Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reviewed all first operations for cholelithiasis at the North Carolina Memorial Hospital from 1973 to 1982 to assess factors associated with postoperative morbidity in diabetics after biliary tract surgery. Diabetics (n = 126) had more frequent postoperative complications (24.6% vs. 12.5%, p less than 0.001) and higher mortality (7.9% vs. 3.0%, p = 0.02) than the nondiabetics (n = 855). Postoperative complications were more frequent in diabetics at both emergency surgery (57.9% vs. 39.1%) and at nonemergency surgery (18.7% vs. 10.2%). Diabetics were older, however, and had more preoperative renal, cardiovascular, and neurologic disease. We used logistic regression analysis to adjust for these differences and to determine independent predictors of postoperative complications. Urgent surgery, operation other than cholecystectomy, cardiovascular disease, and male sex were associated with an increased risk of postoperative morbidity. Diabetes was associated with an increase in risk that was not statistically significant. We conclude that diabetics have increased morbidity primarily because they are older and have other medical problems. The risk conferred by uncomplicated diabetes is modest, and recommendations for prophylactic surgery in asymptomatic diabetics with gallstones should be reexamined in this light.
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PMID:Factors associated with postoperative complications in diabetics after biliary tract surgery. 371 64

Between 1978 and 1985, we conducted a prospective study of 21 patients who survived several attacks of pancreatitis and were diagnosed as having primary hyperlipidemia. None of the patients suffered from chronic alcoholism, primary diabetes, or cholelithiasis or was receiving prolonged steroid therapy. Lowering of plasma lipid values toward normal was achieved in all patients following a program of combined dietary and drug (bezafibrate) therapy. Five patients had recurrent episodes of pancreatitis during the treatment program. These patients were diagnosed subsequently as suffering from bulimia and were all given cognitive behavioral therapy. One patient died following an attack of pancreatitis. An underlying eating disorder should be suspected in patients who relapse after treatment for pancreatitis and hyperlipidemia. Multidisciplinary treatment should be used in these patients to improve therapeutic efficacy and uncover behavioral patterns that have a direct impact on their life expectancy.
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PMID:Bulimia. An underlying behavioral disorder in hyperlipidemic pancreatitis: a prospective multidisciplinary approach. 382 58

A large retrospective autopsy study of patients was analyzed to evaluate the major etiologic and pathologic factors contributing to fatal acute pancreatitis (AP). From an autopsy population of 50,227 patients, 405 cases were identified where AP was defined as the official primary cause of death. AP was classified according to morphological and histological, but not biochemical, criteria. Patients with AP died significantly earlier than a control autopsy population of 38,259 patients. Sixty percent of the AP patients died within 7 days of admission. Pulmonary edema and congestion were significantly more prevalent in this group, as was the presence of hemorrhagic pancreatitis. In the remaining 40% of patients surviving longer than 7 days, infection was the major factor contributing to death. Major etiologic groups in AP were chronic alcoholism; postabdominal surgery; common duct stones; a small miscellaneous group including viral hepatitis, drug, and postpartum cases; and a large idiopathic group comprising patients with cholelithiasis, diabetes mellitus, and ischemia. The prevalence of established diabetes mellitus in the AP group was significantly higher than that observed in the autopsy control series, suggesting that this disease should be considered as an additional risk factor influencing survival in AP. Pulmonary complications, including pulmonary edema and congestion, appeared to be the most significant factor contributing to death and occurred even in those cases where the pancreatic damage appeared to be only moderate in extent. Emphasis placed on the early recognition and treatment of pulmonary edema in all cases of moderate and severe AP should contribute significantly to an increase in survival in this disease.
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PMID:Death due to acute pancreatitis. A retrospective analysis of 405 autopsy cases. 389

