Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1986; 87(3): 326-332
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1210562
Original

© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

The Frequency of Islet Cell Surface Antibodies in Newly Diagnosed Diabetics from Ethiopia1)

W.-H. Peters, Frances T. Lester, K.-D. Kohnert, W. Hildmann
  • Gondar College of Medical Sciences, Preclinical Departments, of the Addis Ababa University, Gondar, Yekatit 12 Hospital, Addis Ababa/Ethiopia and Central Institute of Diabetes “Gerhardt Katsch”, Karlsburg/GDR
1) Partly presented at the XXth Annual Meeting of the Ethiopian Medical Association, Addis Ababa, May 1984
Further Information

Publication History

1985

Publication Date:
16 July 2009 (online)

Summary

Forty-three newly diagnosed diabetic patients from Ethiopia were studied for the frequency of islet cell surface antibodies and other clinical features which are relevant to the aetio-pathogenesis and classification of diabetes mellitus. In preliminary investigations of a small number of controls and noninsulin-dependent diabetics we found, as expected, no circulating antibodies. Four first-degree relatives of ICSA-positive sibs were negative, too. However, 3 out of 7 known insulin-treated diabetics displayed ICSA in the blood serum.

In our study of newly diagnosed diabetics we found ICSA in 39% (17/43). Five patients who were assigned to the NIDDM subclass had no antibodies. 37 diabetics required insulin treatment after clinical diagnosis and 16 (43%) of these were ICSA-positive. There were no differences in the assessed clinical parameters between ICSA-positive and -negative patients. One ICSA-positive patient initially controlled with oral hypoglycaemic agents became insulin-dependent within our study period. Our observations in newly diagnosed diabetics from Ethiopia revealed a lower frequency of ICSA than in Caucasians, however, the results provide evidence for the occurrence of autoimmune phenomena in the aetiopathogenesis of diabetes mellitus in this ethnic group.