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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oesophageal emptying of solids was studied with a scintigraphic technique in 12 patients with
insulin dependent diabetes
complicated by autonomic neuropathy and in 22 control subjects. In the diabetics the acute and chronic effects of oral domperidone on oesophageal emptying and symptoms of heartburn and
dysphagia
were assessed. The number of swallows required to clear the oesophagus in the diabetics (median 9.5, range 2-30) was significantly greater (P less than 0.001) than in normal controls (median 2, range 1-14). Domperidone did not increase solid oesophageal emptying in diabetic patients either after acute or after chronic administration.
...
PMID:The effect of domperidone on oesophageal emptying in diabetic autonomic neuropathy. 399 93
A cross-sectional study was designed to identify a relationship between the presence of symptoms usually related to nervous system involvement as well as other chronic complications of diabetes with three objectively defined degrees of autonomic neuropathy (AN). Symptoms usually related to peripheral sensitive neuropathy and AN were assessed using a questionnaire applied to 132 diabetics (38
IDDM
and 94 NIDDM), 65 without and 67 with AN. AN was classified as follows according to 5 cardiovascular autonomic tests described by Ewing: 1) early involvement-1 abnormal test (N = 27); 2) definite involvement-2 or 3 abnormal tests (N = 26); 3) severe involvement-4 or 5 abnormal tests (N = 14). A statistically significant association was observed between degree of autonomic involvement and the presence of the following symptoms: dizziness on standing,
dysphagia
, vomiting, diarrhea, fecal incontinence, gustatory sweating, urinary retention, numbness and hyperesthesia of the feet or legs. Constipation and cystitis were not significantly related to cardiovascular AN. Only 3% of the patients without neuropathy and with early involvement had four or more than four of the symptoms. The prevalence of proliferative retinopathy and nephropathy was increased among patients with more severe degrees of AN. For
IDDM
patients there was a positive correlation between the degree of cardiovascular AN and the duration of diabetes. We conclude that: 1) severe cardiovascular AN is usually related to 4 or more of the evaluated symptoms and those patients usually have the other complications of diabetes; 2) severe AN could be a risk factor or an indicator of the same underlying process that determines the beginning of proliferative retinopathy and/or nephropathy.
...
PMID:Relationship between the degree of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction and symptoms of neuropathy and other complications of diabetes mellitus. 858 Aug 65
Plasma cell granuloma involving the thyroid is very rare. A 29-year-old man with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus presented with a one-week history of fever, sore throat, neck tenderness and
dysphagia
. Antibiotics were given but over the next two weeks a hard 8 cm mass in the left lobe of the thyroid developed. Fine needle aspiration was not diagnostic and surgical exploration revealed an inflammatory process arising from the left lobe of the thyroid involving the left sternothyroid muscle and parapharyngeal spaces. Histology of multiple biopsies showed plasma cell granuloma. Immunoperoxidase staining demonstrated the presence of IgG, IgM and IgA with predominance of IgG. The residual mass resolved and was impalpable after four weeks. Plasma cell granuloma should be suspected when there is a rapidly developing hard thyroid mass. Open biopsy/removal and histological confirmation are mandatory and residual disease may resolve within weeks.
...
PMID:A hard thyroid mass due to plasma cell granuloma. 1145 84
Thirty-eight patients of NIDDM, 12 of
IDDM
and 10 healthy age matched controls were subjected to seven standardised autonomic reflex function tests. A scoring criteria was utilised for diagnosing and grading the severity of dysautonomia. Eight patients of
IDDM
and 24 of NIDDM had dysautonomia. One-third of the patients in each group had grade IV autonomic dysfunction. Severity of autonomic dysfunction was directly related to the duration of disease in NIDDM whereas in
IDDM
this relation was not seen. Peripheral neuropathy was almost always associated with dysautonomia in NIDDM. On the contrary, in
IDDM
dysautonomia was independent of peripheral neuropathy. Charcot's arthopathy,
dysphagia
, constipation and nocturnal diarrhea were always associated with evidence of dysautonomia. Other symptoms viz. gustatory sweating, postural dizziness and impotence did not necessarily indicate dysautonomia.
