0 JDF U) by all laboratories. Among individuals who later developed diabetes, the mean concordance was 93%, with two sera found positive by 100% of laboratories. In sera from newly diagnosed IDDM patients, the mean concordance was 82%. Three sera were found positive and one serum negative by all laboratories. The JDF U of the sera considered to be positive were significantly greater than each laboratory's average for the controls. In conclusion, the results from laboratories participating in the Fourth International ICA Workshop demonstrated excellent specificity, good concordance, and an ability to separate control sera from defined, IDDM-related subjects.  相似文献   

15.
Islet cell antibodies (ICAs), thyrogastric antibodies, and HLA-DR antigens were determined in 204 patients with type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes controlled with diet and/or oral hypoglycemic agents (NIR) and in 108 age-matched patients who required insulin to control their hyperglycemia (IR). beta-Cell function measured as C-peptide response to glucagon was evaluated in relation to the presence of ICAs and HLA-DR antigens. The IR patients differed from the NIR patients with respect to higher frequency of ICAs (P less than .001), thyroid antibodies (P less than .02), and the HLA antigen DR4 (P less than .02). The highest frequency of ICAs and thyroid antibodies was observed in female insulin-treated subjects (51.2 and 46.4%). Patients who were heterozygous for HLA-DR3/DR4 showed significantly higher frequency of ICAs (P less than .01) and complement-fixing ICAs (P less than .001) than patients without the heterozygous form DR3/DR4. Neither the presence of ICA alone nor DR3/DR4 alone was associated with a significant impairment of beta-cell function. However, when both ICA and DR3/DR4 were present in a diabetic individual, beta-cell function was markedly impaired (P less than .001), suggesting that both genetic and autoimmune factors are necessary to facilitate the process leading to beta-cell destruction of the patients. Our findings suggest that type II diabetes is a heterogeneous disorder including at least two major subgroups, which can be further characterized by HLA-DR antigens and organ-specific antibodies.  相似文献   

16.
We have studied the endocrine-metabolic status of patients in non-insulin-receiving (NIR) remission of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) within 6-60 mo of diagnosis during administration of cyclosporine, in comparison with nondiabetic subjects. IDDM patients in NIR remission were recognized when target glycemic control (plasma glucose and mean capillary blood glucose levels less than 7.8 mM before meals) was maintained without administration of insulin for at least 2 wk. In so-called isoglycemic tests, 50 g glucose was administered orally, and the glycemic curve was simulated in a subsequent study by programmed intravenous infusion of glucose. Under these conditions, the subjects with diabetes exhibited obvious glucose intolerance: acute beta-cell responses to intravenous glucose were virtually absent but significant, although subnormal responses were present after oral glucose. The responses of plasma immunoreactive gastric inhibitory polypeptide to oral glucose were normal. After bolus intravenous injections of glucose, the patients with diabetes again exhibited glucose intolerance; acute responses of immunoreactive insulin (IRI) and C-peptide were present, although grossly obtunded. On intravenous infusion of arginine (30 g in 30 min), the patients with diabetes showed substantial but subnormal increases in plasma IRI and C-peptide. Intravenous infusion of arginine elicited increments of plasma immunoreactive glucagon (IRGI) in both groups, and this response was slightly exaggerated in the patients with diabetes. On ingestion of a standard mixed meal (Sustacal) delivering 600 cal, there was a modest but significantly greater increase in plasma glucose levels in the diabetic subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
In vivo beta-cell function tests are used increasingly in humans during the preclinical phase of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), but the severity of the beta-cell loss responsible for the abnormalities seen in these tests is unknown. We have measured several physiological beta-cell function tests--fasting plasma glucose, glucose disappearance constant, fasting insulin, acute insulin responses to arginine (AIRarginine) and glucose (AIRglucose), and glucose potentiation of AIRarginine (delta AIRarginine/delta G) and two direct objective measurements (pancreatic insulin content [PIC] and quantitative beta-cell mass)--in adolescent male baboons (Papio anubis/cyanocephalus). We have correlated in vivo measurements obtained within 3 days after the animals were killed with in vitro estimates of PIC and beta-cell mass in 15 animals, (2 nondiabetic requiring insulin treatment and 13 after varying doses of streptozocin to induce degrees of beta-cell damage ranging from normoglycemia to severe hyperglycemia). There was a strong linear correlation between beta-cell mass and PIC (r = 0.79, P less than 0.001). Physiological measures of beta-cell function were significantly correlated with both PIC and beta-cell mass. The correlations between physiological measures and beta-cell mass were linear and intercepted the beta-cell mass axis at 0.15-0.2 g, suggesting that in vivo measures of beta-cell function approach 0 when there is still approximately 40-50% of the beta-cell mass detectable histologically. With PIC, the linear correlations intercepted the axes close to 0. These findings provide considerable validity to the measurements of beta-cell function used in preclinical IDDM in humans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The effect of age on ICA and thyrogastric antibodies at diagnosis of IDDM was evaluated in 633 consecutively diagnosed Swedish diabetic patients aged 15-34 yr and in 282 volunteers of the same age. ICAs were present in 61% (383 of 633) of the patients and in 2% (5 of 282) of control subjects. When the initial classification was considered, ICAs were detected in 69% (327 of 473) of patients with IDDM, 23% (19 of 83) of those with NIDDM, 50% (36 of 72) of those with unclassifiable diabetes, and 20% (1 of 5) of those with secondary diabetes. The frequency of ICA fell significantly (P less than 0.001) with age in IDDM patients from 77% (104/135) in those 15-19 yr old to 52% (50 of 96) in 30- to 34-yr-old IDDM patients. The low frequency of ICA in 30- to 34-yr-old IDDM patients was confined to men (42%, 28 of 66). The frequency of gastric (H+, K(+)-ATPase) antibodies was significantly (P less than 0.05) higher in IDDM patients (10%, 47 of 449) than in patients with NIDDM (3%, 3 of 80) and unclassifiable diabetes (4%, 3 of 72). In conclusion, the frequency of ICA at the diagnosis of IDDM in young adult subjects decreases with increasing age, particularly in men. The frequent finding of ICA in patients considered to have NIDDM or unclassifiable diabetes indicates that misclassification of diabetes is frequent in young adult patients recently diagnosed with diabetes.  相似文献   

