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Athill C A - - 2000
INTRODUCTION: Although computerized mapping studies have demonstrated the presence of multiple wavelets during atrial fibrillation (AF) and that action potential amplitude and duration in AF vary significantly from beat to beat, no study has correlated the single cell action potential changes with the patterns of activation during AF. METHODS AND ...
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Schmidt R E - - 2000
Diabetic autonomic neuropathy results in significant morbidity and mortality. Both diabetic humans and experimental animals show neuroaxonal dystrophy of autonomic nerve terminals, particularly in the prevertebral superior mesenteric ganglia (SMG) and celiac ganglia (CG) which innervate the hyperplastic/hypertrophic diabetic small intestine. Previously, investigators suggested that disturbances in ganglionic nerve growth ...
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Watkins L L - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: Although hyperglycemia has been recognized as a predictor of cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy in diabetic patients, the glucose threshold at which autonomic control begins to become impaired has not been evaluated. This study examined whether fasting plasma glucose (FPG) or fasting plasma insulin (FPI) is associated with reductions in baroreflex ...
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Zikic D - - 2000
In war, many people are not directly hurt, but they feel fear of various intensities for a long time. The response of the cardiovascular autonomic system to these conditions, produced by the bombardment of Yugoslav cities by NATO for 78 days in spring 1999, was investigated. A group of 12 ...
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SmorawiĆski J - - 2000
The study was designed to find out (1) whether the effect of 3-day bed rest on blood glucose (BG) and plasma insulin (IRI) responses to glucose ingestion depends on preceding physical activity and (2) whether plasma adrenaline (A), noradrenaline (NA) and cardiovascular changes following a glucose load are modified by ...
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Winkler A S - - 2000
AIMS: Clinical observation has led to the idea that there might be a distinctive form of selective sensory and autonomic neuropathy affecting patients with Type 1 diabetic mellitus with severe symptomatic autonomic neuropathy (Type 1-DAN) and this study was conducted to evaluate the presence of such a neuropathy in Type ...
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Villa M P - - 2000
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Patients with diabetes mellitus commonly have cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction and an abnormal ventilatory pattern during sleep. Few data are available on these changes in childhood diabetes. We investigated whether young diabetic children with or without diabetic neuropathy have ventilatory dysfunction during sleep and if so, whether these autonomic changes ...
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Bottini P - - 2000
Diabetic autonomic neuropathy (DAN) may affect up to 30% of the diabetic population. Sometimes DAN becomes clinically manifest causing specific symptoms and signs; more often, however, DAN is responsible for subtle alterations detectable only by functional tests, as in the case of the respiratory system. At first, abnormalities both in ...
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Luft D - - 2000
In some patients with type 1 diabetes, various physiologic reactions during a cold pressor test (CPT) are impaired. Whether this is caused by diabetic autonomic neuropathy, disturbed secretion of catecholamines, or disturbed blood glucose control is unknown. The authors, therefore, performed CPTs in patients with type 1 diabetes and in ...
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Viswanathan V - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: This study was conducted to assess the adverse effects of diabetic nephropathy on cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy (CAN) in South Indian Type 2 diabetic patients. METHODS: Comparison was made between Type 2 diabetic patients with nephropathy (group 1, n=25), Type 2 diabetic patients without nephropathy (group 2, n=25) and non-diabetic, ...
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Gaur C - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to study gall bladder volume in fasting and 45 minutes post-prandial, by real time ultrasound in healthy controls and diabetic patients with and without autonomic neuropathy and to compare them. METHOD: Age, Sex and body mass index (BMI) matched 50 healthy subjects and ...
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Kitamura A - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Core hypothermia develops after the induction of general anesthesia, but intraoperative vasoconstriction usually prevents its progression. However, diabetes mellitus is often associated with autonomic neuropathy, which leads to abnormal peripheral neurovascular function. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that diabetic patients experience a greater reduction in core temperature during general ...
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Gerritsen J - - 2000
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Currently, three categories of measures are used to assess cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction: measures of the Ewing-test, measures of heart-rate variability, and measures of baroreflex sensitivity. We studied the determinants of these measures obtained from cardiovascular autonomic function tests in the Hoorn Study. METHODS: The study group (n = 631) ...
