In Spain, as in other industrialised nations, diabetes, with an estimated prevalence of 3.7 % [1, 2], constitutes a major cause of suffering and a major burden on the health system. In both cases, it is the specific complications of diabetes that are chiefly to blame. As an aid to managing health resources, we have therefore studied the prevalence of diabetic polyneuropathy among Spanish diabetic patients.Previous studies of the prevalence of diabetic polyneuropathy [3±14] had widely differing results. This was attributable to differences in the kind of patient sample (most samples were recruited in specialised centres); to whether or not the neurological effects of ageing were taken into account; and to study or diagnostic methods and criteria or both (studies differed as to whether they included neurophysiological tests in the diagnostic protocol; target- Diabetologia (1998)
The role of acetylcholine in human GH secretion was studied with atropine, which selectively blocks cholinergic muscarinic receptors and crosses the blood-brain barrier. Paired tests were performed in 22 normal subjects divided into 4 groups. The stimuli employed were arginine (30 g/30 min, iv), clonidine (300 micrograms, orally), physical exercise for 20 min, and saline. In the second test, atropine (1 mg, im) was administered before GH stimulation. Arginine elicited a GH secretory peak of 16.6 +/- 5 ng/ml (mean +/- SEM), which was completely blocked when atropine was administered with arginine (0.9 +/- 0.1 ng/ml). Atropine did not, however, modify the PRL secretory response; peak levels after arginine and atropine plus arginine were 16.3 +/- 3.1 and 16.8 +/- 2.5 ng/ml, respectively. Clonidine elicited a GH secretory peak (11.8 +/- 2.7 ng/ml) which also was blocked by pretreatment with atropine (1.2 +/- 0.2 ng/ml). Neither clonidine nor clonidine plus atropine altered PRL secretion. GH levels also were sharply increased after physical exercise, with a peak level of 19.4 +/- 4.9 ng/ml. Atropine completely blocked exercise-induced GH secretion (2 +/- 0.9 ng/ml). Atropine alone did not modify GH or PRL values compared with saline administration. The potency of the atropine-induced suppression of GH secretion by three different stimuli, each with presumably different mechanisms of action, suggests that acetylcholine plays an important role in the regulation of GH secretion.
Phenotypic features appeared after puberty in female, but not male subjects with familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD). We have studied anthropometrical, clinical, and metabolic gender differences in a Spanish family with FPLD resulting from a lamin A/C gene mutation, R482W. Genetic studies were carried out on 14 members of the family. In eleven heterozygous mutation carriers (6 men, 5 women), body composition was evaluated by bioelectric impedance analysis, skin-fold measurements were taken, and lipid profiles were drawn. Moreover, plasma glucose, insulin, and leptin were determined, and insulin resistance and beta cell response were evaluated using HOMA. Ten healthy women and 10 healthy men matched for age and body mass index were used as control group. Body composition was similar in these patients to normal people. However, skin-folds of extremities were thinner in FPLD women compared with those of control subjects, but not in men. The affected women, but not men, showed hypoleptinaemia, insulin resistance, and beta-cell hyperresponse compared with unaffected women. The lipid profile was normal in the young patients, irrespective of sex. Type 2 diabetes mellitus and hypertriglyceridaemia were detected in old and overweight patients only. In conclusion, molecular diagnosis allows us to demonstrate that women with FPLD present both adipose tissue and biochemical abnormalities early in life, and this did not happen in affected men.
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