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

This paper presents the results of a comparative biosocial study between 186 patients with large bowel cancer and two groups of matched controls, each with 186 persons. One of these groups was from hospitalized patients, the other from the neighbourhood of the cancer patients. Bowel cancer patients and their controls were compared with regard to level of education, profession, physical activity in job, smoking habits, alcohol and coffee consumption and previous illnesses. The only parameters that were statistically different between cancer patients and both controls were haemorrhoids and use of laxatives, that were found to be increased in the cancer group. Higher education level, coffee consumption, polyposis, appendectomia were significantly more presented in bowel cancer patients but only in comparison to one control group. Out of the other diseases of the digestive tract, cases and controls differed with respect to cholecystitis, cholecystectomy and to diabetes.
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PMID:Biosocial and other characteristics of the large bowel cancer patients in Belgrade (Yugoslavia). 322 92

A case of acalculous cholecystitis in a 65-year-old man with underlying diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and peripheral arteriosclerosis is presented here. His case remained diagnostically puzzling for some time until symptoms and signs became more severe and very suggestive of acute cholecystitis. The clinical impression was then supported by an abnormal radioisotope biliary scan. The scan has fairly good sensitivity in detecting this condition but may not be totally dependable. Acalculous cholecystitis is an unusual but serious variant of a common disorder in which treatable gallbladder disease may masquerade as a less treatable liver malady. A common denominator among this disorder's many etiologies may be impairment of the gallbladder microcirculation in the presence of one or more conditions that lower the gallbladder's resistance to bacterial invasion. Prompt detection and treatment are desirable to reduce morbidity and mortality. However, early diagnosis is not always possible, because the clinical picture often is unclear, clear, gallstones are absent, and laboratory test results may be normal or equivocal. As in the case reported here, the vague clinical picture may dictate following a patient until the illness reaches an intensity acute enough to permit identification. The greatest aid to earlier diagnosis for the physician faced with circumstances similar to those described here is to think of cholecystitis and then to give strong weight to that clinical suspicion. At times, a recommendation for cholecystectomy may have to be made mainly on clinical judgment.
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PMID:Cholecystitis occurring without stones. 351 45

Physical conditioning induces many favourable changes in the body, including an increase of maximum oxygen transport, a decrease of body fat, a strengthening of muscles, tendons and bones, an improvement of blood lipid profile, and a better balance between oxygen demand and supply in the myocardium. The preventive value of such changes is often seen in measures of perceived health or their practical consequences. Industrial fitness programmes apparently reduce the use of medical services (physician visits and hospital days), with gains of productivity, a lessening of absenteeism, and a lower employee turnover. Techniques such as the Canadian Health Hazard Appraisal questionnaire suggest a general reduction in 'risk-taking' behaviour among exercise-class participants, with a substantial reduction in their 'appraised' age. There is little evidence that regular moderate exercise can alter the response to acute disease, but both theoretical considerations and epidemiological data suggest the value of physical activity in preventing manifestations of ischaemic heart disease, obesity and maturity onset diabetes, cholecystitis, hypertension, certain neuroses, and age-related pathologies. A fit individual is also at a lesser risk of industrial injury, and is capable of living independently for a longer fraction of his or her old age. It is concluded that physical activity is one of the more useful tactics of preventive medicine; the current challenge to both research workers and policy makers is to carry this message beyond the white-collar executive to such target groups as blue-collar workers, ethnic minorities, housewives, the elderly and the handicapped.
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PMID:The value of physical fitness in preventive medicine. 384 82

Most physicians believe that the diabetic patient is predisposed to infections and that infections complicate the control of the diabetes. Despite the lack of scientific proof, certain infections (such as tuberculosis, bacteriuria in females, malignant external otitis, rhinocerebral mucormycosis, emphysematous cholecystitis, emphysematous pyelonephritis, acute papillary necrosis etc) are widely regarded to be associated with the diabetic. Foot infections, infections of the respiratory tract and the urinary tract are very important in the diabetic. The reasons why diabetics are susceptible to infections are unclear: although the production of humoral antibody appear intact, defective function of the polymorphonuclear leucocytes has been demonstrated. Successful treatment of infections in the diabetic requires early and exact diagnosis, the exhibition of the correct antimicrobials, the treatment of the diabetic state and associated disorders and prompt surgical intervention where required. Good control of blood glucose in diabetic patients is a desirable goal in the prevention of certain infections and to ensure maintenance of normal host defense mechanisms that determine resistance and response to infection.
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PMID:Infections in diabetes with special reference to diabetics in Singapore. 389 79

Glucocorticoid treatment was performed in 31 patients with diabetes mellitus (41 examinations). The therapy was effective in the patients with the labile form of the disease, in diabetic nephropathy not accompanied by stable azotemia and after administration of allergenic insulin drugs. Steroids should be combined with divided doses of short-acting insulin drugs within 24 hours. The adrenocortical drugs are absolutely contraindicated in pronounced ketosis. The treatment above can be aggravated by a chronic inflammatory process, especially by cholecystitis.
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PMID:[Interrelations between blood coagulation and lipid metabolism in patients with diabetes mellitus]. 685 93

