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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although an individual assessment of the risks and benefits is always essential, combined, low-dose oral contraceptives (OCs) are an effective method of fertility control, even for women with chronic medical problems. In addition to contraception, therapeutic uses of combined OCs include acne, anovulatory uterine bleeding, control of bleeding with blood dyscrasias, dysmenorrhea, endometriosis, hirsutism, hypothalamic amenorrhea, ovarian hormone replacement, polycystic ovarian syndrome, premenstrual syndrome, and recurrent functional ovarian cysts. This article presents guidelines for clinicians on the selection of combined OC users, counseling, contraindications, and management of adverse effects. It further outlines general considerations for the prescription of combined OCs to women with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, migraine headaches, and epilepsy.
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PMID:Combination oral contraceptives. 917 54

Female patient, 21 years of age, with diabetes mellitus type I, admitted due to progressive weight loss, with a recent history of impaired glycemic control, ketosis and amenorrhea for 12 months. Studies were conducted in order to exclude an endocrine or malignant disorder. After nutritional, endocrine and psychiatric evaluation, the diagnosis of anorexia nervosa, was made. Therapeutic results and clinical course after the first year are shown. The case raises important problems, especially within diabetic population, puzzling the clues for diagnosis and therapy.
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PMID:[Anorexia nervosa in a patient with type-1 diabetes mellitus]. 958 Mar 2

The Diabetes Mellitus is the pathology that frequently is associated to the pregnancy and it is responsible for perinatal mobility specially by the respiratory distress syndrome since exists delay in the conversion of myoinositol-phosphatidyl inositol-phosphatidyl glycerol. To demonstrate the reliability of the DO tho 650 nm with standard of 20 in the determination of fetal lung maturity of the infant of diabetic mother. There were included 143 patient with pregnancy > or = 37 weeks with amenorrhea reliable and gestational age confirmed by ultrasound, of those 94 corresponded to gestational Diabetes Mellitus, 49 to pregestational (46 non insulin-dependent and 3 insulin-dependent). In all of them amniotic fluid studies was perform at 37 week and the resolution of the pregnancy was when DO to 650 nm showed fetal lung maturity. It was found a correlation among the DO to 650 nm of 20 and absence of RDS in 130 cases (true positive); there were seven cases with immaturity results by DO that they did not express RDS (false negative) and six cases with results that showed immaturity by DO and there were manifestations of RDS (true negative). We did not find results of false positive. The frequency of RDS was of 4.9% with a positive predictive value of the 100% an negative predictive value of 46%, a specificity of 100% and a sensitivity of 94%. An interesting finding was the fact that six cases true negative cases had poor maternal metabolic control of different degrees. For our results can be deduced that DO to 650 nm with standard of .20 it is reliable for the diagnosis of fetal lung maturity in the pregnancies complicated with Diabetes Mellitus, in addition to be an easy elaboration test and low cost.
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PMID:[Reliability of optic density at 650 nm in determining lung maturity in children of diabetic mothers]. 982 5

Polycystic ovary syndrome is a diagnosis made in 5%-10% of women between late adolescence and the menopause. Patients may present with oligomenorrhoea or amenorrhoea, anovulation or infertility, hirsutism or acne. Women with the syndrome have at least seven times the risk of myocardial infarction and ischaemic heart disease of other women, and by the age of 40 years up to 40% will have type 2 diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance. Polycystic ovary syndrome is associated with insulin resistance, with consequent hyperinsulinaemia and (frequently) hyperlipidaemia and obesity. Recent research has shown that the application of diabetes management techniques aimed at reducing insulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia (such as weight reduction and the administration of oral hypoglycaemic agents) can not only reverse testosterone and luteinising hormone abnormalities and infertility, but can also improve glucose, insulin and lipid profiles. The management of polycystic ovary syndrome should now include patient education and attention to diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors such as hyperlipidaemia, obesity, physical exercise, glucose intolerance, hypertension and cigarette smoking.
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PMID:Polycystic ovary syndrome: a new direction in treatment. 986 12

In 1% of women, premature ovarian failure develops by 40 years of age, a condition causing amenorrhea, infertility, sex steroid deficiency, and elevated gonadotropins. Early loss of ovarian function has significant psychosocial sequelae and major health implications. These young women have a nearly two-fold age-specific increase in mortality rate. Among women with spontaneous premature ovarian failure who have a normal karyotype, half have ovarian follicles remaining in the ovary that function intermittently. Indeed, pregnancies have occurred after the diagnosis of premature ovarian failure. Thus, premature ovarian failure should not be considered as a premature menopause. Young women with this disorder have a 5% to 10% chance for spontaneous pregnancy. Attempts at ovulation induction using various regimens fail to induce ovulation rates greater than those seen in untreated patients; however, oocyte donation for women desiring fertility is an option. Young women with premature ovarian failure need a thorough assessment, sex steroid replacement, and long-term surveillance to monitor therapy. Estrogen-progestin replacement therapy should be instituted as soon as the diagnosis is made. Androgen replacement should also be considered for women with low libido, persistent fatigue, and poor well-being despite taking adequate estrogen replacement. Women with premature ovarian failure should be followed up for the presence of associated autoimmune endocrine disorders such as hypothyroidism, adrenal insufficiency, and diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Premature ovarian failure. 992 18

