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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a 4-year review of 509 patients with chronic pancreatitis, the incidence of clinically manifest fixed common bile duct (CBD) stenosis was 9% (45 patients). In 76% this was alcohol related, and pancreatic calcification was present in 51%. All patients presented with unrelenting jaundice and five (11%) had
cholangitis
. The mean serum bilirubin (165 +/- 108, normal 0-17 mumol/l), alkaline phosphatase (1790 +/- 1143, normal 73-207 U/l) and gamma glutamyl transferase (798 +/- 660, normal 7-64 U/l) were markedly raised.
Diabetes
occurred in 8 (18%). A biliary drainage operation was performed in 43 patients and 11 had concomitant pancreaticojejunostomy. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ECRP) provided valuable information preoperatively in outlining both biliary and pancreatic disease in selecting patients for dual ductal drainage. Minor complications not related to biliary anastomosis occurred in 14%. Four patients died (9%), two from pseudocyst-related haemorrhage. Jaundice was successfully relieved in all and did not recur during follow-up. No secondary biliary cirrhosis was encountered, but varying degrees of portal fibrosis were present in 75% of liver biopsies. The commonest biliary pathogen was E. coli. It is recommended that a biliary bypass operation be performed when the diagnosis is radiologically confirmed and no improvement occurs within 1 month.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis with biliary obstruction. 156 30
Ultrasonic Doppler measurement of the blood flow in the portal vein and hepatic artery was conducted to evaluate the function and functional reserve of the liver in 146 patients with various forms of
cholangitis
combined with biliary cirrhosis and hepatic insufficiency. The functional reserve of the liver was judged by comparison of the basic blood flow on a fasting stomach with the blood flow after a functional histamine load. Five types of responses of the portal vein blood flow to the functional load according to the degree of disturbed hepatic function were revealed. Comparison of the flow of blood along the portal vein in healthy individuals with that in patients with
diabetes mellitus
and a formed splenorenal shunt showed that disconnection of the blood flow from the splenic vein has no effect on the flow of blood in the portal vein. The latter is regulated at the level of microcirculation in the liver, which is confirmed by the correlation between the blood flow in the portal vein and in the hepatic artery.
...
PMID:[Doppler ultrasonic evaluation of hepatic functional reserve]. 157 35
A group of 102 patients (66 males, age 62 +/- 11 years) surviving an acute myocardial infarction was followed for 6 to 48 months. Survival was analyzed by the method of Kaplan Meier and Cox analysis was used to identify prognostic factors. Thirteen patients died during follow up: 3 had sudden death, 3 a stroke, 3 died from heart failure, 3 had reinfarction and cardiogenic shock and 1 died from
cholangitis
. Most deaths occurred in the first few months of follow up. Survival was 92% at 6 months, 90% at 1 year, 88% at 2 years and 86% at 3 years after infarction. Single variable analysis disclosed a 2 to 3 fold late mortality risk associated to the presence of age over 60 years, old myocardial infarction, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
and ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation during the acute phase. Greater than 3 fold risk was seen for patients developing heart failure or shock during myocardial infarction. Heart failure was the only statistically significant risk factor identified by multivariate analysis.
...
PMID:[Prognosis after myocardial infarction]. 213 24
The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of death as the initial manifestation of cholelithiasis. Records of patients who died or underwent cholecystectomy for gallstone-related disease at Duke University Medical Center between 1976 and 1985 were reviewed. Thirty patients died, six of whom (20%) had previous episodes of biliary pain and stone documentation. Twenty-four (80%) were asymptomatic (three with previous incidental diagnosis of cholelithiasis). Reason for admission included acute cholecystitis (nine), pancreatitis (eight), biliary pain (six),
cholangitis
(four), jaundice (one), and endocarditis (one). Three patients died of gallstone complications without surgical intervention; one patient had renal failure and two had septicemia. Other causes of death were: sepsis (seven patients), cardiac failure (six), pulmonary complications (four), renal failure (three), cerebrovascular accident (three), liver failure (two), pancreatitis (one), and gastrointestinal bleeding (one). During this period, 1731 cholecystectomies were performed without mortality. In this group, the patients were younger (50 +/- 8 years vs. 64 +/- 13 years, p less than 0.001), and had a lower incidence of cirrhosis (p less than 0.001) and
diabetes
(p less than 0.002). The sex ratio was inverted (p less than 0.001). This study demonstrates that death from gallstones is uncommon (three cases per year), as is death from their initial clinical manifestation (1.2%). The risk of death is two- and ninefold higher in patients with acute cholecystitis or acute pancreatitis. Age, cirrhosis, and
diabetes
are important determinants of outcome.
