SUMMARY A detailed study of four cases of MND-Madras has shown a significantly low plasma citrate level in these subjects. Comparison with other related groups of neurological disorders indicates the citrate/pyruvate ratio to be of diagnostic value in MND-Madras. This seems to suggest that the pathophysiology of MND-Madras may centre round altered citrate metabolism.
Objectives (a) To study whether there was an increased prevalence of glucose intolerance in the parents of probands with Type 1 diabetes and (b) to look for any possible link between the glucose intolerance in the parents with HLA-DQB1 alleles transmitted in excess to the Type 1 diabetes offspring.Study Design and Methods From 215 families of South Indian Type 1 diabetes probands, 336 parents (170 fathers, age 30±70 years; 166 mothers, age 23±72 years) were studied by oral glucose tolerance test (GTT). Glucose intolerance in the parents was compared with the population data available. HLA-DQB1 alleles in 170 of the families were studied by the Olerup method (based on sequence speci®c primers) and the transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) was used to determine the Type 1 diabetes-associated DQB1 alleles.
Pancreatic beta cell function was assessed by estimation of fasting and post prandial plasma C-peptide in 183 non-insulin dependent diabetic patients, who were treated with oral hypoglycaemic drugs, for more than 10 years. One-hundred-and-forty-one patients, continued to respond to oral hypoglycaemic agents (Group I) and in 42 the control was not satisfactory and had to be changed over to insulin (secondary failure, Group II). Significant beta cell reserve (PP CP greater than or equal to 0.6 pmol/ml) was present in 89 out of 183 patients (48%) and 83 (93%) of them responded to oral hypoglycaemic agents. Among the 94 patients with low beta cell reserve, 58 (62%) were on oral hypoglycaemic agents and the other 36 (38%) were on insulin. Of the 42 patients with secondary failure to the oral drugs, 36 (86%) had low C-peptide while 6 (14%) had significant C-peptide values. Secondary failure to oral hypoglycaemic agents can also occur in spite of good beta cell reserve. Beta cell reserve was not correlated either to the duration of diabetes or the age at diagnosis of the patients.
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