Diabetes is associated with a higher incidence of secondary hypogonadotrophic amenorrhoea. In amenorrhoeic women with insulin-dependent diabetes a derangement in hypothalamic-pituitary-ovary axis has been proposed. No data exist on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal function in these women. Gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH), corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH), metoclopramide and thyroid releasing hormone (TRH) tests were performed in 15 diabetic women, eight amenorrhoeic (AD) and seven eumenorrhoeic (ED). Frequent blood samples were taken during 24 h to evaluate cortisol plasma concentrations. There were no differences between the groups in body mass index, duration of diabetes, insulin dose and metabolic control. The AD women had lower plasma concentrations of luteinizing hormone (LH), follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), prolactin, oestradiol, androstenedione and 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP) than the ED women. The responses of pituitary gonadotrophins to GnRH, and of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) to TRH, were similar in both groups. The AD women had a lower prolactin response to TRH and metoclopramide, and lower ACTH and cortisol responses to CRH, than the ED women. Mean cortisol concentrations > 24 h were higher in the amenorrhoeic group. Significant differences in cortisol concentrations from 2400 to 1000 h were found between the two groups. Insulin-dependent diabetes may involve mild chronic hypercortisolism which may affect metabolic control. Stress-induced activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis would increase hypothalamic secretion of CRH. This would lead directly and perhaps also indirectly by increasing dopaminergic tonus to inhibition of GnRH secretion and hence hypogonadotrophic amenorrhoea. Amenorrhoea associated with metabolically controlled insulin-dependent diabetes is a form of functional hypothalamic amenorrhoea that requires pharmacological and psychological management.
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PMID:Evaluation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in amenorrhoeic women with insulin-dependent diabetes. 1009 67

A 29-year-old woman was admitted in March 1998 due to high plasma ACTH levels, amenorrhea and uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (DM) which had persisted since 1991. Plasma ACTH levels showed a wide range of changes: they were usually high (59-240 pg/ml), intermittently very high (336-942 pg/ml), and sometimes normal or low. Plasma cortisol levels were usually normal but were sometimes high when the ACTH levels were very high. However, even when the plasma ACTH levels were very high, she did not show any cushingoid features. DM was diagnosed as non-insulin-dependent DM. Plasma ACTH showed an excessive response to CRH, while cortisol showed a delayed response. Plasma cortisol showed a poor response to ACTH-(1-24). ACTH receptor gene analysis revealed no mutations in the ACTH receptor-coding region. MRI showed a nonenhancing mass on the left side of the pituitary. Cavernous sinus sampling showed a very high plasma ACTH level in the left cavernous sinus compared with the levels in the right cavernous sinus and peripheral blood. Sephadex G-75 gel filtration of plasma ACTH immunoreactivity in plasma obtained by cavernous sinus sampling showed mainly high molecular forms of ACTH, probably proopiomelanocortin and ACTH-beta-lipotropin. This case is a very rare form of pituitary adenoma showing intermittent secretion of high molecular ACTH unaccompanied by cushingoid features.
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PMID:Pituitary adenoma showing intermittent secretion of high molecular weight adrenocorticotropin without evidence of Cushing's disease. 1064 Aug 99

In recent years the complexities and heterogeneity of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) have been recognised. Most PCOS sufferers with amenorrhoea, menstrual dysfunction, hirsutism, acne and infertility can be evaluated and safely managed in primary care. It is prudent to remember that all women with PCOS are at risk of insulin resistance and the associated abnormalities of the insulin resistance syndrome--dyslipidaemia, hypertension, coronary artery disease and diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Polycystic ovarian syndrome: is community care appropriate? 1069

Despite advances in lactation skills and knowledge, insufficient milk production still continues to mystify mothers and lactation consultants alike. Based on 3 cases with similar threads, a connection is proposed between polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and insufficient milk supply. Described are the etiology and possible symptoms of PCOS such as amenorrhea/oligomenorrhea, hirsutism, obesity, infertility, persistent acne, ovarian cysts, elevated triglycerides, and adult-onset diabetes, along with possible pathological interference with mammogenesis, lactogenesis, and galactopoiesis. Clinical suggestions include guidelines for screening mothers and careful monitoring of babies at risk. Further research is necessary to confirm the proposed association and to develop therapies with the potential to improve lactation success.
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PMID:Polycystic ovary syndrome: a connection to insufficient milk supply? 1115 45

Up to one-third of women in the UK have polycystic ovaries (i.e. 10 or more follicles per ovary detected on ultrasound). An estimated one-third of these women have polycystic ovary syndrome, usually defined in the UK as polycystic ovaries together with one or more characteristic features (hirsutism, male-pattern baldness, acne, oligomenorrhoea or amenorrhoea, obesity, or raised serum concentrations of testosterone and/or luteinising hormone [LH]). The metabolic abnormalities often associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (insulin resistance and abnormal serum lipid concentrations) also put some women with the syndrome at increased risk of developing diabetes mellitus. Here, we review the management of women with polycystic ovary syndrome.
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PMID:Tackling polycystic ovary syndrome. 1122 Nov 87


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