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Benthem L - - 2000
We investigated the relationship between autonomic activity to the pancreas and insulin secretion in chronically catheterized dogs when food was shown, during eating, and during the early absorptive period. Pancreatic polypeptide (PP) output, pancreatic norepinephrine spillover (PNESO), and arterial epinephrine (Epi) were measured as indexes for parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous ...
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Paolisso G - - 2000
BACKGROUND: Spectral analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) investigates the cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS) activity. In particular, low frequency/high frequency (LF/HF) is considered an index of cardiac sympatho-vagal balance and is stimulated by glucose ingestion in healthy subjects. No studies have evaluated the effect of glucose ingestion on cardiac ...
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Erbas T - - 2000
BACKGROUND: The alteration of endothelin (ET) levels in diabetic patients with cardiac autonomic neuropathy (CAN) has not been studied extensively and its correlation with cardiac function parameters has not been discussed. HYPOTHESIS: The aim of the present study was to discuss the correlation between the degree of cardiac autonomic neuropathy, ...
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Ambulatory blood pressure, microalbuminuria, and autonomic neuropathy in adolescents with type 1 ...
Lafferty A R - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between 24-h blood pressure (BP) measurements, urinary albumin excretion rates, and autonomic neuropathy (AN) in adolescents with type 1 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 31 patients with microalbuminuria (MA), 20 patients with intermittent MA (I-MA) and 11 patients with persistent MA (P-MA) ...
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Isotani H - - 2000
To determine the reversibility of autonomic nerve function in relation to the rapid improvement of glycemic control, we studied 54 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (33 men and 21 women; mean age, 49+/-8 years; mean duration of diabetes, 10+/-7 years). For 4 weeks of admission, the subjects were placed ...
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Meier M - - 2000
In diabetes mellitus, heart rate corrected QT interval (QTc) has been suggested to be related to ischemic heart disease and increased risk of sudden cardiac death. The aim of the study was to analyze the length of QTc interval with regard to global and regional myocardial perfusion in type 1 ...
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Mésangeau D - - 2000
Cardiac autonomic neuropathy is a common complication in insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. Nevertheless, little is known about when this impairment occurs during the time course of the disease. Analysis of blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) variability could be used to detect early signs of autonomic alteration. To test ...
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Whitsel E A - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: A 1992 consensus statement on autonomic testing portrayed Bazett's heart rate-corrected QT interval (QT) prolongation as a specific yet insensitive indicator of diabetic autonomic failure. At that time, only a few small studies had evaluated the accuracy of QTc. To date, even fewer studies have evaluated whether its accuracy ...
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Khawaja K I - - 2000
We report the clinico-pathological features and management of a 49-year-old male with a 30-year history of Type 1 diabetes mellitus who had nephropathy (proteinuria 1.81 g/24 h, creatinine 136 micromol/l), proliferative retinopathy and severe somatic and autonomic neuropathy. A sural nerve biopsy demonstrated marked myelinated fibre loss with unmyelinated fibre ...
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Sayer J W - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: To assess the role of beta cell failure in the development of autonomic dysfunction in patients with coronary artery disease. DESIGN: Autonomic function was measured by standard clinical methods and by heart rate variability in 24 type II diabetic and 24 non-diabetic subjects with coronary artery disease. Quantitative estimates ...
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Hoeldtke R D - - 2000
It is well documented that diabetic patients with chronic complications have decreased renin secretion and elevations in the renin precursor prorenin. It is uncertain, however, whether the abnormal processing of prorenin is reflective of microvascular disease, hypertension, or autonomic neuropathy. Dechaux et al. (Transplant Proc. 18:1598-1599, 1986) observed abnormalities in ...
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Stella P - - 2000
The pathogenesis of diabetic neuropathy is poorly understood. In this prospective study, we investigated the incidence rate and potential predictors for cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy (CAN) in a cohort of childhood-onset type 1 diabetic patients. Subjects from the Epidemiology of Diabetes Complications Study were examined at baseline and then biennially. CAN ...
