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Some Characteristics of Steroid Diabetes: A Study in Renal-Transplant Recipients Receiving High-Dose Corticosteroid Therapy

  1. Peter Arner,
  2. Rolf Gunnarsson,
  3. Sven Blomdahl and
  4. Carl-Gustav Groth
  1. Departments of Medicine and Ophthalmology and the Division of Transplantation Surgery, Department of Surgery, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge Hospital Stockholm, Sweden
  1. Address reprint requests to Peter Arner, M.D., Department of Medicine, Huddinge Hospital, S-141 86, Huddinge, Sweden.

Abstract

Risk factors and course of steroid diabetes were investigated in 145 renal-transplant recipients who were given a high-dose steroid regimen. Persistent steroid diabetes developed in 25% of the patients and transient diabetes in another 22%. When antidiabetic therapy was required, insulin had to be given in 50%. The incidence of steroid diabetes correlated with steroid dose, age, body weight, and diabetes heredity but not with abnormal glucose tolerance or with another complication of steroid therapy, posterior-pole lenticular cataract. There was no association with HLA-A and B antigens. Thus, steroid diabetes is a frequent complication of high-dose corticosteroid therapy and is similar to type II diabetes. However, it often requires insulin therapy.

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