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

A 62-year-old man with untreated diabetes complained of diplopia and headache. Neurological examination demonstrated left abducens nerve palsy. MRI showed a mass lesion in the left orbital apex. Total left ophthalmoplegia and visual loss rapidly developed in the next two weeks. A craniotomy was performed to decompress the orbital apex and remove the mass. The optic nerve was tightly encased by fibrous tissue. The pathological diagnosis was mucormycosis. Systemic administration of amphotericin B and fluconazole was started immediately. But the lesion rapidly invaded the cavernous sinus and occluded the left internal carotid artery. Finally, the patient died with intracranial extension of mucormycosis four months after the operation. Rhinocerebral mucormycosis is a rapidly progressive fatal disease. Successful treatment seems to be based on early diagnosis, control of the underlying disease, radical surgical resection, and systemic administration of amphotericin B. Mucormycosis should be considered as a differential diagnosis of orbital apex syndrome.
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PMID:[A case of rhinocerebral mucormycosis presenting orbital apex syndrome]. 962 58

Cigarette smoking greatly increases the risk of thyroid-associated orbitopathy (TAO) (odds ratio 7.7, interval 4.3 to 13.7) and the number of cigarettes smoked per day seems to be a significant independent determinant for the incidence of proptosis and diplopia. The own prospective study showed that soft tissue involvement (ATA activity score) and ocular motility could be influenced less by steroid and irradiation treatment in smokers in comparison to nonsmokers. The mechanisms whereby smoking affects eye disease are widely unknown, cytokines (INF-gamma, TNF-alpha, IL-1), receptors and receptor antagonists have probably a crucial role.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1999
PMID:Risk of smoking in thyroid-associated orbitopathy. 1061 13

The aim of ocular muscle surgery in Graves' disease is to determine how an optimal normalization of ocular motility disorders - diplopia, compensatory head posture, eyelid dispositions - can be achieved. The results of ocular muscle surgery of fibrotic ocular muscles allow the following conclusions to be drawn. Correcting the motility disorder can be precisely dosed by recessing only one fibrotic ocular muscle with a strabismic angle of up to 15 degrees. This leads to reproducible and dependable results, with a dose-effect coefficient independent of the initial strabismus angle. Indications as to the amount of surgery and which side should be varied according to horizontal an vertical deviations, and are also dependent on the compensatory head posture. Improvement of the binocular visual field is possible in nearly all cases. Over corrections occur more often when the muscle is not directly fixed at the sclera but adjusted on the following day. The time factor is important both before and after the operation. Before the operation, the motility status should have been stable for at least six months. Postoperatively, within the first few days, an insufficient correction should be expected, however this should not lead to premature revision of the amount of surgery. The surgery of the vertical rectus muscles influences the eyelid position. The upper lid retraction is improved with surgery on the vertical extraocular muscle and depends on prior upper lid motility. In contrast, an increase in lower lid retraction is not dependent on an inferior rectus recession. The results permit a precise series of steps to be drawn up in Graves' disease regarding surgical indications, proportionally correcting each side, and the dosage of ocular muscle operations.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1999
PMID:Ocular muscle and eyelid surgery in thyroid-associated orbitopathy. 1061 26

A 74-year-old man with diabetes mellitus type II, retinopathy and polyneuropathy suffered from exophthalmus, ptosis and diplopia. Magnetic resonance imaging and computer tomography showed a space-occupying process in the right orbital apex. An extranasal ethmoidectomy accompanied by an orbitotomia revealed the presence of septated hyphae. Aspergillus fumigatus was grown from the tissue. After surgical removal of the fungal masses, therapy with amphotericin B (1 mg kg(-1) body weight) plus itraconazole (Sempera, 200 mg per day) over 6 weeks was initiated. Five months later the patient's condition deteriorated again, with vomiting, nausea and pain behind the right eye plus increasing exophthalmus. Antifungal therapy was started again with amphotericin B and 5-fluorocytosine. Neutropenia did not occur. The patient became somnolent and deteriorated, a meningitis was suggested. Aspergillus antigen (titre 1:2, Pastorex) was detected in liquor. Anti-Aspergillus antibodies were not detectable. Both the right eye and retrobulbar fungal masses were eradicated by means of an exenteratio bulbi et orbitae. However, renal insufficiency and an apallic syndrome developed and the patient died. At autopsy, a mycotic aneurysm of the arteria carotis interna dextra was detected. The mycotic vasculitis of this aneurysm had caused a rupture of the blood vessel followed by a massive subarachnoidal haemorrhage. In addition, severe mycotic sphenoidal sinusitis and aspergillosis of the right orbit were seen, which had led to a bifrontal meningitis.
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PMID:Case report. Mycotic arteritis due to Aspergillus fumigatus in a diabetic with retrobulbar aspergillosis and mycotic meningitis. 1176 8

