Diabetes mellitus and diabetic retinopathy in acromegaly showed no correlation with the duration of acromegaly and diabetes mellitus, age, or growth hormone level.
To investigate this relationship and potential associations between other polymorphic genes and proliferative retinopathy, a sample (n = 428) of participants in the population-based Wisconsin Epidemiologic Study of Diabetic Retinopathy was selected for typing for HLA-A, -B, -C, and -DR and a panel of other polymorphic genes.
As an acute-phase reactant HP may be functionally involved in the etiology of DM and DR, which are associated with immunologic and inflammatory processes, respectively.
Although no association was found between ACE gene polymorphism and diabetic retinopathy or nephropathy, this polymorphism was associated with MI in the patients with NIDDM.
An (A-C)n dinucleotide repeat polymorphic marker at the 5' end of the aldose reductase gene is associated with early-onset diabetic retinopathy in NIDDM patients.
The results indicate that there is no or minimal influence of the PAI-1 gene on either PAI-1 levels or the development of diabetic retinopathy in patients with diabetes mellitus.
Trypsin digests were inspected for the presence of lesions of diabetic retinopathy; vWf protein was localized by indirect immunofluorescence; and vWf mRNA levels were studied by in situ hybridization.
Electron microscopic immunocytochemical evidence for the mechanism of blood-retinal barrier breakdown in galactosemic rats and its association with aldose reductase expression and inhibition.
These findings indicate that I/D polymorphism of ACE gene is not a useful marker and is unlikely to play a major role in determining genetic susceptibility to diabetic retinopathy or the severity of diabetic retinopathy.
Together, these in vitro results suggest that AGE-VN found in vivo is related to morphologic and functional changes in the diabetic retina and may contribute to the genesis of acellular capillaries in early diabetic retinopathy.
These preliminary findings indicate that in Pima Indians with type 2 diabetes, presence of the 4G allele of the PAI-1 gene was associated with a higher risk of diabetic retinopathy.
The Trp64Arg allele of the beta 3-AR gene was significantly more frequent in the NIDDM patients with PDR (P = 0.002), but not in those with non-PDR (P = 0.151), than in NIDDM patients without diabetic retinopathy.
To investigate the potential significance of these polymorphisms in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy in IDDM, 80 patients with diabetic retinopathy and 119 controls without diabetic retinopathy were investigated in the current project.
The data suggest that proliferative DR development may be associated with increased retinal expression of vascular endothelial growth factor, placenta growth factor and transforming growth factor-beta1 that possibly triggers the deposition of small tenascin-C isoforms in the blood vessel walls.
The data suggest that proliferative DR development may be associated with increased retinal expression of vascular endothelial growth factor, placenta growth factor and transforming growth factor-beta1 that possibly triggers the deposition of small tenascin-C isoforms in the blood vessel walls.
Fibronectin mRNA was elevated in DR compared to normal retinas, possibly due to the overexpression of extradomain A-containing isoform (ED-A+, or cellular fibronectin).
In DR retinas, tenascin-C mRNA expression increased compared to both normal and diabetics without DR. By RT-PCR and Northern blotting, mainly small tenascin-C mRNA isoforms were expressed, and some of them were elevated in DR retinas.