scholarly journals Chlorpropamide-alcohol flushing and plasma chlorpropamide concentrations in diabetic patients on maintenance chlorpropamide therapy

Diabetologia ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M. Hillson ◽  
R.F. Smith ◽  
H. Dhar ◽  
R.A. Moore ◽  
T.D.R. Hockaday
1987 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Hoskins ◽  
P. G. Wiles ◽  
H. P. Volkmann ◽  
D. A. Pyke

1. The relationship between chlorpropamide alcohol flushing and non-insulin dependent diabetes remains uncertain. It is known, however, that the frequency of facial flushing with alcohol and the temperature response depend upon both the plasma level of chlorpropamide and the starting facial temperature [10]. 2. We tested 23 young adult non-diabetic subjects with 8 g of ethanol after a dose of chlorpropamide 250 mg twice daily for 2 days or a placebo, in a double blind, cross-over manner. Previously, nine other subjects had participated in a pilot study to assess the safety of the chlorpropamide dose and to ensure that adequate plasma chlorpropamide levels were achieved. 3. No subject was negative for chlorpropamide alcohol flushing, as defined by the following criteria: (1) facial temperature rise of 35% or more of maximum possible rise, (2) observer assessment or (3) subject assessment. In 26 of the total 32 subjects, all three criteria were fulfilled. 4. Thus, among young, healthy non-diabetic adults chlorpropamide alcohol flushing would appear to be a normal phenomenon.


1983 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 149-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Feely ◽  
S. McLaren ◽  
A.M.M. Shepherd ◽  
D. Maclean ◽  
I.H. Stevenson ◽  
...  

1 The relationship between plasma chlorpropamide concentration and thyroid function was examined in 87 maturity onset diabetic patients receiving chronic therapy. 2 Although plasma chlorpropamide concentration was weakly negatively correlated with serum thyroxine (r= 0.33, P< 0.01) the mean serum thyroxine and thyrotrophin (TSH) were not different from that of a matched control group of diabetics treated with diet alone. 3 Serum thyroxine was negatively correlated with the duration of diabetes in both groups. 4 These results suggest that chlorpropamide does not have a clinically significant antithyroid effect.


1984 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 633-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Johnston ◽  
Frank Carey ◽  
Robert A. Forder ◽  
Duncan Haworth

1. Levels of immunoreactive 6-oxo-prostaglandin F1α (6-oxo-PGF1α) and thromboxane B2 (TXB2) were measured in peripheral venous plasma in a group of volunteers and non-insulin dependent diabetic patients (NIDDS). Levels of these eicosanoids were close to the limit of sensitivity of the radioimmunoassays and consequently data are reported as maximal values. Basal plasma levels of 6-oxo-PGF1α did not exceed 5 pg/ml in either group and maximal levels of immunoreactive TXB2 were 125 ± 14 and 128 ± 8 pg/ml for volunteers and NIDDS respectively. 2. Attempts to elicit peripheral vascular prostacyclin biosynthesis in volunteers by using forearm ischaemia produced no increase in plasma 6-oxo-PGF1α levels. Measurement of the combined plasma levels of 6-oxo-PGF1α, 13,14-dihydro-6-oxo-PGF1α, 13,14-dihydro-6,15-dioxo-PGF1α and 6-oxo-PGE1 indicated that these were also low (less than 5 pg/ml) and that failure to demonstrate increased 6-oxo-PGF1α levels was unlikely to have arisen from metabolism of prostacyclin to one or more of these metabolites. 3. Measurement of 6-oxo-PGF1α and TXB2 in peripheral venous plasma before and during chloropropamide alcohol flushing (CPAF) did not provide evidence for a role for these eicosanoids in the etiology of this phenomenon. 4. These findings point to the need for a reappraisal of studies that have described altered plasma levels of 6-oxo-PGF1α and TXB2 in CPAF and other pathophysiological conditions in man.


Author(s):  
Bruce R. Pachter

Diabetes mellitus is one of the commonest causes of neuropathy. Diabetic neuropathy is a heterogeneous group of neuropathic disorders to which patients with diabetes mellitus are susceptible; more than one kind of neuropathy can frequently occur in the same individual. Abnormalities are also known to occur in nearly every anatomic subdivision of the eye in diabetic patients. Oculomotor palsy appears to be common in diabetes mellitus for their occurrence in isolation to suggest diabetes. Nerves to the external ocular muscles are most commonly affected, particularly the oculomotor or third cranial nerve. The third nerve palsy of diabetes is characteristic, being of sudden onset, accompanied by orbital and retro-orbital pain, often associated with complete involvement of the external ocular muscles innervated by the nerve. While the human and experimental animal literature is replete with studies on the peripheral nerves in diabetes mellitus, there is but a paucity of reported studies dealing with the oculomotor nerves and their associated extraocular muscles (EOMs).


Author(s):  
John M. Basgen ◽  
Eileen N. Ellis ◽  
S. Michael Mauer ◽  
Michael W. Steffes

To determine the efficiency of methods of quantitation of the volume density of components within kidney biopsies, techniques involving a semi-automatic digitizing tablet and stereological point counting were compared.Volume density (Vv) is a parameter reflecting the volume of a component to the volume that contains the component, e.g., the fraction of cell volume that is made up of mitochondrial volume. The units of Vv are μm3 /μm3.Kidney biopsies from 15 patients were used. Five were donor biopsies performed at the time of kidney transplantation (patients 1-5, TABLE 1) and were considered normal kidney tissue. The remaining biopsies were obtained from diabetic patients with a spectrum of diabetic kidney lesions. The biopsy specimens were fixed and embedded according to routine electron microscogy protocols. Three glomeruli from each patient were selected randomly for electron microscopy. An average of 12 unbiased and systematic micrographs were obtained from each glomerulus and printed at a final magnification of x18,000.


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