Many physicians will not provide oral contraceptives (OCs) to women with a history of migraine due to concerns about increasing the risk of a cerebrovascular accident. The World Health Organization's revised medical eligibility criteria indicate that only women with serious migraine that includes focal neurologic symptoms should be cautioned against OC use. This article reviews the research evidence on headache, migraine, and OCs. The recent literature suggests that healthy, nonsmoking women using low-dose OCs (35 mcg of estrogen or less) have no increased risk of stroke. Although the presence of diabetes, hypertension, and/or migraine appears to be associated with an increased risk of cerebral thromboembolism, the use of OCs does not synergistically add to the risk. It is important, however, for physicians to differentiate between tension headaches, migraines with aura (classic migraine), and migraines without aura (common migraine). Women with classic migraine should avoid OCs if an alternative method of contraception can be used. Common migraine is not a contraindication to OC use, although the frequency and severity of headaches during OC use should be monitored. OC discontinuation should be discontinued, at least temporarily, if previously existing migraine suddenly worsens, headaches that are qualitatively different than the type usually experienced by the patient occur, headaches wake a patient from sleep, or double vision or loss of vision occur.
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PMID:Headache, migraine and oral contraceptives. 1229 64

The April Case of the Month (COM). A 55-year-old male with history of diabetes mellitus presented with progressive loss of sensitivity on the left side of the body and horizontal diplopia. Symptoms appeared after a right basal pneumonia one month before admission. A CT scan showed an large inoperable lesion in the pons. The patient was treated with corticoids. One week later, the patient showed general deterioration. The fifth and sixth right cranial nerves were affected. Ataxia and disorders in swallowing were also present. A second CT scan showed that the pontine mass had become larger. The patient died 7 days after his admission and the autopsy was limited to CNS. The right middle cerebellar peduncle showed a 2-cm well-defined white brownish necrotic lesion that extended to the pons and periventricular gray matter. Microscopic examination revealed toxoplasmosis, which was confirmed by immunohistochemical studies. The brain tissue was negative for HIV by PCR. Toxoplasmosis is a well-known complication of AIDS, and has been reported in post-transplant patients as well, but only a few reports of toxoplasmosis in diabetics have been reported.
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PMID:April 2003: 55-year-old male with necrotic pontine lesion. 1465 67

We report a patient with mitochondrial diabetes mellitus associated with the A3243G mutation (MDM3243). The patient is a 77-year man with diabetes. At age 68, he noticed diplopia, due to superior rectus muscle palsy of the right eye. At age 70, he noticed lipoma on the right arm. The pathology of his muscle revealed some ragged-red fibers, and focal cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. Hence, he may have a pathogenetic mechanism in common with CPEO (chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia) or mitochondria-related autoimmune disorder associated with mononeuropathy. He had the rate of 0.102% for heteroplasmy of 3243 mitochondrial DNA mutation in leukocytes. This case's heteroplasmy level is the smallest among the reported cases of MDM3243 in the literature. 3243 mitochondrial DNA mutation is known to induce a lack of uridine-modification in tRNA(Leu(UUR)) at the first letter of the anticodon, with which the third letter of the codon pairs, and decline of the pairing of the anticodon of tRNA with the codon of mRNA, suggesting the termination of polypeptide-elongation to generate premature proteins. Therefore, we speculate that these premature proteins may accumulate overtime, thereby affecting cells in target organs.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract 2004 Mar
PMID:Lipoma and opthalmoplegia in mitochondrial diabetes associated with small heteroplasmy level of 3243 tRNA(Leu(UUR)) mutation. 1475 94

