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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the Tri-State Leukemia Survey, the history of diseases in 605 adult male leukemia cases 15 years and older and in 668 adult male population controls was examined. These diseases occurred at least 1 year before leukemia was diagnosed. The data were based on respondents' answers that the disease was diagnosed by a physician; the respondent was either the subject or his spouse. Of 30 diseases studied, 7 showed an excess among the patients with leukemia: infectious hepatitis, eczema, psoriasis,
diabetes
, arthritis and rheumatism, heart disease, and ankylosing spondylitis. Mumps had a lower reported occurrence among the cases, whereas pneumonia was less frequent in acute lymphatic cases than in population controls. Three diseases occurred significantly less in controls than in persons with specific histologic types of leukemia. Our data revealed a more frequent history of
herpes zoster
(
shingles
) in chronic lymphatic leukemia, more hives in acute chronic myeloid cases, and meningitis in acute myeloid leukemia. When we only considered the patients' responses, more of them admitted having had acne than did our controls. The remaining diseases--childhood viral diseases, infectious mononucleosis, smallpox, typhoid fever, dysentery, scarlet fever, tuberculosis, asthma, hay fever, and goiter did not occur more frequently in cases than in controls. The findings were consistent with evidence from previous laboratory and clinical studies. The increased occurrence of infectious hepatitis in our case series is consistent with the findings of other studies showing an increased frequency of Australia antigen in patients with hepatitis, leukemia, and Down's syndrome.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of diseases in adult males with leukemia. 99 1
The influence of sex and age on the distribution of lesions, incidence of postherpetic neuralgia, and related disorders in
herpes zoster
is reported. Results were obtained by reviewing the records of 140 outpatients with
herpes zoster
seen over a ten-year period. Trigeminal involvement and post-herpetic neuralgia were more common in patients over 50 years of age. The most common sites of lesions in all ages were the thoracic dermatomes, between T-1 and T-8. The distribution of lesions and the incidence of postherpetic neuralgia did not vary between the sexes. High incidences of
diabetes
and cataracts were found to be associated with
herpes zoster
infection. Clinical carcinoma of the prostate was a frequent finding in men with
herpes zoster
over age 50. In those patients with malignancies, there was no correlation between distribution of zoster lesions and location of malignancy.
...
PMID:Herpes zoster: correlation of age, sex, distribution, neuralgia, and associated disorders. 127 13
Although corticosteroid treatment is clearly beneficial to patients with temporal arteritis, its exact risk/benefit ratio in these old and side effects-prone patients is unknown. We have thus surveyed that available French and English literature, in order to pool the published series and to evaluate the iatrogenic potential of corticosteroids in this situation. We selected 11 series, yielding a total of 1008 patients. A treatment failure resulted in the death of the patient in five cases. Twenty-seven patients became blind, but only 2 under treatment. The side-effects involved 29% of the patients and are responsible of 29 deaths (2.9%): osteoporosis was the main problem, followed by femoral head necrosis and muscle wasting. Gastroduodenal ulcers were uncommon and generally benign; sigmoid colon diverticulitis was infrequent but dangerous; some infectious complications were noted (
herpes zoster
, tuberculosis, etc...); high blood pressure and
diabetes
were common problems. Psychiatric side-effects were rare. Thus, the unwanted effects of corticosteroids in the treatment of temporal arteritis are relatively infrequent and generally not severe, except osteoporosis. They should be systematically prevented by appropriate diet and treatments (e.g., calcium, potassium, and vitamin D supplements).
...
PMID:[Benefits of corticosteroids in the treatment of Horton's disease and rhizomelic pseudopolyarthritis: advantages and inconveniences. A meta-analysis]. 134 39
Neuralgic pain during or following
herpes zoster
infection is a common problem in pain therapy. The current management of neuralgias due to zoster is discussed with reference to patients in a chronic pain clinic within an anesthesiology department. The courses of 80 patients followed up for at least 3 months from the pain clinic at the University Hospital in Kiel were analyzed. The mean age was 69 years. The predominant locations for zoster lesions were the thoracic segments (65%) and the first branch of the trigeminal nerve (19%).
