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

This prospective study was undertaken to assess the natural history of gallstones in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes. Four hundred forty outpatients with diabetes mellitus were studied; 81 of these had gallstones diagnosed by ultrasound. On the basis of the information they gave, they were divided into two groups: A, asymptomatic; and B, symptomatic (previous episode(s) of biliary pain) at recruitment. Five years after diagnosis, the patients were recalled and questioned about their symptoms. Three of 81 could not be traced and eight had died from diseases not related to gallstones. Seventy were finally evaluated, 47 belonging to group A, 23 to group B. The cumulative percentage of initially asymptomatic patients who presented with biliary pain or complications during the follow-up was 14.9% (4.2% for complications). Of group A patients, 17% underwent cholecystectomy (one prophylactic, six elective and two emergency). One patient (2.1%) died after operation of obstructive jaundice. Of group B patients, 47.8% had biliary symptoms or complications (8.7% cholecystitis); 21.7% were operated (17.4% elective, 4.3% emergency cholecystectomy). Since few patients with asymptomatic gallstones and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus develop pain or complications over time, prophylactic cholecystectomy is probably not advisable.
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PMID:Natural history of gallstones in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A prospective 5-year follow-up. 805 Mar 21

Emphysematous cholecystitis is a rare variant of acute cholecystitis, most frequently seen in elderly, debilitated, or diabetic patients. This report documents the development of fulminant sepsis due to acalculous cholecystitis after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatogram (ERCP) in an otherwise healthy patient with suspected malignant obstructive jaundice. Three other cases of acute cholecystitis have been reported in the literature after ERCP. Although not proven to prevent infectious complications during ERCP, strong consideration should be given to prophylactic antibiotics in patients with suspected malignant obstruction and/or coexistent medical illness, eg, diabetes. When attempts at decompression of the obstructed biliary system by endoscopy fail, decompression by percutaneous or surgical routes should be considered in a timely fashion.
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PMID:Emphysematous cholecystitis after ERCP. 805 Mar 24

During an 11 year period, 47 patients with acute acalculous cholecystitis were operated on. Two to one male/female ratio was observed with a mean age of 55 age of 55 years. No one had a past history of biliary tract pathology but 70 per cent of the patients had risk factors, mainly diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular and collagenous diseases, some different of those reported in the world literature (sepsis, trauma, non biliary tract surgery, etc.). The ultrasound was the best diagnostic tool. Open cholecystectomy was performed in all patients and some sort of local complication was found in 85 per cent of patients (empyema, gangrene or perforation) in spite of the surgical procedure was done on emergency or early elective basis, a 31 per cent operative mortality rate was found and a 10.6% Operative mortality rates was observed. The bacterial cultures showed gram negative and anaerobic flora. This report shows that an early diagnosis and surgical treatment keeps a low morbidity and mortality rates but the gallbladder late complications have a high rates.
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PMID:[Acute acalculous cholecystitis. Results of surgical treatment]. 815 2

The case of a 60-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus type II and primary hypothyroidism, who presented a clinical picture compatible with intestinal obstruction is reported. An abdominal sonogram revealed acute calculous cholecystitis and ileus. A plain film of the abdomen showed dilatation of small bowel loops. She underwent celiotomy, once stabilized, and gallstone ileus+cholecystoduodenal fistula were diagnosed intraoperatively. Resection of the ischemic segment of distal jejunum and the stone, cholecystectomy and primary repair of the fistula were performed. In spite of the systemic complications (metabolic, cardiovascular and pulmonary), that appeared postoperatively, the patient had a favorable outcome. This patient had an acute calculous cholecystitis and a spontaneous biliary-enteric fistula with intestinal obstruction, without previous symptoms of biliary tract disease preceding the episode of bowel obstruction.
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PMID:[Asymptomatic cholecystoduodenal fistula in a patient with diabetes mellitus and primary hypothyroidism: report of a case]. 829 19

Weight loss reduces many of the health hazards associated with obesity including insulin resistance, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia, sleep apnea, hypoxemia and hypercarbia, and osteoarthritis. Potential adverse effects of weight loss include a greater risk for gallstone formation and cholecystitis, excessive loss of lean body mass, water and electrolyte problems, mild liver dysfunction, and elevated uric acid levels. Less consequential problems such as diarrhea, constipation, hair loss, and cold intolerance may also occur. The short-term adverse effects are not severe enough to contraindicate weight loss, nor do they outweigh its short-term benefits.
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PMID:Short-term medical benefits and adverse effects of weight loss. 836 5