General health-related quality of life is markedly impaired in patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO), and even worse than in patients with other chronic conditions like diabetes, emphysema or heart failure. A disease-specific quality-of-life questionnaire for GO has been developed, the so-called GO-QOL, consisting of two subscales: one for visual functioning (8 questions referring to limitations due to decreased visual acuity and/or diplopia) and one for appearance (8 questions referring to limitations in psychosocial functioning due to changes in appearance). The GO-QOL was found to be a valid and reliable instrument. A minimal clinically important difference (MCID) in the GO-QOL score was derived from data obtained before and after specific eye treatments. Based on the patient's opinions, changes of > or = 6 points (minor surgery) or > or = 10 points (surgical decompression, immunosuppression) are recommended as MCID. It is concluded that the GO-QOL is an useful instrument for measuring changes over time in visual functioning and appearance of GO patients. The GO-QOL is available in six languages, and can be used as a separate outcome measure in clinical studies.
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PMID:Effects of Graves' ophthalmopathy on quality of life. 1516 2

Twenty-three diabetic patients -- 16 men and seven women (mean age: 50.7 +/- 17.4 years; mean duration of diabetes: 13.6 +/- 6.9 years) -- with diabetic mononeuropathy of the cranial nerves participated in the study. Four of them were with mononeuropathia multiplex and total ophthalmoplegia, affecting the oculomotor, trochlear and abducent nerves; 12 with paresis of the oculomotor nerve, one -- of the trochlear nerve and six -- of the abducent nerve. They were treated with alpha-lipoic acid (600 mg) for 10 days daily intravenously, thereafter one film tablet of 600 mg daily for 60 days. On the 10th day, we found significant improvement in the clinical signs of diabetic mononeuropathy - double vision, motility and position of the eyeball, ptosis of the upper eyelid and mydriasis. The mean period of oral treatment was 69.1 +/- 23.8 days, following the 10-day intravenous application of alpha-lipoic acid, and full recovery of the diabetic mononeuropathy was achieved with this therapeutic approach. Peripheral neuropathy was present in 17 patients (74%). On the 10th day, we established a decrease in total symptom score by an average of 2.7 +/- 1.4 points and by the end of the treatment period it was improved by 5.9 +/- 1.9 points (p = 0.04). On the 10th day, we found a decrease of 33% in foot pain and by the end of the second month, it fell by 65.5% (p < 0.0001). Vibration perception threshold was reduced in these patients at entry -- mean: 2.42 +/- 1.8 at the great toe, 2.89 +/- 1.8 at the first metatarsal and 3.65 +/- 1.7 at the medial malleolus. By the end of the second month, it reached mean 4.7 +/- 1.8 (p < 0.002) at the great toe, 4.92 +/- 2.1 (p = 0.004) at the first metatarsal and 5.3 +/- 1.4 (p < 0.01) at the medial malleolus. Cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy was present in two of the patients and there was improvement after treatment in the Ewing's tests -- Valsalva manoeuvre, deep-breathing test and lying-to-standing test. The results of our study demonstrate that alpha-lipoic acid appears to be an effective drug in the treatment for not only peripheral and autonomic diabetic neuropathy, but also diabetic mononeuropathy of the cranial nerves leading to full recovery of the patients.
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PMID:Treatment for diabetic mononeuropathy with alpha-lipoic acid. 1592 91

The diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy depends upon a constellation of findings, family history, type of muscle involvement, specific laboratory abnormalities, and the results of histological, pathobiochemical and genetic analysis. In the present paper, the authors describe the diagnostic approach to mitochondrial myopathies manifesting as extraocular muscle disease. The most common ocular manifestation of mitochondrial myopathy is progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO). To exclude myasthenia gravis, ocular myositis, thyroid associated orbitopathy, oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, and congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles in patients with an early onset or long-lasting very slowly progressive ptosis and external ophthalmoplegia, almost without any diplopia, and normal to mildly elevated serum creatine kinase and lactate, electromyography, nerve conduction studies and MRI of the orbits should be performed. A PEO phenotype forces one to look comprehensively for other multisystemic mitochondrial features (e.g., exercise induced weakness, encephalopathy, polyneuropathy, diabetes, heart disease). Thereafter, and presently even in familiar PEO, a diagnostic muscle biopsy should be taken. Histological and ultrastructural hallmarks are mitochondrial proliferations and structural abnormalities, lipid storage, ragged-red fibers, or cytochrome-C negative myofibers. In addition, Southern blotting may reveal the common deletion, or molecular analysis may verify specific mutations of distinct mitochondrial or nuclear genes.
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PMID:Extraocular mitochondrial myopathies and their differential diagnoses. 1676 Jan 17


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