...
PMID:Clinical dysautonomia in diabetes mellitus--a study with seven autonomic reflex function tests. 1252 Oct 82
We report a rare case of multiple cranial nerve palsy associated with pregnancy, the cause of which remained to be clarified despite of extensive inspections. A 28-year-old woman with
type 1 diabetes
on insulin therapy developed left oculomotor nerve palsy in the fourth month of pregnancy. Her symptoms improved after one month's administration of vitamins B1 and B12. Numbness appeared in the left side of the face in the 8th month of pregnancy, and then moved to the right side in two weeks. Dysarthria and
dysphagia
occurred one month later. Bulbar symptoms were worsened, and she became unable to eat or drink. Neurological examination revealed disturbance of sensation in the right side of the face, soft palate paresis, and bilateral atrophy and fasciculation of the tongue. Extensive laboratory examinations including immunological and endocrinological studies, cerebrospinal fluid examination and brain magnetic resonance imaging were unremarkable. These symptoms remitted spontaneously after delivery, and the methylprednisolone pulse therapy accelerated the improvement. Neurological examination done one year after delivery showed complete recovery of the symptoms except for persistent tongue atrophy.
...
PMID:[Recurrent multiple cranial nerve palsy in a gravida with type 1 diabetes, that remitted after delivery and with steroid therapy]. 1893 78
Central pontine myelinolysis is characterised by focal osmotic demyelination within the pons. Its clinical presentation varies, but may include acute paralysis, dysarthria and
dysphagia
. The cause is traditionally associated with overzealous correction of hyponatraemia in patients who are malnourished, alcoholic or chronically ill. However, it may develop in the context of normal serum sodium, since rapid gradient shifts in brainstem osmolalities can occur in other ways. We present an unusual example of central pontine myelinolysis caused by osmotic shifts secondary to hyperglycaemia in a person with
type 1 diabetes
mellitus and with consistently normal serum sodium concentrations.
...
PMID:Central pontine myelinolysis secondary to hyperglycaemia. 2740 76
Esophagitis in children is not uncommon, mostly due to gastro-esophageal reflux. Other conditions like eosinophilic and infective esophagitis need to be elucidated in differential diagnoses. Fungal orCandida esophagitisusually occurs in high risk children who are immune-compromised, malnourished, on steroid therapy or have uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. An eleven-year girl presented with uncontrolled
type I diabetes mellitus
and recurrent epigastric pain with vomiting. Her oral intake was satisfactory. There was no
dysphagia
and odynophagia. Physical examination was normal with good oral hygiene. Failure in responding to conventional medications led to endoscopic evaluation, which revealed white patches and esophageal inflammation and diagnosed as fungal esophagitis on histopathology. Although infective esophagitis is encountered sporadically in pediatric age group, but it should always be considered in high risk individuals and when conventional medication fails to resolve the symptoms.
...
PMID:Fungal Esophagitis in a Child with Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus. 2753 71
A previously healthy 40-year-old Japanese male was urgently admitted with a 2-month history of
dysphagia
, 30-kg weight loss, and fever. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) antibodies and cytomegalovirus antigenemia were positive. Pneumocystis pneumonia and cytomegalovirus pneumonia were suspected. The patient was diagnosed with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Cytomegalovirus antigenemia became negative 20 days after the positive result. On hospital day 41, he experienced cardiopulmonary arrest. The clinical diagnosis was fulminant
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. He later developed hypoglycemia and was diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency accompanied by septic shock. He died of multiple organ failure 29 h post-admission to our ICU.
...
PMID:Sudden, Sharp Turn in an AIDS Patient's Course Following the Onset of Fulminant Type 1 Diabetes. 3123 75