The practical implications of the new Marseilles classification (1984) of pancreatitis are discussed and the present-day diagnostic methods critically reviewed. The new classification distinguishes between two typical long-term profiles, i.e. acute (reversible) and chronic (progressive) pancreatitis. Modern diagnostic tests such as sonography, CT, ERCP and the secretin-CCK test do not provide a "gold standard" for early chronic pancreatitis. Thus, long-term studies of function and morphology are needed to differentiate chronic pancreatitis (progressive dysfunction, calcification, ERP changes) from acute (reversible) pancreatitis. The etiology is a helpful prognostic guide since gallstone pancreatitis virtually never becomes chronic. However, alcoholic "acute" pancreatitis may not always progress to chronic pancreatitis. Drug or surgical treatment of pain is symptomatic and empirical, since the pathomechanisms of pain are poorly understood. A prerequisite for optimum therapy is exact staging of the disease into: uncomplicated early stages with short, self-limiting episodes of pancreatitis: conservative therapy, persistent pain, mainly due to pseudocysts (diagnosis by morphological tests): surgical therapy, advanced painless forms of chronic pancreatitis associated with diabetes and/or steatorrhea: diet and substitution therapy. After successful surgical drainage persistent pain subsides, but postoperative episodic recurrences of pancreatitis are common in the early stages of the disease and in association with continued alcohol intake. However, spontaneous pain relief occurs in all cases in the late stages of the disease and with progressive pancreatic dysfunction (despite continued alcohol abuse).
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PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of chronic alcoholic pancreatitis. A critical review of the status]. 390 86

Although observation is the best form of therapy for patients with asymptomatic gallstones, surgical management offers the least risk and greatest benefit to patients with symptomatic disease. This is particularly true of patients with diabetes and patients over 60 years of age. Dissolution therapy may play a major role in the treatment of symptomatic cholesterol gallstones in the future, but at present the most effective approach remains early cholecystectomy.
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PMID:Gallstones. When to observe, when to treat. 394 94

Diagnostic significance of a simple and rapid screening procedure for determining the relative amounts of pancreatic and salivary isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor was evaluated in 242 subjects (controls 84, acute pancreatitis nine, chronic pancreatitis 28, pancreatic cancer 14, peptic ulcer 25, liver cirrhosis 15, cholelithiasis 24, irritable colon syndrome 13, diabetes mellitus 13, mumps seven, and chronic renal failure 10). Electrophoretically separated isoamylases of saliva and pure pancreatic juice were all inhibited at similar degrees to the corresponding unfractionated amylases. Total amylase and pancreatic isoamylase were elevated in all nine patients with acute pancreatitis. Pancreatic isoamylase was decreased in 12 of 28 patients (43%) with chronic pancreatitis and increased in nine of 14 patients (64%) with pancreatic cancer. The mean pancreatic isoamylase activity in the patients with acute pancreatitis was significantly higher (p less than 0.01), while that of chronic pancreatitis was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) when compared with controls. The inhibition method offers simple, rapid, and specific analysis of serum isoamylase for the differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia in cases of emergency.
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PMID:Differential determination of serum isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor and its clinical application. 396 56

The triglyceride, cholesterol, and phospholipid contents of heart papillary muscle were measured in groups of obviously healthy and diseased females and males on whom either routine or forensic necropsies were performed. In healthy men the triglyceride content was 1.77 +/- 1.30 mg/g of wet weight and in women 1.25 +/- 0.48 mg/g wet weight. The corresponding values for cholesterol were 1.07 +/- 0.24 mg/g and 1.21 +/- 0.22 mg/g and those for phospholipids 17.70 +/- 5.15 mg/g and 19.65 +/- 10.21 mg/g. The differences between the sexes were not significant. The hypertensive or cardiac hypertrophy group had about the same or slightly lower means for lipid content. In the cholelithiasis group, women had significantly high triglyceride values (3.38 +/- 2.36 mg/g). The cholesterol values were not significantly elevated in either men or women. In the diabetic group, triglycerides were significantly increased both in men (mean 8.12 +/- 0.54 mg/g) and in women (6.85 +/- 5.66 mg/g). The cholesterol mean values were also high in both sexes, but the rise was not significant because of the great variation. In the coronary atheroma group, both male and female hospital cases had high triglyceride contents (mean 4.48 +/- 4.25 mg/g and 3.65 +/- 3.94 mg/g) whereas the forensic cases had only slightly elevated or normal values. Cholesterol assays paralleled the triglyceride ones, but phospholipids showed an inverse trend. The results showed that the lipid content of papillary muscle was increased in diseases where disturbances of lipid metabolism are evident, as in diabetes and cholelithiasis. In coronary atheroma only those cases with advanced obstruction of the arteries were associated with abnormal values of papillary lipids. No increase of the lipid content with age alone was found, nor was there any correlation with obesity.
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PMID:Triglycerides, cholesterol, and phospholipids in normal heart papillary muscle and in patients suffering from diabetes, cholelithiasis, hypertension, and coronary atheroma. 426 65