Most physicians believe that diabetic individuals are predisposed to infections and that infection complicates the control of the diabetes. However, only bacteriuria can be documented to occur with increased frequency in diabetic compared with nondiabetic patients. Although most bacteriuric diabetic patients are asymptomatic, severe infections such as emphysematous pyelonephritis, papillary necrosis, perinephric abscess, and candida pyelonephritis may occur. Tuberculosis, once a proven threat to diabetic individuals, is a less serious problem now that effective screening and chemoprophylaxis programs have been initiated. Several unusual infections such as malignant external otitis, rhinocerebral mucormycosis, emphysematous pyelonephritis, and emphysematous cholecystitis occur also exclusively in diabetics. Foot infections are very important in diabetic patients; successful treatment requires accurate assessment of the extent and etiology of the infections and often involves surgery as well as broad antibiotic coverage. The important problem of infection in diabetic patients deserves careful evaluation. Questions such as do diabetic individuals have a higher incidence of infection, why are diabetic patients predisposed to infection, why is necrosis common in several of the infections, what is the course of asymptomatic bacteriuria, who do diabetic patients develop foot infections, and how should foot infections be prevented and treated should be topics of clinical investigation.
Diabetes Care
PMID:Infection and diabetes mellitus. 699 64

The levels of serum secretory component (SC) were measured in 147 patients with digestive disease. Decreased levels were found patients with acute hepatitis, HBs-antigen associated chronic hepatitis, HBs-antigen associated liver cirrhosis and hepatoma. Normal levels were observed in patients with diabetes mellitus, gastric cancer and colonic carcinoma. Elevated levels were found in patients with cholecystitis, obstructive jaundice and acute pancreatitis. The serum SC level in almost all disease groups showed no correlation with immunoglobulin levels.
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PMID:Studies on secretory component in digestive disease. III. Levels of serum secretory component in digestive disease. 743 18

We describe a 77-year-old man with diabetes mellitus who developed a large gas-containing pyogenic liver abscess after admission. Mild elevation of serum biliary enzyme levels suggested probable biliary trouble on admission. Ultrasonography and computed tomography showed a large abscess of the liver with gas formation and the presence of gas within the lumina of the gallbladder and biliary tract when the patient had fever, leukocytosis and evidence of hepato-renal dysfunction. These findings suggest that the large liver abscess may have developed as a result of emphysematous cholecystitis.
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PMID:A case of gas-containing liver abscess associated with emphysematous change in the gallbladder. 762 6

The clinical presentation of psoas abscess is often non-specific and insidious that may mislead the diagnosis and treatment. The abscess often extends beyond the retroperitoneum and pelvis before its diagnosis, and leads to serious complications. Many diseases have the similar signs and symptoms and must be ruled out. Computed tomogram is the most useful and reliable diagnostic tool. Only a few cases of salmonella psoas abscess were reported in the literature, and were usually associated with spinal osteomyelitis or septic hip. We present a case of salmonella psoas abscess in a patient with diabetes mellitus. The patient had the history of cholecystitis with sepsis due to salmonella infection 4 years before and cholecystectomy had been done. No associated lesion was found to be associated with the abscess, and we believed the abscess being the result of recurrent bacteremic attack. High index of suspicion, early diagnosis, adequate drainage and effective antibiotic treatment are the key points in managing the disease.
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PMID:Salmonella psoas abscess--a case report. 764 Nov 11

We reported a rare case of marked dilatation of the bilateral common carotid artery (CCA) associated with stenosis of the left middle cerebral artery (MCA). A 64-year-old female was admitted with right hemiparesis and dysarthria. She was hospitalized 2 years ago for cholecystitis. For 5 years, she has been under medical treatment for hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, cardiac failure associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and atrial fibrillation. Brain CT scan showed infarction of the left corona radiata. Angiography revealed marked dilatation of the bilateral CCA and the internal carotid artery (ICA), moderate dilatation of the innominate artery and the right subclavian artery, kinking of the right CCA, diverticular outpouching of the left ICA, and stenosis of the right external carotid artery and the left MCA. Breast CT scan revealed moderate dilatation and marked calcification of the ascending aorta and the aortic arch. Laboratory examination did not show any sign of inflammation, rheumatoid factor (RA), antistreptolysis-O (ASLO) and antinucleotic antibody. Based on the clinical course, radiological findings and laboratory data, possible diagnosis of the dilatation of the bilateral CCA was discussed with particular emphasis on arteriosclerotic aneurysm and aortitis syndrome.
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PMID:[Marked dilatation of the bilateral common carotid artery: a case report]. 773 79


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