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Krishnakumar K - - 2000
Hypoglycaemic activity of a petroleum ether extract of the root bark of Salacia oblonga Wall. (Celastraceae) (SOB) was studied in streptozotocin (STZ) hyperglycaemic rats. In addition, the anti-lipid peroxidative activity of SOB was studied in hyperglycaemic rats. The extract showed significant hypoglycaemia ( p < 0.001), which was supported by ...
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Kolev O I - - 1999
The aims of this study were to investigate the function of the central motor control system in interaction with the vestibular and auditory systems (measured by H-reflex changes in response to vestibular and acoustic stimulations) in diabetics without clinical data for CNS impairment, in order to establish whether the disease ...
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Arildsen H - - 1999
AIM: To compare the QT dispersion in unselected patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus to non-diabetic control subjects and to assess the association between the QT dispersion and cardiac autonomic neuropathy, ischaemic heart disease, blood pressure level and nephropathy. METHODS: 42 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and 80 control subjects aged ...
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Torigoe K - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Abnormal sympathetic skin response (SSR) has been reported in adult patients with diabetic neuropathy. In addition, other studies have revealed abnormal SSR in diabetic patients not having autonomic symptoms and autonomic dysfunctions. These findings have been only obtained from adult patients. There have been few reports on the autonomic ...
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Robillon J F - - 1999
The purpose of this study was to assess the abnormalities and prevalence of QT dispersion in 154 diabetic patients (DP) who underwent a standard 12-lead ECG. QT interval was measured from the beginning of the QRS complex until the T wave returned to baseline. Atrial fibrillation, pacemakers and the impossibility ...
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Massin M M - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Adults with type 1 diabetes may have abnormal alterations in heart rate variability (HRV) due to cardiac autonomic neuropathy. This prospective study was performed to determine whether HRV can be used to detect subclinical autonomic neuropathy in diabetic children. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We examined five time domain and ...
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Winkler A S - - 1999
AIMS: To discover whether Type 1 diabetic patients with autonomic neuropathy might be anaemic and erythropoietin (EPO)-depleted. METHODS: Fifteen Type 1 diabetic patients with serious complications (DM-COMP) were selected because of severe symptomatic autonomic neuropathy, including significant postural hypotension. All had proteinuria from nephropathy (three microalbuminuria and 12 macroalbuminuria), but ...
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Kimber J - - 1999
In normal man, the centrally active alpha2-adrenoceptor agonist clonidine reduces arginine-vasopressin (AVP) secretion, probably by presynaptic inhibition of noradrenergic neuron terminals in the supraoptic nucleus. A lesion of noradrenergic pathways in animals abolishes this response to clonidine. At postmortem in multiple system atrophy (MSA) there is marked loss of hypothalamic ...
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Cencetti S - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether oscillations in the cerebrovascular circulation undergo autonomic modulation in the same way as cardiovascular oscillations. DESIGN: Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular oscillations were monitored at rest and during sympathetic stimulation (head up tilt). The association with and transmission of the oscillations in the sympathetic (low frequency, LF) and ...
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Di Carli M F - - 1999
BACKGROUND:C ardiac sympathetic signals play an important role in the regulation of myocardial perfusion. We hypothesized that sympathetically mediated myocardial blood flow would be impaired in diabetics with autonomic neuropathy. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 28 diabetics (43+/-7 years old) and 11 age-matched healthy volunteers. PET was used to delineate ...
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Aronson D - - 1999
Diabetes mellitus is associated with a marked increase in the risk of coronary events but with an altered circadian distribution that demonstrates an absent morning peak and higher infarction rate during the evening hours. To elucidate the mechanism of this phenomenon, the circadian pattern of heart rate variability was evaluated ...
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Jalal S - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the association of silent myocardial ischemia (SMI) with cardiac autonomic neuropathy in asymptomatic diabetic patients. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Two hundred asymptomatic patients of diabetes mellitus were assessed for evidence of cardiac autonomic neuropathy. Of these, 30 (15 males, 15 females; mean age 44.7 +/- 8.8 years) were ...
