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

Eighteen patients with coeliac disease were found by screening for reticulin antibodies of unselected sera at the time when determination of various tissue antibodies was requested. Joint disease, allergic and pulmonary disorders, and diabetes were particularly observed. IgA class reticulin antibody, in particular, proved to be specific for coeliac disease. Most patients with coeliac disease also had positive serum gliadin antibodies. Abdominal symptoms and signs of malabsorption were slight and infrequent. In most patients a gluten-free diet resulted in the improvement of jejunal mucosal histology, and serum reticulum and gliadin antibody titres decreased simultaneously, reflecting the appropriateness of the diet. Coeliac disease often has mild and atypical symptoms, and, particularly in certain disease groups, screening with reticulin antibody test seems to be appropriate.
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PMID:Atypical coeliac disease found with serologic screening. 232 Sep 42

Acromegaly was diagnosed in 14 middle-aged to old cats of mixed breeding. Thirteen (93%) of the cats were male and one was female. The earliest clinical signs in the 14 cats included polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, all of which were associated with untreated diabetes mellitus. All developed severe insulin resistance within a few months; peak insulin dosages required to control severe hyperglycemia ranged from 20 to 130 U per day. Other clinical findings weeks to months after diagnosis included enlargement of one or more organs (e.g., liver, heart, kidneys, and tongue) (n = 14), cardiomyopathy (n = 13), increase in body size and weight gain (n = 8), nephropathy associated with azotemia and clinical signs of renal failure (n = 7), degenerative arthropathy (n = 6), and central nervous system signs (i.e., circling and seizures) caused by enlargement of the pituitary tumor (n = 2). The diagnosis of acromegaly was confirmed by demonstration of extremely high basal serum growth hormone concentrations (22 to 131 micrograms/l) in all cats. Computerized tomography disclosed a mass in the region of the pituitary gland and hypothalamus in five of the six cats in which it was performed. Two cats were treated by cobalt radiotherapy followed by administration of a somatostatin analogue (octreotide), whereas two cats were treated with octreotide alone. Treatment had little to no effect in decreasing serum GH concentrations in any of the cats. Eleven of the 14 cats were euthanized or died four to 42 months (median survival time, 20.5 months) after the onset of acromegaly because of renal failure (n = 2), congestive heart failure (n = 1), concomitant renal failure and congestive heart failure (n = 3), progressive neurologic signs (n = 2), persistent anorexia and lethargy of unknown cause (n = 1), the owner's unwillingness to treat the diabetes mellitus (n = 1), or unknown causes (n = 1). Results of necropsy examination in ten cats revealed a large pituitary acidophil adenoma (n = 10), marked left ventricular and septal hypertrophy (n = 7), dilated cardiomyopathy (n = 1), arthropathy affecting the shoulder, elbow, or stifle (n = 5), and glomerulopathy characterized by expansion of the mesangial matrix and variable periglomerular fibrosis (n = 10).
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PMID:Acromegaly in 14 cats. 240 66

Idiopathic hemochromatosis is a hereditary disease characterized by a progressive iron overload secondary to high intestinal iron absorption. After a latent period of many years, manifestations of liver cirrhosis, diabetes mellitus, cardiac failure, hypogonadism, skin hyperpigmentation and arthropathy can occur. Liver cirrhosis is the most common feature and it is complicated by hepatocellular carcinoma in 30% of cases. Tests of high sensibility are available for early diagnosis. Repeated phlebotomy can prevent clinical features in asymptomatic patients and can improve prognosis in symptomatic subjects. Current concepts in idiopathic hemochromatosis are reported in this review.
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PMID:[Idiopathic hemochromatosis]. 298 52

Hemochromatosis is a disease in which the inappropriate absorption of iron over 30-40 yr results in tissue iron overload and the development of cirrhosis of the liver, diabetes, hypogonadism, arthropathy, and skin pigmentation. We present an infant who died at 2 days of age, and who was found to have massive iron overload in the liver. This case is consistent with a rare condition that has been called neonatal hemochromatosis. This disease is discussed in the context of an overview of iron metabolism and adult hemochromatosis.
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PMID:Neonatal hemochromatosis: a case and review of the literature. 327 60

Acquired hemosiderosis resulting from massive iron deposits in various organs, including heart, liver, and pancreas, may lead to architectural and functional disturbances of these organs. Even though iron overload can occur in nonuremic as well as in uremic individuals, the dialysis patient is at particular risk for developing hemosiderosis. Many dialysis patients receive exogenous iron from either oral iron therapy or blood transfusions. In addition, these patients seem to be at high risk for retaining iron. A diagnosis of excess iron deposition should be considered if the patient has unexplained cardiomyopathy, hepatic cirrhosis, proximal myopathy, diabetes mellitus, arthropathy, or immune dysfunction such as listeriosis. Several techniques are available for determining iron overload. Diagnostic tests include measuring serum ferritin levels, staining bone marrow preparations for excess iron, measuring tissue hemosiderin concentrations, magnetic resonance imaging, and the deferoxamine (DFO; Desferal) "challenge test." The simplest treatment for iron overload in nonuremic patients is removal of iron by venesection. However, in patients in whom venesection is not feasible, the chelating agent DFO can effectively remove excess iron. In the dialysis patient, DFO therapy can be combined with either dialysis or hemoperfusion to remove the iron-DFO complex that would otherwise be removed by the kidney. DFO therapy in the nondialyzed individual has proven to be successful, but before treatment, the benefits of the treatment must be weighed against possible adverse side effects such as cataracts, changes in color vision, and anaphylaxis. In the dialysis patient, indications for iron removal are less clearly defined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Management of iron overload in dialysis patients. 329 89