The analysis of 664 cases operated upon for acute cholecystitis as well as a review of the literature indicate the dramatic increase in the age of patients presenting with this complication. Other obvious changes: increasing rate of diabetes mellitus and acalculous cholecystitis. The development of preoperative and operative sonography has contributed greatly to the safety of surgery for acute cholecystitis. The majority of patients classified as having low risks should, at the present state of our knowledge, undergo early and definitive surgery. This approach has shown to be the most beneficial from both the medical and economic standpoint. High risk patients as well as patients refusing surgery are optimally treated by sonar-guided percutaneous transhepatic cholecystostomy. Among the recent changes observed over the last 5 years, a marked decrease in septic complications as well as in the length of hospital stay was noted. Both changes improve the cost-benefit ratio of early surgery in this condition.
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PMID:State of the art in the diagnosis and management of acute cholecystitis. 844 56

Factors that predispose to infection in general, of course, may predispose to infection with anaerobes. Included in this category are diabetes mellitus, neutropenia, hypogammaglobulinaemia, malignancy, splenectomy, collagen vascular disease, cytotoxic drug therapy, corticosteroid therapy and other immunosuppression. However, even with these situations there may be certain, more specific, associations: anaerobic cholecystitis and anaerobic osteomyelitis in diabetics, neutropenic colitis, and the increased incidence of local anaerobic infections associated with carcinoma of the lung, colon and uterus. Conditions that lead to decreased redox potential more specifically predispose to infection with anaerobes. Included in this category are obstruction and stasis, tissue anoxia, tissue destruction, vascular insufficiency, prior aerobic infection, burns, foreign body implantation, and calcium salts in a wound (in association with fractures). Other specific clinical situations that predispose to anaerobic infections include leukaemia; oral, gastrointestinal, and female pelvic surgery; trauma at other sites; childbirth; aspiration pneumonia; human and animal bites; and therapy with agents with poor activity against anaerobes (e.g. aminoglycosides, quinolones). AIDS patients appear to be predisposed to severe periodontal disease and its complications.
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PMID:Host factors predisposing to anaerobic infections. 851 53

A total of 206 patients with chronic calculous cholecystitis (CCC) are subjected to operation in the surgical clinic of the Military Hospital--Plovdiv over the period 1991-1994 = Diabetes mellitus as a concomitant disease is discovered in 21 cases (10.20 per cent). All of them have pain syndrome complaints, and during cholecystectomy concrements in the gallbladder are found. As shown by the results, the combination CCC and DM leads to aggravation of the disease. Destructive changes in the gallbladder in this combination are detected in 28.5 per cent, whereas in patients free of DM they amount to 10.5 per cent. Presumably, removal of the gallbladder contributes to eliminate the persisting stress factor in terms of the insular apparatus of the pancreas. Assessment of the long-term results shows that the positive therapeutic effect of the operation is permanent.
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PMID:[The combination of chronic calculous cholecystitis and diabetes mellitus]. 864 41

Many studies have compared different countries' health care systems at the macro level. Less has been done to analyze care provided for patients with specific diseases and to compare physician attitudes concerning factors that influence patient care. This study compares severity of illness and length of hospital stay for patients admitted for diabetes mellitus, cholecystitis, or appendicitis at three teaching hospitals in Italy, Japan, and the United States. Physicians caring for patients with these diseases were surveyed to assess their opinions of the adequacy of resources available at their hospital, perceived administrative pressures concerning resource use, and interactions with patients and their families that relate to admission and discharge decisions. The severity of the patient mix was consistently higher in the U.S. hospital than in the Italian or Japanese hospitals. Controlling for diagnosis, severity of illness, surgery, age, and presence of co-morbid conditions, the U.S. hospital consistently had the shortest stays and the Japanese hospital the longest. Japanese physicians were more likely than U.S. or Italian physicians to report insufficient resources, such as nurses, to provide quality care, but less likely to report administrative pressures interfering with patient care. Differences in hospital utilization may reflect variation in clinical practices, availability of resources, barriers to access to care, organizational differences at the national and hospital level, and patient and family preferences.
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PMID:Patterns of hospital care and physician perspectives from an Italian, Japanese, and USA hospital. 879 39

The increase of acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) in out-patients produces the review of clinic files of 810 cases of cholecystectomy because of acute cholecystitis; 27 were acalculous (3.3%). AAC was predominant in female sex (20/27) in which the mean age was 37 years. In twelve patients (44%) the cholecystitis was associated with diabetes and hypertension. The clinical manifestations were similar to patients with cholelithiasis and preoperative diagnosis was made in only 33% by ultrasonography. The surgical findings were: Edematous gallbladder without stones, wall thickness and necrosis, as well as perivesicular adherences. In all patients the treatment was immediate cholecystectomy, with morbidity of 14.4% and no mortality. AAC is not only present in critically ill patients, but also is present in patients not hospitalized, and immediate cholecystectomy is the treatment of choice.
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PMID:[Acute non-calculous cholecystitis in non-hospitalized patients]. 894 99


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