...
PMID:Deaths from gallstones. Incidence and associated clinical factors. 291 58
The operation of total pancreatectomy is performed rarely. Its role in the management of patients with chronic pancreatitis remains to be elucidated. We have reviewed our series of 29 total pancreatectomies for benign disease [14 women median age 39 years; 15 men median age 34 years]. Twelve underwent standard total pancreatectomy, in 17 duodenum preserving total pancreatectomy (DPTP) was performed. There was one death (mortality 3.4%). In no patient was the total pancreatectomy the first operative procedure. The patients were compared with age and sex matched diabetic control subjects selected on a best fit basis from the diabetic clinic database. The aetiology of the pancreatitis was idiopathic nine, pancreas divisum nine, alcohol eight and other causes three. The indication for surgery was pain 27, acute pancreatitis one and
cholangitis
with pancreatitis one. The complications of the procedures were mainly caused by infection [wound three, chest six and central line sepsis four] and in two there was a leak from the duodenum; no patient required re-operation. The postoperative stay [standard total, median 21 days (range 13-98) DPTP median 31 days (range 17-49)] has lengthened over the period due to greater attention to analgesic, diabetic and enzyme deficiency control before discharge. In standard total pancreatectomy there were five major hypoglycaemic episodes with only two in 17 DPTP patients. The per cent ideal body weight, the insulin requirement and the HbAl compared less well in standard total pancreatectomy group compared with controls than did DPTP. With both groups large doses of enzyme replacement were required, and this proved of importance in diabetic control. Our experience with total pancreatectomy suggests that pain will be improved in over 80% of patients and that the results of surgery will improve with prolonged follow up provided attention is given to analgesic abuse, enzyme deficiency and
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Total pancreatectomy for chronic pancreatitis. 335 68
The surgery of the gall bladder by gallstones, bile duct and alterations of the duodenal papilla are conducted with an increase of lethality. This increased lethality is caused by accompanying ill effects, especially chronical pancreatitis,
cholangitis
, disturbances of the liver. The indications to operate old patients are occlusions of duodenal papilla relapsing colics with or less occlusing icterus, emphysema of gall bladder or perforation. A careful narcosis is necessary by disease of circulation,
diabetes
, bronchitis and emphysema of the lung. Simple cholestectomies in old patients have a mortality of 0-1%. Interventions on bile ducts, transduodenal papillotomia, choledochoduodenotomy have an mortality of 4-8%. The intraoperative cholangiography is always necessary. Operations on bile duct are finished by inserting a T-drain. The distal portion of the T-drain are not emissed through the duodenal papilla, because a pancreatitis can be released. The principal postoperative complication is the pancreatitis, consumption coagulopathy, bronchopneumonia,
cholangitis
with intermitting fever and injuries of the liver parenchym. The persisting pancreatitis can be treated with infusions.
...
PMID:[Surgical interventions on the gallbladder and the biliary tract in the aged]. 712 73
We described three septicemia cases in which blood cultures yielded gram-positive cocci identified as Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. Patients were three male adults aged 63 to 71 years with severe underlying diseases, pancreatic cancer, esophageal cancer and
diabetes mellitus
with chronic renal failure. They had fever and chills at the onsets of septicemia with acute obstructive suppurative
cholangitis
, acute pneumonia, and infection complicated with invasion sites of esophageal cancer contagious to bronchus and subcutaneous tissue. Blood cultures yielded catalase and oxidase negative highly vancomycin-resistant (MIC: 1024 micrograms/ml <) gram-positive cocci showing alpha or gamma hemolysis on blood agar plates. Two cases were polymicrobial infections. In one case with esophageal cancer, clinical symptoms persisted after the start of antimicrobial chemotherapy and the patient died 10 days later associated with complications of esophageal cancer. Leuconostoc lactis, Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. dextranicum, and Pediococcus acidilactici wee identified by physiological reactions. These strains were also highly resistant to teicoplanin and fosfomycin, and tolerant to all rested beta-lactams such as benzylpenicillin. This is the first report in Japan to our knowledge on the identification of Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. isolated from human infectious diseases.
