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

Necrotizing fasciitis most often occurs in the context of prior trauma or surgery. Predisposing medical conditions include diabetes mellitus, arteriosclerosis, obesity, hypertension and prior irradiation. De novo occurrence in the vulva, in the absence of prior injury, surgery or irradiation, has been reported rarely. Necrotizing fasciitis of the vulva in the diabetic patient may have an insidious onset but requires an early diagnosis and aggressive surgical episode of fasciitis occurred in an obese, diabetic woman. Aggressive, wide excision of all infected vulvar, mons and thigh tissue, followed by aggressive medical and surgical postoperative care, resulted in minimal morbidity. Prompt recognition and aggressive care are required to treat this condition.
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PMID:Recurrent necrotizing fasciitis of the vulva. A case report. 176 62

A 66-year old male with severe hyperglycaemia due to previously uncontrolled diabetes mellitus was also suffering from arteriosclerosis obliterans and diabetic nephropathy. The patient was treated with 16 IU/day insulin zinc suspension. In addition, an intravenous infusion of 80 micrograms/day prostaglandin E1 was given for 28 days in an attempt to improve the arteriosclerosis obliterans and diabetic nephropathy. Treatment resulted in a reduction in fasting blood glucose but no decline in urinary protein. Prostaglandin E1 treatment, however, produced an improvement in renal haemodynamics assessed by renography.
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PMID:Effect of prostaglandin E1 on renal haemodynamics in a patient with diabetic nephropathy. 177 11

We report here a case of penile gangrene in a patient with diabetic nephropathy treated by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). The patient demonstrated severe systemic arteriosclerosis. The main cause of the gangrene was considered to be circulatory insufficiency induced by severe arteriosclerosis. Several predisposing factors including chronic renal failure, long-term diabetes mellitus and CAPD-related metabolic changes such as abnormalities of lipid metabolism also appeared to have contributed to the arteriosclerotic changes. The prognosis in cases of this type is thought to be extremely poor.
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PMID:Penile gangrene in a patient with diabetic nephropathy on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. 177 43

Werner's syndrome (adult progeria) is a rare autosomal recessive condition characterized mainly by a characteristic habitus (short stature, light body weight) scleroderma like changes of the limbs and premature aging. Chronic leg ulcers appears in about fifty per cent of the patients. These ulcers can be related to the combination of mechanical factors on atrophic subcutaneous tissue and skin of the feet and leg associated with early arteriosclerosis (20%) and diabetes mellitus (60%).
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PMID:[Leg ulcers in Werner's syndrome. Report of one case]. 179 75

We report our observations in 427 stroke patients (305 Saudis, 122 non-Saudis with an age range of 14 months to 85 years) seen in a tertiary hospital in the eastern province of Saudi Arabia over an 8-year period. Of these patients, 115 (27%) were between 18 and 45 years old, and constituted the "young stroke patients" for this study. The hospital frequency for the young was 5/10,000 inpatients. In general, there was a male preponderance, with a male:female ratio of 2.2:1 and 7:1 for Saudis and non-Saudis, respectively. Ischemic stroke (55%) was more frequent than hemorrhagic stroke (25%), and the stroke was unspecified in 20%. The main etiologic factors were hypertension, diabetes mellitus and cardiac disorders. In the young population, the frequencies of hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes were similar. In this group, the main causes of intracerebral hemorrhage were aneurysms and arteriovenous malformations, while arteriosclerosis and embolism of cardiac origin were responsible for the ischemic strokes. In Saudis, the stroke types were 59% ischemic, and 17% hemorrhagic, as against 45 and 48% in non-Saudis, respectively. Most ischemic strokes were found in Saudis (78%). Intracerebral hemorrhage accounted for 63% of all hemorrhagic strokes, and was more frequent in Saudis but subarachnoid hemorrhage was three times more common in non-Saudis. In the young stroke patients, interethnic comparison showed that individuals from the Far East were nine times more likely to have hemorrhagic than ischemic stroke compared to the others (odd's ratio = 8.7), and the etiology of ischemic stroke remained undetermined in 67% of those from the Indian subcontinent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pattern and ethnic variations in stroke in Saudi Arabia. 185 28

Pathological, muscular arteries (common and superficial femoral [FC, FS], anterior and posterior tibial [TA, TP] arteries) of patients suffering from arteriosclerosis obliterans (ASO), thromboangiitis obliterans (TAO), and diabetes mellitus (DIA), removed during amputation of the lower limb were studied as isolated organs. The vessels were cut into transverse rings and contractile force was measured isometrically. The total number of used rings was 828. The following agonists were applied: KCl (80 mM), serotonin (5-HT) (10 microM), prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) (0.1 mM) or phenylephrine (PE) (10 microM). It was established that applying KCl, 5-HT or PGF2 alpha, the majority of arterial rings display a contraction, but most of the preparations (66%) give no response against PE. The measure of contraction depends on the diagnosis (TAO greater than ASO greater than DIA), on the age of patient and also the anatomical location of the artery in the case of TAO (TP greater than greater than TA), on the associated hypertension in the case of ASO (normotensive greater than hypertensive) and finally on the time elapsed between the operation and usage of preparation if the agonist is KCl. As a conclusion, despite the terminal clinical stage the majority of studied human arteries retained at least a part of their functional integrity.
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PMID:[Experiences with isolated organ studies on pathological human arteries]. 187 91

