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A case of chlorpropamide-induced, symptomatic hyponatremia in a diabetic patient is reported. The hyponatremia was associated with loss of appetite, nausea, and vomiting. These symptoms caused reduced food intake which provoked severe hypoglycemia with disturbed consciousness. The hyponatremia developed when the chlorpropamide doses were increased from 400 to 600 mg/day. Withdrawal of chlorpropamide was followed by remission of hyponatremia. Chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia is a rare complication and is due to an antidiuretic effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of chlorpropamide caused by increased secretion of adiuretin and potentiation of the effect of adiuretin in the tubuli of the kidney. This case report and the analysis of 18 published cases in the literature show the following characteristics for chlorpropamide-induced hyponatremia: (1) Hyponatremia is a rare complication in the treatment of diabetics with chlorpropamide. The patients typically are female and over sixty. The dosage of chlorpropamide usually was 500 mg daily or even more. (2) Hyponatremia is often unrecognized for a long time because the symptoms are not specific. The characteristic symptoms include loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, confusional state and, rarely, convulsions and coma. Recovery occurs spontaneously after withdrawal of the drug. (3) The incidence of this type of hyponatremia is increased in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention such as heart failure and renal failure, and in cases of diuretic therapy. In the light of these findings, the authors believe that chlorpropamide is no longer a drug of choice in the treatment of diabetic women, especially in cases of preexisting tendency to water retention and in diuretic therapy. In such cases, a sulfonylurea without antidiuretic effect is to be preferred.
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PMID:[Hyponatremia and hypoglycemia after treatment with chlorpropamide. Case histories with review of the literature on 18 cases of chlorpropamide induced hyponatremia]. 66 98

The prevalence of diabetes due to chronic pancreatitis would appear to be increasing. In western countries this is associated with the known increase in alcohol consumption and AIP. Malnutrition may be etiologic in tropical areas. The incidence of diabetes in chronic pancreatitis is dependent on a number of factors. It is more common in alcohol-induced pancreatitis, rarely occurs after the first attack but tends to increase with time and rises markedly in calcific pancreatitis. Abnormal glucose tolerance occurred in 91% of patients with calcific pancreatitis and 70% of patients with noncalific AIP in our follow up of five to 12 years. This stresses the importance of serial regular glucose tolerance tests in these patients (Table I). The insulin-reserve is severely depleted in most patients who do not yet demonstrate abnormal glucose tolerance, indicating that pancreatitis regularly affects the islets and that nearly all patients are potential diabetics. The beta cells appear to respond better to oral glucose, glucagon or secretin than to i.v. glucose suggesting a selective glucose receptor loss or block to hyperglycemia in chronic pancreatitis. The alpha cells seem to be more resistant to the effects of chronic pancreatitis but true hypoglucagonemia was found in 16% of patients. In addition, stimulated growth hormone secretion may be deficient in pancreatic diabetes. These last two factors, among others, may be responsible for the protracted and even fatal hypoglycemia to which some patients with AIP on insulin therapy are liable. The danger of drug-induced hypoglycemia, coupled with the infrequency of vasculopathy, retinopathy and nephropathy in pancreatic diabetes has induced us to keep these patients hyperglycemic and glycosuric rather than in a sugar-free state, as long as symptoms are contained. Recurrent abdominal pain, marked weight loss and associated steatorrhea often raise special problems in the management of the pancreatic diabetic.
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PMID:Clinical and hormonal aspects of pancreatic diabetes. 80 21

Adverse effects occurred in four youths after intravenous injection of an aqueous cannabis-seed tea, which was prepared by boiling the seeds. The effects were immediate and included nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, watery diarrhea, chills, fever, hypovolemic shock, hypotension, and non-oligemic transitory renal failure. Other manifestations included persistent hypoglycemia, tachycardia, gastrointestinal bleeding, conjunctival hemorrhage, injury, jaundice, splenomegaly, leucocytosis, myalgia, arthralgia, motor weakness, and prostration. Ischemia was noted on electrocardiogram (EKG). All manifestations appeared to reverse within weeks, but these effects had been potentially fatal.
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PMID:Adverse effects of intravenous cannabis tea. 87 75

Pancreatic tumors are rare surgical problems in infants and children. A 20-year audit (1971 to 1991) of this institution showed six patients ranging in age from 3 weeks to 16 years who were operated on for pancreatic neoplasms. Five of these tumors were malignant, bringing the reported experience to 71 cases. This series of malignancies included three solid cystic tumors, one insulin-secreting tumor, and one pancreatoblastoma. The clinical presentations varied: three had abdominal pain, one developed hypoglycemia, and one had an abdominal mass with jaundice. In five of the six patients pancreatic pathology was suspected preoperatively. All were treated primarily with pancreatic resection including one pancreatoduodenectomy. No radiotherapy or chemotherapy was used. The perioperative mortality was 0% with a morbidity of 50%. The long-term results are encouraging, with all patients alive after a mean follow-up of 7.8 years. These data suggest that aggressive surgical therapy is warranted in the management of pediatric pancreatic tumors.
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PMID:A 20-year review of pediatric pancreatic tumors. 132 84