Diabetes mellitus
was present in 20% of the patients and malignant disease in 18%. In 2 patients recurrent postherpetic neuralgia was the first symptom of HIV infection. Despite pretreatment, the mean initial pain score was 8 on an analog scale (range 0-10). Acute
herpes zoster
pain during the infection was treated with virustatic agents, corticosteroids and sympathetic blocks. Postherpetic neuralgias required a more sophisticated approach, depending on the stage of the disease and the type of pain involved: sympathetic blockade with local anesthetic agents or injections of very low dose opioids to sympathetic ganglia, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and antidepressants or anticonvulsants. The success of the therapy is correlated with the duration of pain. If the history of zoster pain was less than 1 month, the majority of patients showed good or excellent results. On the other hand, only one-third of patients with a history longer than 6 months had adequate pain relief. Therefore, early and appropriate treatment is desirable for patients suffering from zoster neuralgias.
...
PMID:[The treatment of zoster neuralgia]. 168 93
The role of socioeconomic and anthropometric indicators, tobacco, alcohol consumption, dietary habits, and medical history in the etiology of soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) was examined in a hospital-based case-control study, conducted in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia region of northeast Italy, between 1985 and 1990. A total of 88 STS cases (53 males and 35 females; median age: 52 years) and of 610 controls (306 males and 304 females; median age: 54 years) were interviewed. There were significant excess risks associated with a history of
herpes zoster
infection (odds ratio [OR] = 2.4, 95 percent confidence interval [CI] = 1.1-5.3), chicken pox (OR = 2.2, CI = 1.2-4.3) and mumps in childhood (OR = 2.0, CI = 1.1-3.9). History of
diabetes
was also linked to a nonsignificant increase in STS risk (OR = 1.8, CI = 0.6-5.4), whereas exposure to radiation for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes was not related to the probability of developing STS. None of the investigated socioeconomic and anthropometric indicators seemed to affect STS risk; neither did tobacco smoking, nor consumption of alcohol, coffee, and tea beverages. Conversely, among the dietary habits investigated, a significant positive association emerged with an increasing frequency of consumption of dairy products (chi 2 for trend = 6.8, P less than 0.01) and oil (chi 2 for trend = 4.3, P less than 0.05), while a negative association was seen for intake of whole grain bread and pasta (OR for highest cf lowest tertile = 0.4, CI = 0.2-0.9).
...
PMID:Non-occupational risk factors for adult soft-tissue sarcoma in northern Italy. 187 45
Percutaneous nerve excitability testing using the Hilger facial nerve stimulator was introduced about 25 years ago. The test is reliable, easy to use, and inexpensive; it continues to be the most frequently used method for predicting prognosis of facial nerve disorders. Between 1966 and 1974, we recorded 10,243 nerve excitability tests on 865 patients with a mean of 3.29 tests for each peripheral branch and 3.43 for the trunk. Using a multiple regression model, we determined the effect on nerve stimulation values of age, sex, race,
diabetes
, hypertension, partial or complete clinical paralysis, diagnosis of
herpes zoster
, year of testing, and eventual facial paralysis recovery profile. We discuss statistical reliability, provide a table of interpretive results, and offer "tips and traps" invaluable to the practitioner. A prospective study of 25 patients with residual facial paralysis was evaluated by two separate otolaryngologists to determine intertester reliability.
...
PMID:Hilger facial nerve stimulator: a 25-year update. 198 55
We report 31 cases of
herpes zoster
(HZ) with neurological complications: 14 with cranial nerve deficits, 1 with cranial nerve deficit associated with segmental motor disorder, 3 with segmental motor deficits, 2 with meningoencephalitis, 2 with meningoencephalitis associated with cranial neuropathy or myelitis, 2 with meningitis, 2 with hemiplegia contralateral to the ophthalmic HZ. 1 with hemiplegia and motor deficit and finally 1 with hemiplegia and a cranial neuropathy. Smoking was the putative risk factor in 53% of our patients together with
diabetes
, which has already been mentioned in the literature. We frequently observed more than one complication in succession (19.3%) that could not easily be related to the cutaneous distribution. Acyclovir had no demonstrable positive effects on neurological complication in our patients.
...
