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

The management of diabetes mellitus involves patient education and dietary modifications, both of which play a key role in determining the success of therapy. Other therapeutic measures include oral hypoglycaemic agents and insulin. In type II diabetic patients not responding to diet alone the second-generation sulphonylureas are preferred. Biguanides are indicated in the very obese type II diabetic, provided there are no contraindications. Where insulin therapy is indicated (e.g. type 1 diabetes mellitus), the trend is to use a human preparation because it evokes a very weak antibody response. Optimal diabetes control, as gauged by home blood glucose monitoring and glycosylated haemoglobin levels or, in the case of type II diabetics, fasting blood glucose levels, prevents the acute symptoms of diabetes mellitus as well as coma and in addition appears to minimise the risk of vascular complications.
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PMID:Management of diabetes mellitus. 355 61

To evaluate the efficacy of dexamethasone for treatment of primary supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage, we studied 93 patients 40 to 80 years old, using a double-blind randomized block design. After the subjects were stratified according to their level of consciousness (Glasgow Coma Scale), those with objectively documented primary supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage were randomly assigned to either dexamethasone or placebo. For ethical reasons, three interim analyses were planned, to permit early termination of the trial if one study group did better than the other. During the third interim analysis, the death rate at the 21st day was identical in the two groups (dexamethasone vs. placebo, 21 of 46 vs. 21 of 47; chi-square = 0.01, P = 0.93). In contrast, the rate of complications (mostly infections and complications of diabetes) was much higher in the dexamethasone group (chi-square = 10.89, P less than 0.001), leading to early termination of the study. In the light of the absence of a demonstrable beneficial effect and the presence of a significant harmful effect, current practices of using dexamethasone for treatment of primary supratentorial hemorrhage should be reconsidered.
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PMID:Effects of dexamethasone in primary supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage. 357 83

Following consideration of the nosological role of hyperglycemic states in psychiatry the case report of a fifty-five year-old patient is presented suffering from fatty cell degeneration of the liver and a relapsing pancreatitis due to chronic alcoholism. After a long period of abstinence without previously known diabetes mellitus a sudden ketoacidotic coma developed with maximum serum glucose level of 2020 mg%. Having emerged during coma treatment Wernicke's encephalopathy passed into Korsakoff's syndrome the main features of which remained unchanged for more than one year. In this case thiamine deficiency of different pathogenetical origin is discussed: defective exogeneous availability due to malabsorption; depletion of endogeneous thiamine stores due to enlarged requirements for glucose oxidation during coma therapy; antimetabolic effects to thiamine by nitroimidazole-derivatives administered parenterally.
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PMID:[Diabetic coma and Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. On the clinical significance of acquired thiamine deficiency]. 359 52

Home health nurses provided individualized instruction in diabetes self-care within the home environment of 393 diabetic individuals. Each subject was randomly assigned to either the intervention (those receiving home teaching) or control (those not receiving home teaching) group. At 6 mo postenrollment, intervention subjects showed significantly greater self-care knowledge and skills than control subjects, although the actual differences between the two groups in terms of self-care skills were probably too small to have any practical meaning. The primary objective of the study, which was the reduction of the number of preventable diabetes-related hospitalizations (ketoacidosis, ketotic coma, nonketotic coma, insulin reaction, and diabetes out of control), was not achieved; no differences between the groups were noted after 12 mo of follow-up. Similarly, length of hospital stay, foot problems, emergency room and physician visits, and sick days were roughly equivalent in both groups during the follow-up year. These results suggest that, in the absence of concurrent changes in the health-care delivery system and strategies for influencing attitudes toward self-care, education alone is ineffective.
Diabetes Care
PMID:A randomized study of the effects of a home diabetes education program. 369 83