Acromegaly is caused by GH-secreting pituitary adenomas and, in rare cases, by ectopic production of GRH with resultant hypersecretion of GH. Important systemic manifestations include acral enlargement, swelling, disfigurement, glucose intolerance and diabetes, hypertension, nerve entrapment, arthropathy, and cardiac disease. Tumor-related major manifestations are visual impairment, oculomotor paralysis, and hypopituitarism. Morbidity is substantial, and mortality is increased. Diagnosis should be made as early as possible by measuring plasma GH after an oral glucose load and plasma somatomedin C levels. Assessment of a pituitary lesion is best made by CT scanning in the coronal plane. Therapy is mandatory and consists of surgical removal of the pituitary adenoma (usually by the transsphenoidal route) or of the ectopic source of GRH (carcinoids or islet cell tumors). Adjunctive radiation and/or drug therapy is often necessary if complete surgical ablation of the adenoma is not possible. Radiation therapy can be administered as conventional supervoltage x-ray treatment or in the form of heavy particle beams. Drugs effective in partially lowering GH levels are bromocriptine and (not yet released) somatostatin analogues. Long-term follow-up of treated patients is important to guard against recurrence, progression, or development of hypopituitarism.
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PMID:Acromegaly. 331 99

Peripheral neuropathy plays an important part in the development of foot complications in patients with diabetes. We studied the contribution of impairment of the dual sensory and inflammatory function of unmyelinated nociceptive C fibers in the foot complications of diabetes. The integrity of these fibers was assessed objectively by measuring axon reflex vasodilation in response to stimulation with 10 percent acetylcholine introduced by electrophoresis. This was related to the non-neurogenic capacity of the vessels to dilate in response to a mechanical stroke. These measurements were made on the soles of the subjects' feet. The function of the nociceptive C fibers was abnormal in 1 of 14 patients with longstanding diabetes who had no foot complications, 3 of 9 patients with diabetes and skin sepsis, 8 of 11 patients with typical neuropathic plantar ulcers, and all of 8 patients with neuroarthropathy. In patients with longstanding diabetes but no foot complications, the mean ratio of neurogenic to non-neurogenic vasodilation was not significantly different from that in controls; however, it was significantly lower in the other three groups (P less than 0.01 for those with sepsis; P less than 0.001 for those with ulcer or arthropathy). Impairment of the neurogenic vasodilator response, or flare, correlated with the clinical diminution of pain sensation. This study suggests that the loss of both components of nociceptive C-fiber function--neurogenic inflammation and pain sensation--is an important factor in the development of foot complications in diabetes.
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PMID:Impaired neurogenic vascular response in patients with diabetes and neuropathic foot lesions. 336 88

Eighteen patients, twenty-five to fifty-two years old, who had juvenile-onset diabetes, had neuropathic arthropathy and fractures at the ankle or tarsus, most of which were bilateral. After a minimum follow-up of one year, four patients could not walk and fourteen were dependent on orthoses. In nine patients, the lesions produced fixed skeletal deformities that caused severe malum perforans, which in three patients was so severe that a below-the-knee amputation had to be done. In patients who had bilateral lesions, when the extremity that was initially involved was prevented from bearing weight, involvement of the contralateral limb became evident after an average of 4.5 months, compared with an average of twelve months in the patients who were allowed weight-bearing on the extremity that was initially involved. Our current treatment protocol is non-weight-bearing immobilization of the involved extremity, and we recommend prophylactic immobilization of the contralateral extremity with a protective cast or orthosis. All of the patients who had this treatment regimen could walk; in contrast, of the eleven patients who were not so treated, four could not walk.
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PMID:Fractures associated with neuropathic arthropathy in adults who have juvenile-onset diabetes. 341 4

A general overview of the literature concerning the development of diabetic neuropathic arthropathy is discussed. A case report is presented dealing with spontaneous fractures of the lesser metatarsal in a patient with an amputated hallux and peripheral neuropathy secondary to diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Spontaneous fractures of the lesser metatarsals secondary to an amputated hallux and peripheral neuropathy. 355 44

Idiopathic hemochromatosis in young adults has been increasingly recognized over the last three decades. Younger patients with hemochromatosis frequently have presenting problems other than diabetes, cirrhosis, and hyperpigmentation. A young woman with idiopathic hemochromatosis is described. Arthritis and secondary amenorrhea developed at age 20, and liver biopsy showed hemochromatosis at age 29. Further work-up revealed that the amenorrhea was due to underproduction of pituitary gonadotropins. The patient was treated with phlebotomy. Estrogen and progesterone replacement was begun because of severe osteoporosis. Serum iron studies may be useful in young patients with unexplained amenorrhea and/or arthropathy.
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PMID:Idiopathic hemochromatosis presenting as amenorrhea and arthritis. 357 42


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