19.
First-degree relatives of patients with insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes (n = 264 from 106 families) were evaluated with HLA typing and determination of competitive insulin autoantibodies (CIAAs) and islet cell autoantibodies (ICAs). The levels of CIAAs in 30 relatives exceeded our upper limit of normal (greater than or equal to 39 nU/ml), and 30 had high-titer ICAs (greater than or equal to 40 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation units [JDF U]). Eleven of the HLA-typed relatives developed diabetes during follow-up. Twenty-three percent (28 of 123) of the relatives with at least one HLA-DR4 allele were CIAA+ (CIAA greater than or equal to 39 nU/ml) versus 4% (6 of 141) among DR4- relatives (P less than 0.0001). Twenty-one of 22 of the highest CIAA values were all in the DR4+ group (DR4+ vs. DR4-, P = 0.003, Wilcoxon's rank-sum test). HLA-DR3 did not correlate with the level of CIAAs, and neither DR3 nor DR4 correlated with titer of ICAs measured in JDF U. We conclude that, in first-degree relatives of patients with type I diabetes, there is a striking association with HLA-DR4 in both the prevalence of relatives exceeding the normal CIAA range and in the level of CIAAs. These data suggest that a gene on HLA-DR4 haplotypes contributes to the level of anti-insulin autoimmunity, and we hypothesize that DR4-associated diabetes susceptibility, distinct from DR3-associated susceptibility, may be secondary to this influence.  相似文献   

20.
The second international workshop on insulin autoantibodies (IAAs) demonstrated improved concordance among laboratories with both radioimmunoassay (RIA) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) when measurements were based on signals displaceable by preincubation with excess insulin. This feature has been incorporated into our original ELISA for IAAs, and the assay was used to compare IAAs in diabetes-related and healthy populations. The serum from a healthy islet cell antibody (ICA)+ and IAA+ subject was used to construct standard curves with and without preincubation with 1 U/ml human insulin. Reporting results in arbitrary displacement (delta +/- IAA) units derived from the standard curve improved precision and increased the specificity of the assay. Frequency analysis of the results from 200 control adults did not show a normal distribution, and cumulative frequency analysis demonstrated two populations: 10 of 200 (5%) control adults, 8 of 241 (3.3%) healthy schoolchildren, and 18 of 229 (7.9%) non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) patients had IAAs greater than 12 delta +/- IAA units. On the same basis, we tested samples from 89 individuals in the prospective Bart's Windsor Family Study for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), 31 of whom had ICAs greater than 5 Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (JDF) units. Of those with ICAs greater than 5 JDF units, 12 developed IDDM and 1 developed NIDDM in 10 yr of study. IAAs greater than 12 delta +/- IAA units were found in 6 of 12 (50%) who became diabetic and in 4 of 18 (22%) who remain healthy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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