We investigated the prevalence and correlates of angina pectoris in 6573 men and women aged 20-59 participating in the Italian National Multicenter Study on Risk Factors for Arteriosclerosis. In both sexes, the prevalence of angina pectoris, as assessed by the Rose questionnaire, increased sharply with age (from 0.8% to 5.1% for men and from 1.7% to 6.9% for women). In all age groups, there was a higher prevalence of angina pectoris for women than for men. In men, a strong positive association was found between angina pectoris and myocardial infarction (both by self-report and electrocardiographic documentation) and self-reported dyspnea. In women, myocardial infarction (self-reported), electrocardiographic-documented myocardial ischemia, intermittent claudication, and dyspnea were all associated with angina pectoris. In both sexes, angina pectoris was positively associated with body mass index. Males with diabetes had two times the prevalence of angina pectoris as males without diabetes; in females, diabetes was only weakly associated with angina pectoris. None of other major ischemic heart disease risk factors (blood pressure, serum lipids, or smoking) was associated with angina pectoris.
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PMID:Prevalence and correlates of angina pectoris in the Italian nine communities study. Research Group ATS-RF2 of the Italian National Research Council. 202 62

Between 1973 and 1977 169 patients underwent implantation of bifurcated prostheses for arterial occlusive disease. Perioperative and follow-up data 10-14 years after operation were retrospectively assessed. The angiologic status of living patients was compiled. Impact of following risk factors was investigated with multivariant analysis. Coronary artery disease, hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus, Pulmonary disease, renal insufficiency, obesity. Follow-up was 98.8%. Preoperatively over 90% of the patients investigated had been in grade IIb (Fontaine) or worse (33% grade IV). Early mortality was 5.3% (1973 = 15%, 1977 = 5.3%, 1987/1988 = 1.8%) and was mainly related to cardiopulmonary factors. Reoperation was necessary in 69 patients (149 procedures, no mortality, 38 amputations). Late mortality was 75% (120 of 160 patients) and mainly due to cardiac problems. The 10-year-actuarial-survival (37%) was reduced due to following combinations of risk factors: Myocardial infarction/smoking/obesity (n = 41) 17%, diabetes/smoking (n = 36) 17% hypertension/myocardial infarction (n = 24) 8%. Clinical condition of the living patients (n = 40) was: 48% grade I, 28% grade IIa, 18% grade IIb, none grade III, 8% grade IV. Long term results following implantation of bifurcated prostheses for arterial occlusive disease show, that quality of life is consistently improved. Reoperation is necessary in almost half of the patients due to the progressive disease. Late mortality is closely related to the underlying arteriosclerosis. Life expectancy of our patients does not significantly differ from the normal population and is probably a sequelae of the close follow-up.
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PMID:[Long-term results 10-14 years following implantation of Y-prostheses for arterial occlusive disease]. 203 1

The hypothesis that sugar promotes the development of coronary diseases could not be confirmed by several epidemiological studies. But sugar can, through its high energy density in sugar-containing foodstuffs, indirectly lead to obesity and diabetes, and to early arteriosclerosis. A sugar- or carbohydrate-rich diet leads, in healthy persons, to a short-term hypertriglyceridemia which disappears after a short time following the adaptation of the metabolism. Certain people with a hereditary disposition toward metabolic disturbances also react, after a longer exposure to higher sugar consumption, with a rise of the triglycerides in plasma.
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PMID:[Is sugar involved in the development of cardiovascular diseases?]. 208 30

We studied the lipidic metabolism and the atherogenic risk factors non related to lipidic metabolism in two groups of patients: group 1 with only coronary disease and group 2 with coronary disease and atherosclerosis in the cerebral and/or peripheric artery territories. Patients of group 2 showed a cholesterol, cLDL, and B-apoprotein titers significantly higher than group 1. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure were higher in group two. Also the incidence of diabetes mellitus in group 2 was higher than in group 1. In a stepwise discriminating analysis the diastolic arterial pressure and cholesterol titers were the parameters with a greatest predictive potential for the presence of localized or generalized ischemic disease. B-apoprotein was the lipidic parameter with the greatest predictive potential. All together these data suggest that in coronary patients, a discrete increase in plasma cholesterol can imply a risk of suffering ischemia in some other arterial territories. Diastolic blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes mellitus are the factors with the highest predictive potential for the generalization of arteriosclerosis.
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PMID:[Factors associated with generalized forms of arteriosclerosis in patients with coronary disease]. 209 Nov 13


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