PMID:Neurological complications of herpes zoster. 208 79
Postherpetic pain persisting 1 month or longer occurs in only a small percentage of all patients with
herpes zoster
. In most patients, PHN tends to diminish with time. The incidence is, however, directly related to age. Any therapeutic claim for prophylaxis or treatment of PHN has to be evaluated with these observations in mind. There is some information about the pathologic features and a concept of the pathogenesis can be suggested. There is evidence for an imbalance in fiber input (reduced large, inhibitory fibers, and intact or increased small, excitatory fibers) to an abnormal dorsal horn that may contain hypersensitive neurons. Prevention of PHN remains difficult. There is evidence that systemic steroids exert a preventive effect when employed in the treatment of
herpes zoster
in the immunocompetent patient. A reasonable regimen is 60 mg of prednisone tapered over 10 to 14 days. One double-blind, controlled study supports the use of amantadine in this situation; this drug is an option in patients for whom steroids are contraindicated, such as those with peptic ulcer,
diabetes mellitus
or compromised immune function. The dosage of amantadine used in this study was 100 mg twice daily for a month. Although a number of other therapies have been suggested, these remedies remain in need of further, more scientific study. For established PHN, there is firm support for the reduction of pain from severe to mild in two thirds of patients administered low doses of amitriptyline followed by gradual, small increments. In the age group over 65 years, one may use as small a dose as 10 mg with an increase of 10 mg every 5 to 7 days. In those younger than 65, a dose of 25 mg to start is reasonable, with increments of 25 mg. Although unproved, the addition of a phenothiazine, such as fluphenazine, may provide further pain relief. Preliminary studies also indicate that topical capsaicin may be a useful new treatment. Although widely used, there is no good evidence for the use of anticonvulsants alone in this disorder. Studies of local anesthetic sprays with vibration and continuous TENS are uncontrolled, but these modalities may be of some merit. One uncontrolled study reported benefit from epidural steroids. DREZ lesions are a possibility in failed medical cases, but other surgical procedures appear to be of little or no use. Although the measures described here will benefit a number of patients, PHN remains an intractable problem in some cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Postherpetic neuralgia. 256
A review of 15 cases of pancreas transplantation at the Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh showed that all of the neurologic complications occurred outside of the pancreas transplantation surgery itself. Major CNS complications included hypoxic encephalopathy (20 per cent), cerebral and spinal-cord infarction (7 per cent), and seizures (13 per cent). These appeared to be closely associated with cardiovascular collapse or cardiac arrest that often occurred following septic, hemorrhagic, or additional surgical-anesthetic stresses, removed in time from the transplantation. When patients who died of sudden cardiorespiratory arrest were included, the overall frequency of global cerebral ischemia was 33 per cent. The occurrence of
herpes zoster
neuritis (13 per cent) was contrasted with the lack of CNS infections. The possible associations of visual hallucinations with cyclosporine therapy (7 per cent), CSF pleocytosis with OKT3 therapy (7 per cent), and compressive neuropathy with operative-anesthetic monitoring (7 per cent) were discussed in relation to previous reports in the literature. Randomized controlled clinical studies were suggested to distinguish more clearly the complications due to pancreas transplantation from those due to the natural history of the underlying
diabetes
and to distinguish the beneficial and adverse effects of pancreas transplants from those of coexisting renal transplants.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of pancreas transplants. 304 46
The last four cranial nerves are fed by the ascending pharyngeal artery, a branch of the external carotid artery. The fact that paralysis of these nerves may occur immediately after arteriography of the external carotid artery demonstrates that ischaemic truncular neuropathies do exist. The deficit is sudden and usually regressive. Ischaemia may account for regressive paralysis of these nerves reported in
diabetes
,
herpes zoster
and after some traumas. Apparently idiopathic and benign paralysis might be due to the same mechanism. All 4 nerves may be affected, or only the IXth, Xth and XIth nerves, or the XIth nerve may be spared, being fed by two arteries. Apart from the obvious case of arteriographic accident, the diagnosis of paralysis of ischaemic origin can only be made after other causes, notably compression, have been excluded, since direct evidence of arterial obstruction is exceptionally obtainable; regression at follow-up is a major argument in favour of ischaemia.
...
PMID:[Benign paralysis of the last 4 cranial nerves. Arguments in favor of an ischemic mechanism]. 316 Oct 22
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