Chronic pancreatitis is defined by a persistent destruction of the pancreatic parenchyma replaced by fibrosis. The lesions generally start in the exocrine gland, islets being attacked later in the fibrosis. The two most frequent forms are: 1. Chronic calcifying pancreatitis which is a pancreatic lithiasis responsible for more than 95% of chronic pancreatitis. In its most frequent form, calculi are built up of more than 98% calcium salts together with fibres of a degraded residue of lithostathine, a secretory protein. This disease is related (i) in most countries to alcohol, protein, fat and tobacco and (ii) in certain tropical countries to malnutrition (low-fat, low-protein diet) for some generations. A causative role for cassava and kwashiorkor is improbable. The mechanism of calcium precipitation is partly explained by the calcium-saturation of pancreatic juice and the decreased biosynthesis of lithostathine S, the secretory protein preventing crystallization. As a rule, diabetes (and steatorrhoea) appear after a clinical evolution characterized by recurrent attacks of upper abdominal pain, generally lasting some days with transiently increased concentrations of pancreatic enzymes in serum. When diabetes appears, pain frequently disappears. Complications are mostly observed in the first 10 years of clinical evolution. 2. Obstructive pancreatitis is due to an obstacle (tumours, scars) in the pancreatic duct. It is rarely a cause of diabetes. Diabetes due to chronic pancreatitis is characterized by the low incidence of ketosis and the high incidence of insulin-induced hypoglycaemia. Patients are generally thin. Serum insulin levels, either basal or stimulated, are decreased. Glucagon is less affected. Angiopathies and retinopathies are less frequent than in non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Neural complications are fairly frequent. The diagnosis is generally easy because diabetes appears at a late stage of the disease. The treatment generally requires insulin.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis and diabetes. 144 67

Side effects of octreotide may be local, biochemical, gastroenterological, or endocrinological. Local pain at the injection site occurs frequently, but rarely lasts more than 15 minutes and often resolves with continued therapy and may be improved if the vial is warmed prior to injection. No long-term hematological or biochemical abnormalities have been described. Despite initial diarrhea in some patients, no change in circulating fat-soluble vitamins has been consistently reported. Antibodies to octreotide have been described, but are rare. Abdominal pain or diarrhea can occur at the beginning of therapy. These symptoms rarely persist and are minimal if the injections are timed between meals, but this may increase the incidence of gallstones. Gallstones occur with increased frequency. Gastritis has been described as being an invariable consequence of long-term treatment with octreotide. We have found the incidence to be increased in patients on octreotide, but this is not invariable. Hypoglycemia may be exacerbated in some patients with insulinoma because of glucagon suppression. Small numbers of patients on octreotide for acromegaly have developed hypoglycemic. Conversely, carbohydrate tolerance may temporarily worsen because of insulin suppression and rarely oral hypoglycemia drug therapy may become necessary. Most frequently, carbohydrate tolerance does not deteriorate. In some patients with acromegaly, pituitary tumor size may continue to increase despite continued therapy. Last, there is the theoretical risk of addiction to a compound which may act through opiate receptors and considerably alleviates headache in some patients with pituitary tumor. Overall, despite the multiplicity of theoretical side effects, the majority of patients tolerate octreotide well, with no serious untoward effects.
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PMID:Proceedings of the discussion, "Tolerability and safety of Sandostatin". 151 39

Two cases of cholelithiasis in children are reported. The first patient was a 10-year-old girl with hyperinsulinism and hypoglycemia as associated medical conditions. The second one was a 3-year-old boy who had no definable cause for cholelithiasis. Both patients were symptomatic. Recurrent abdominal pain was the main symptom. A specific and accurate diagnosis was readily made by ultrasound in both children.
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PMID:[Cholelithiasis in childhood: description of 2 cases]. 152 8

A 29-year-old patient with familial Mediterranean fever and amyloidosis involving the kidney, liver, and gastrointestinal tract received longterm colchicine, 1 mg daily. In the last year she developed diarrhea and abdominal pain, that coincided with toxic colchicine blood levels. After 2 weeks of oral erythromycin therapy she was hospitalized for acute, life threatening colchicine toxicity, with fever, diarrhea, abdominal pain, myalgia and lower extremity parasthesias and later convulsions and alopecia. Pancytopenia evolved into rebound leukocytosis, disturbed liver function and hypoglycemia. After a long stormy course she improved. Colchicine toxicity with combined liver and renal impairment and the role of erythromycin in her colchicine toxicity are discussed.
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PMID:Acute colchicine intoxication--possible role of erythromycin administration. 157 71

The 11 cases of malaria admitted to Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital in the past 10 years were analyzed to assess the characteristics of patients who acquired malaria parasite infection. Nine of the patients contracted malaria in Southeast Asia. Two men had received antimalarial chemoprophylaxis before they went abroad and another two men relapsed after antimalarial treatment. The initial symptoms and signs were nonspecific, including fever, chills, abdominal pain and hepatosplenomegaly. Seven patients responded well to the antimalarial regimens. Two persons developed meningeal malaria. Resistance to chloroquine and primaquine and even to quinine was noted in another two cases. Hypoglycemia was diagnosed in one of latter two patients who developed heavy parasitemia (26%), acute renal failure and died 5 days after treatment. Peripheral blood smear examination is a simple and quick method to make a diagnosis in any suspicious case. Resistance to chloroquine and primaquine is not uncommon, especially in those who acquired the infection in Southeast Asia. Changing to more potent agents and aggressive management in complicated cases is necessary.
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PMID:Clinical experience on malaria. 205 63

We report 6 patients with Munchausen syndrome, a fictitious disorder with physical symptoms. There were 4 females and 2 males, the age ranged from 21 to 29 years. Abdominal pain (2), hemoptysis, shock and hypoglycemia were the presenting symptoms. The diagnosis was made after a prolonged and costly hospital course, including invasive and non invasive diagnostic procedures. Two patients were ill enough to be at risk of death. An early diagnosis may help prevent unnecessary or risky procedures in these patients.
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PMID:[Munchausen's syndrome: a study of 6 cases]. 215 25


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