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International Journal of Diabetes and Metabolism. 2004; 12 (3): 35-43
Dans Anglais | IMEMR | ID: emr-203738

Résumé

Diabetes mellitus [DM] is a major global health problem and it currently affects more than 175 million people worldwide. DM is an increasingly common chronic disorder which is associated with substantial costs in terms of life and demand on health budgets. Thus, up to 15% of national budgets are spent on the diagnosis, treatment and caring of diabetic patients in the Western World. DM is divided into two main groups, Type 1 or Insulin -dependent diabetes mellitus [IDDM; 5-10 % of all cases and juvenile onset] and Type 2 or Non-insulin- dependent diabetes mellitus [NIDDM; 90-95 % of all cases and adult in onset]. Both Types 1 and 2 DM are associated with a number of common symptoms and long term complications. One of these is the indigestion of food stuffs, especially carbohydrates. This is due to the inability of the gastrointestinal tract, especially the salivary glands and the exocrine pancreas to secrete an adequate amount of the major digestive enzyme, amylase. The medical term used to describe the dysfunction is digestive insufficiency or exocrine pancreatic insufficiency when dealing with the pancreas alone. Current evidence in the literature suggests that exocrine pancreatic insufficiency may be associated with a number of physiological and biochemical processes which may be deranged in the pancreas. These include reduced endogenous insulin secretion or insensitivity of the islet hormone to regulate glucose metabolism especially by pancreatic acinar cells, reduced gene expression for the mRNA amylase and the synthesis and release of the enzyme, reduced cytosolic concentrations of calcium [ca2+] and magnesium [Mg2] Na+ - k+ -ATP pase and tyrosine kinase activities and insensitivity of cholecystokinin [CCK] receptors on pancreatic acinar cells. This review describes the cellular mechanism of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in DM compared to healthy conditions. The work focuses on a brief review of DM, the normal anatomy and physiology of the pancreas, stimulus-secretion coupling and the interactions between secretagogues, DM-induced exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and the roles of a number of cellular mediators in the stimulus- secretion coupling processes, the cellular and molecular mechanisms associated with the disease and finally, on the scope for future research studies

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