Patients with type 2 diabetes naïve to insulin can be effectively treated with once-daily insulin detemir (+/- OADs) to achieve improved glycaemic control with no adverse effect on weight and a low risk of hypoglycaemia. These short-term results are consistent with the findings of clinical trials.
SUMMARY Hereditary osteo-onychodysplasia (HOOD, nail-patella syndrome) is an autosomal dominant condition characterised by nail dysplasia, patellar hypoplasia or aplasia, and nephropathy. The risk for HOOD patients to have a child with HOOD who will develop renal failure cannot easily be deduced from published pedigrees. We have studied a large family with 30 patients with HOOD and have analysed 34 kindreds with HOOD nephropathy from published reports, comprising 213 patients. For a patient with HOOD from a family in which HOOD nephropathy occurs, the risk of having a child with HOOD nephropathy is about 1:4; the risk of having a child in whom renal failure will develop is about 1:10.
To evaluate systemic cytokine and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responses in migraine, we measured plasma levels of tumour necrosis factor, interleukin-1, adrenocorticotropic hormone, and cortisol, as well as body temperature during and between attacks in 20 migraine patients. We found no evidence of systemic rise of cytokines during migraine attacks. Plasma cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone responses were similar to those found to experimentally-induced pain in normal subjects, i.e. elevated cortisol and unchanged adrenocorticotropic hormone levels. Unexpectedly, body temperature tended to be lower during attacks.
To determine whether human calcitonin inhibits GH secretion in man, as has been described for salmon calcitonin, the effect of an i.v. bolus of human calcitonin or saline on GH release after either insulin-induced hypoglycaemia or the administration of GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) or saline was studied. After the injection of calcitonin, no spontaneous GH surges were seen; the GH response to hypoglycaemia was diminished and the response to GHRH almost completely suppressed. Administration of calcitonin also caused a small and transient rise in plasma PRL and TSH but not LH levels, and no change in the integrated PRL or TSH response. Calcium and magnesium levels did not change. It is concluded that human calcitonin suppresses GH secretion in man, but not by suppressing GHRH and probably not by increasing somatostatin release. In addition, calcitonin has limited PRL and TSH-releasing activity.
The glucagon-stimulated insulin and C-peptide release in patients with active acromegaly, cured acromegalic patients and healthy controls were studied. There was an elevation of the fasting insulin levels in active acromegalics and the fasting C-peptide levels in both patient groups. After i.v. injection of glucagon the insulin and C-peptide levels increased. The highest levels were recorded in active acromegalics, but cured patients also had higher levels than the control group. The insulin/C-peptide ratio was increased in active acromegalics in comparison with that found for inactive acromegalics and normal controls. In addition, the plasma half-lives (T1/2) of endogenous insulin and C-peptide were measured. It was found that the T1/2 for insulin was increased in active acromegalics only. From this study we conclude that even when the treatment of acromegaly is effective insulin and C-peptide secretion do not normalize due, probably, to increased synthesis and release upon stimulation of the pancreatic beta-cells. In active acromegaly the removal of insulin is probably also reduced.
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