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Weston P J - - 1999
AIMS: Sudden nocturnal death in young persons with Type 1 diabetes mellitus has been recently described, and is known as the 'dead in bed' syndrome. Its aetiology is unknown, and we have therefore explored the details of all papers recording the syndrome, to formulate a hypothesis of causation. METHODS: Literature ...
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Oka-Manabe S - - 1999
A 63-year-old diabetic man was admitted with general fatigue. Electrocardiogram (ECG) on admission showed complete atrioventricular (AV) blockade associated with prominent bifid T waves. The second component of the bifid T waves was distinguished from U waves by the beat-to-beat varying bifidity and the nadir between the two components located ...
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Ejskjaer N - - 1999
AIMS: The pathogenesis of diabetic autonomic neuropathy is multifactorial, but recent studies have suggested a link between the presence of autoantibodies to nervous tissue structures and severe, symptomatic autonomic neuropathy. The present study was designed to examine the true prevalence of these autoantibodies in a large clinic-based population of Type ...
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Wu J S - - 1999
BACKGROUND: Postural hypotension with a decline of 20 mm Hg or more in systolic blood pressure on standing is considered a potentially dangerous hypotensive response. Postural dizziness is often strongly associated with postural hypotension. However, there is conflicting evidence, and previous studies have been confined to the elderly, not specifically ...
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Sartucci F - - 1999
OBJECTIVES: Diabetic impotence is generally due to peripheral neuropathy, but a central pathway impairment has also been suggested. We evaluated somatosensory transmission in a group of impotent diabetic men to assess the role of central nervous system (CNS) involvement. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) of pudendal (pdn) and ...
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Mancini M - - 1999
STUDY OBJECTIVES: The interaction among pulmonary mechanics, respiratory muscle performance, and ventilatory control in subjects with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus has so far received little attention. We therefore decided to assess the role of central factors and peripheral factors on the ventilatory response to a hypoxic stimulus in type I diabetic ...
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Kroll M H - - 1999
Serial data of glucose and insulin values of individual patients vary over short periods of time; this phenomenon has been called biological variation. The classic homeostatic control model assumes that the physiological mechanisms maintaining the concentrations of glucose and insulin are linear. The only deviations over a short period of ...
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Mayaudon H - - 1999
This study assessed gastric neuropathy in type 1 diabetes mellitus and its relationships with cardiac autonomic neuropathy. Fifty-four asymptomatic type 1 patients (43 +/- 12 years) and 15 healthy subjects participated in the study. Cutaneous electrogastrography (EGG) was recorded for 4 h before, during, and 4 h after the ingestion ...
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Javorka K - - 1999
The aim of this study was to obtain information about parameters of heart rate variability (HRV) in three frequency bands (high frequency - HF, low frequency - LF and very low frequency - VLF), the sensitivity of cardiovascular tests, and subjective feelings depending on autonomic nervous system balance in a ...
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Pressler J L - - 1999
The purpose of this study was to compare the behavioral responses of term newborns of insulin-dependent diabetic mothers (NDMs) with newborns of nondiabetic, healthy mothers. The research design involved matched controls with repeated measures. Participants included 40 NDMs matched with 40 newborns of nondiabetic, healthy mothers. The main outcome measures ...
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Rödig G - - 1999
We have analysed the clinical agreement between two methods of continuous cardiac output measurement pulse contour analysis (PCCO) and a continuous thermodilution technique (CCO), were both compared with the intermittent bolus thermodilution technique (BCO). Measurements were performed in 26 cardiac surgical patients (groups 1 and 2, 13 patients each, with ...
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Flanagan D E - - 1999
The pathophysiology of insulin resistance is unclear. A link between increased heart rate (HR) and insulin resistance suggests an association with sympathetic nervous system activity. To further evaluate this, we examined autonomic activity using spectral analysis of HR variability (HRV), which provides a measure of cardiac sympathovagal modulation, and related ...
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Lluch I - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Although abnormal gastroesophageal (GE) reflux is the most frequent alteration of the gastrointestinal tract, its prevalence in diabetes mellitus (DM) is not widely known. The objective of this study was to analyze both the presence of abnormal GE reflux in diabetic patients with no esophageal symptoms and the influence ...
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