Ceftizoxime (CZX), a parenteral cephalosporin derivative belonging to the so-called third generation cephalosporin is reported to have a broad antibacterial activity, particularly against Gram-negative aerobic bacilli and some anaerobes, such as Bacteroides fragilis and a good stability to beta-lactamases. Clinical study was performed on a total of 20 cases, 9 females (1 case had urinary tract infection 3 times) and 11 males, aged from 27 to 82 years. All patients had the underlying diseases. They were bronchial asthma in 3 cases, influenza in 1, chronic pulmonary emphysema in 1, pulmonary fibrosis in 1, chronic bronchitis with strongyloidiasis in 1, lung cancer in 3, esophagus cancer in 2, stomach cancer in 1, hepatoma with urolithiasis in 1, liver cirrhosis with diabetes mellitus in 1, alcoholism with strongyloidiasis in 1, cholelithiasis in 1 and congestive heart failure in 1, respectively. Clinical diagnoses for infections were 2-acute bronchitis, 2-exacerbation of chronic bronchitis, 2-broncho-pneumonia, 2-pneumonia including one suspected case, 1-obstructive pneumonia, 2-secondary pulmonary infection, 1-pulmonary infection, 3-urinary tract infection (UTI), 1-UTI with sepsis, 1-sepsis, 1-sepsis with purulent meningitis, 1-biliary tract infection and 1-infected bronchoesophageal fistula. CZX was given by intravenous drip infusion, at a dose of 1 to 2 g, twice daily for 3 to 15 days. Because of severity in infections and underlying diseases, some cases were treated either steroid, gamma-globulin preparations or other antibiotics in combination with CZX. Twelve out of 15 cases assessed clinically responded satisfactorily to the treatment and efficacy rate was 80.0%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Effectiveness of ceftizoxime on various infections in patients with underlying diseases]. 609 Jul 23

Five cases of somatostatinoma are reported, four being primarily located in the pancreas and one in the duodenum. The diagnosis was based upon the histological and immunochemical characteristics of tumoral and metastatic tissue. A marked clinical heterogeneity was noted: one patient presented with gallstones, steatorrhea, and diabetes, two patients suffered from severe hypoglycemic attacks, and two cases were admitted for obstructive jaundice. This varying symptomatology was related to differences in the circulating levels of biologically active somatostatin and to a variable cellular composition of the tumor. In all cases, a basal and/or tolbutamide-induced hypersomatostatinemia was measured. It is concluded that the clinical and hormonal features of the earlier defined somatostatinoma syndrome are no requisite for the diagnosis of somatostatinoma; the analysis of plasma somatostatin immunoreactivity might lead to a higher detection rate of this endocrine tumor.
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PMID:Five cases of somatostatinoma: clinical heterogeneity and diagnostic usefulness of basal and tolbutamide-induced hypersomatostatinemia. 613 27

A rapid method for determining urinary indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) is introduced as the tumor-marker for the screening and diagnostic purpose of cancer patients by means of high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Its clinical significance is discussed along with a review of literatures. The IAA concentration and creatinine level of optionally collected urine samples were measured and used for the calculation of IAA amount per unit creatinine (microgram IAA/mg creatinine) in urine. Thus, an amount of 24-hours urinary IAA could be calculated without collecting a whole day's urine supply. Analysis of urinary IAA was performed within 10 minutes by HPLC. Urinary IAA level is usually high in the patients with the upper G-I tract cancers such as gastric cancer, esophageal cancer and hepato-biliary tract cancer, and also malignant hematopoietic disorders. But it is also high in non-cancer patients such as liver cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus and cholelithiasis occasionally. The patients with high urinary IAA level also showed high urinary levels of 5-hydroxy indoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) and monoamine oxidase activity (MAO). It was characteristic that hepatocellular carcinoma showed slight elevation of urinary IAA with normal levels of 5-HIAA and MAO. It is conclusive that the positive rate of elevated urinary IAA level was high in the patients with gastric cancer with ulcer-forming type in its morphological classification, and its level tends to elevate as the disease progresses. Therefore, the measurement of urinary IAA level in an optionally collected urine sample, as the tumor-marker, can be useful to check the progression and regression of gastric cancer.
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PMID:[A rapid method for determining urinary indoleacetic acid concentration and its clinical significance as the tumor-marker in the diagnosis of malignant diseases]. 620 79


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