This study was performed to examine the relationship between postmortem biochemical values and cause of death. The follow samples were taken from 399 corpses: cerebrospinal fluid (CSF; n = 376, suboccipital), blood (n = 158, femoral vein), and urine (n = 101, at autopsy). (See Table 1 for causes of death) All samples were stored at -80 degrees C. A further 100 samples of blood were later taken and stored at +4 degrees C before testing. Biochemical determinations made were: glucose in CSF, blood, and urine (hexokinase method); lactate (LDH/GPT) and free acetone (HS-gas chromatography) in CSF; hemoglobin A1 in blood (microcolumn technique). In 34 cases fatal diabetic coma was considered verified by morphological and chemical findings. One hundred cases of sudden cardiac death were chosen as the main control group. In 32 of the 34 cases defined above, the value of the formula of Traub (glucose + lactate in CSF) exceeded 415 mg/dl. It is not influenced significantly by hyperglycemia or hyperlactatemia due to factors other than diabetes (i.e., carbon monoxide, asphyxia). After death the value rose till the 30th hpm, then remained stable for at least 1 week. Fatal coma was defined as the ketoacidotic form if free acetone in CSF ranged above 21 mg/l. In these cases, CSF glucose and free acetone correlated positively. Hemoglobin A1 remained stable after death. Its amount was independent from postmortem blood glucose, postmortem interval and total hemoglobin. Furthermore, the manner of storage (-80 degrees or +4 degrees C) had no significant influence on its values. In 29 of 34 cases of fatal coma, Hb A1 exceeded 12.1%. Analysis of urine glucose showed elevated levels (over 500 mg/dl) in diabetic comas. On conclusion, fatal diabetic coma seems indicated as the cause of death if measured values of postmortem biochemistry exceed the following limits: CSF-Traub 415 mg/dl, free acetone (CSF) 21 mg/l; Hb A1 12.1%; urine glucose 500 mg/dl. Most important are the Traub formula and hemoglobin A1. Usually, in fatal coma both values are elevated. If both of them are normal, diabetic coma can nearly be excluded. Combined evaluation of all values is absolutely necessary. Morphology must also always be taken into account. Consequently, a diagnosis of fatal coma can be obtained by a process of elimination.
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PMID:[Biochemical measurements of glucose metabolism in relation to cause of death and postmortem effects]. 376 99

In an effort to ascertain important epidemiologic and prognostic risk factors, we analyzed 33 cases of Staphylococcus aureus meningitis occurring over an 8-year period (1976 to 1984). Staphylococcus aureus caused 6% of all bacterial meningitis at our University Hospital. Fifty percent of cases were pediatric and included 7 newborn infants, of whom 71% were either premature or had low birth weight. Major underlying diseases were: central nervous system (CNS) disorders (55%), endocarditis (21%, predominantly intravenous drug abusers), other sites of infection (27%), and prematurity (24%). Fifty-seven percent of patients were bacteremic and 41% of those had concomitant bacteriuria. Hypoglycorrhachia was present in 27% of cases, positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Gram stain in 20%, disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in 19%, and methicillin-resistant organisms in 18%. Cerebrospinal fluid cultures remained positive for a protracted period (mean, 6.7 days) regardless of the presence or absence of a CNS shunt. Overall mortality was 21%. Favorable outcomes were associated with the eventual presence of sterile CSF (15.4% vs. 100% mortality) and the removal of foreign bodies (10% vs. 67% mortality). Mortality was also associated (p less than 0.5) with the presence of diabetes mellitus, age greater than 60, obtundation or coma on presentation, bacteremia, or DIC. Cure correlated (p less than .05) with CNS shunt-associated infections, age less than 1, normal neurologic examinations on presentation, or the absence of DIC or bacteremia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Staphylococcus aureus meningitis: a broad-based epidemiologic study. 382 85

The use of insulin by diabetics has largely removed the threat of death from ketotic coma but cardiovascular dysfunction remains a major cause of death in patients with diabetes. Recent research has indicated a generalized membrane defect, which may cause abnormalities of calcium metabolism in nerves, cardiac and smooth muscle as well as endothelial cells and thus may lead respectively to the development of neuropathy, primary cardiomyopathy, microangiopathy and atherosclerosis in the diabetic population. Each of these pathogenic processes, which are associated with insulin deficiency, alone or in combination with others, may result in cardiac dysfunction in chronic diabetes. Activation of the sympathetic nervous system and abnormalities in catecholamine metabolism have been identified in diabetes; their involvement in the genesis of cardiac pump failure as well as large and small vessel disease is likely. The membrane defects as indicated by changes in both plasma membrane and glycocalyx in diabetic cardiomyopathy appear to be complex and may involve alterations in the metabolism of lipids and pyrimidine nucleotides. It seems that intracellular calcium overload is intimately involved in the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy; however, a concentrated research effort is required to understand the primary biochemical lesion in the pathogenesis of cardiac dysfunction in diabetes. In the meantime, a heightened awareness on the part of clinicians concerning the susceptibility of diabetic patients to cardiovascular problems may help in reducing mortality and morbidity in the diabetic population.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of cardiac dysfunction in diabetes mellitus. 385 Jul 73