...
PMID:[Microbiological and clinical studies of vancomycin resistant Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. isolated from septicemia patients]. 796 99
We report two young men with clinical and laboratory evidence of macroscopic ulcerative colitis, sclerosing
cholangitis
, and insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. The first patient presented at age 15 with vomiting, abdominal pain, weight loss, and abnormal liver function test results. Liver biopsy and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) demonstrated sclerosing
cholangitis
. Colonoscopy with biopsy revealed ulcerative colitis which responded to sulfasalazine.
Diabetes
occurred at age 18 and insulin therapy was begun. The second patient was 19 at presentation with diarrhea, hematochezia, and weight loss. Proctosigmoidoscopy revealed ulcerative colitis, and sulfasalazine led to clinical remission. Three months later he developed
diabetes
requiring insulin therapy. At age 28, he developed elevated alkaline phosphatase, and ERCP revealed sclerosing
cholangitis
. At age 37 he expired from adenocarcinoma that metastasized to the liver. Literature review revealed only one possible case report of this association with microscopic asymptomatic ulcerative colitis in that patient. Statistical analysis suggests that this association is real rather than a chance occurrence. An autoimmune process may be involved and a specific histocompatibility locus antigen (HLA) type may exert a regulatory influence.
...
PMID:Associated ulcerative colitis, sclerosing cholangitis, and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 828 9
Hepatocytes are rich in mitochondria, which play an important role in hepatic metabolism. In certain pathologic conditions (most often alcoholic liver disease) mitochondria became enlarged; nevertheless, even in these conditions they are hardly detectable on light microscopy. Recently an antimitochondrial antibody (mAM), which recognizes a 60-kDa protein, has been characterized. The purpose of the present study was to study immunoreactivity of this antibody in a series of liver biopsies. We studied 146 liver biopsies using an mAM. In 8 cases an ultrastructural study was also done, and in 2 cases Western blot analysis was performed. Cases were divided as follows: alcoholic liver disease (ALD, 31); steatosis (8); nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH, 1); hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related hepatitis (83); hepatitis B virus (HBV)-related hepatitis (6); primary biliary cirrhosis (1); sclerosing
cholangitis
(1); haemosiderosis (1); sarcoidosis (1); alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (1); nonspecific findings (12). All the patients were investigated for alcohol or drug abuse, pharmacological treatment, hyperlipidaemia, hypercholesterolaemia and
diabetes
. Immunoreactivity was diffuse in cases of ALD, NASH and steatosis, and in patients with drug abuse. Electron microscopic immunogold and Western blot analysis confirmed that in the conditions examined the protein recognized by the mAM showed greater expression. Immunohistochemical staining was helpful in demonstrating a toxic or a metabolic insult even in cases in which the histological picture was blurred by viral infection.
...
PMID:Identification of mitochondria in liver biopsies. A study by immunohistochemistry, immunogold and Western blot analysis. 976 31
Acquired perforating dermatosis (APD) is a very rare disorder which has been described in association with systemic diseases such as
diabetes mellitus
, HIV infection or lymphoma. In this report we describe a patient with APD associated with sclerosing
cholangitis
and
diabetes mellitus
who was successfully treated with rifampicin. A 33-year-old Indian woman with a history of extensive pancreatic surgery, sclerosing
cholangitis
and insulin dependent diabetes mellitus was referred to our unit with intractable pruritus. She was treated with cholestyramine, ursodeoxycholic acid, several analgesics, UVB therapy, topical steroids, sedative antihistamines and plasmapheresis without significant improvement. Increasingly severe itching was associated with papular skin changes limited initially to the lower limbs but which later involved her entire body. Biopsy of a representative lesion showed the changes of APD. She was subsequently treated with rifampicin which produced a dramatic resolution of pruritus within 3 weeks and the skin changes progressively resolved over subsequent months. In this newly described association of APD with sclerosing
cholangitis
, rifampicin treatment appeared to be efficient in ameliorating pruritus and the papular skin changes typical of APD.
...
PMID:Successful treatment of acquired perforating dermatosis with rifampicin in an Asian patient with sclerosing cholangitis. 1022 Jul 47
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