The descriptive epidemiology of diabetic coma at onset was investigated in a nationwide survey of insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) children (age at onset less than 18 yr) throughout Japan for the years 1970-81. Of the 1172 cases, 148 (12.6%) were unconscious at onset. Diabetic coma was highly associated with abnormalities in the biochemical variables. There was no sex difference in the frequency of coma; however, there was an inverse association with age wherein children under 5 yr of age were approximately two times more likely to present in coma than older children. There was a strong association with reported infections wherein patients with coma were more than twice as likely to report infection than patients without coma. It seemed that the frequency of coma did not decline during the study period. The risk of dying at onset was very high; diabetic children in coma (4.7%) were 12 times more likely to die than patients without coma.
Diabetes 1985 Dec
PMID:Coma at the onset of young insulin-dependent diabetes in Japan. The results of a nationwide survey. Japan and Pittsburgh Childhood Diabetes Research Groups. 386 5

Hypernatraemic states are associated with an increased risk of thrombosis. To examine the relative contributions of sodium and vasopressin, we infused hypertonic saline in 11 male volunteers and measured the effect on factor VIII (FVIII), euglobulin clot lysis time (ELT) and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) generation. Samples were taken pre-infusion, hourly during a 3h infusion of 450 ml 6M saline and one hour after the infusion had stopped. Mean plasma osmolality (SEM) rose from 287(0.7) to 302(10) mOsm after 3h (p less than 0.01). Plasma vasopressin concentrations rose from 1.0(0.3) to 4(0.94) pg/ml over 3 hr (p 0.01). Plasminogen activator activity (10(6)/ELT2) rose from 65(10) to 372(55) units (p less than 0.001). There was a highly significant correlation between plasma osmolality and plasminogen activator activity (r = 0.5 p less than 0.0001). FPA generation time shortened from 7.2(0.4) to 5.4(0.6) min after 2h and 5.3(0.6) after 4h (n = 6). Values for FPA after 4 min incubation steadily increased from 5.8(1.2) to 14.3(4.6) pmol/ml during the infusion but differences failed to achieve statistical significance. FVIIIC (1 stage) remained constant at 75(5.5%) during the infusion. There was a small and statistically insignificant increase in FVIII RiCof after 3h and FVIII RAg decreased slightly. The results suggest that hypernatraemia and increasing plasma aVP concentrations produce changes in haemostatic function consistent with a hypercoaguable state. The mechanisms for the effect are unclear. These changes in haemostatic function might contribute to the thrombo-embolic complications of conditions such as hyperosmolar coma in diabetes mellitus or severe heatstroke in which degrees of hypernatraemia occur.
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PMID:Does hypernatraemia promote thrombosis? 393 26

We reviewed the clinical and laboratory characteristics of 34 patients who had classical heatstroke during the Kansas City heat wave of 1980. The patients were elderly, predominantly black, and of low socioeconomic class. Overall mortality was 18%, with 9% of patients exhibiting severe residual neurologic deficit; 73% had full recovery. Patients with coma, temperature greater than or equal to 108 F (42.2 C), severe hypotension, coagulopathy, and need for respiratory assistance were at highest risk of death. Associated disease was common (67%), with hypertension (32%), diabetes (21%), and alcoholism (21%) being most frequent. Medications known to predispose to heatstroke were used by 56% of patients. Hematologic abnormalities were nonspecific, and clinical evidence of renal or hepatic failure was rare. Hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, hypomagnesemia, hypophosphatemia, and elevated levels of creatine phosphokinase and glucose were frequent but did not correlate with outcome. The predominant arterial blood gas abnormality was metabolic acidosis or a combined metabolic acidosis and respiratory alkalosis.
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PMID:Classical heatstroke: clinical and laboratory assessment. 396 67


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