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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diseases affecting host defense mechanisms include neutropenia, aplastic anemia,
leukemia
, lymphocytopenia (B- and T-lymphocyte abnormalities), deficiencies of complement, splenectomy,
diabetes mellitus
, renal failure, and autoimmune diseases. Immunocompromised patients face frequent life-threatening complications of infections, particularly when they are hospitalized and receiving cytotoxic myelosuppressive drugs. Oral antimicrobial agents affect the flora of the host's alimentary tract, enhancing colonization by resistant, potentially pathogenic, strains and species, especially in a hospital environment. Nalidixic acid, oxolinic acid, pipemidic acid, polymyxins, co-trimoxazole, polyene antibiotics, and framycetin, which preserve anaerobic colon flora, do not affect the host's colonization resistance and can be given in oral doses high enough to suppress and clear susceptible potential pathogens from the intestinal tract. Such prophylactic treatment permits patients to stay hospitalized in ward conditions. In the compromised host who has fever and suspected septicemia, a decision concerning treatment should be made within an hour of notification of the patient's condition. In acute stages of life-threatening infection, the principal aim of antimicrobial chemotherapy is to provide the most potent treatment; at this stage, the accompanying side effects are less important. An essential component of therapy should be an aminoglycoside paired with a beta-lactam antibiotic. Because the incidence of staphylococcal resistance to antibiotics is high, preliminary sensitivity-testing is essential when staphylococcal sepsis threatens the life of a compromised host. Despite aggressive antibiotic therapy, more than half of immunocompromised patients and patients with severe underlying diseases die when gram-negative bacteria invade their blood. In these patients, medical or surgical removal of the septic focus is a major part of management, but plasma or plasma fractions should be given to correct hypovolemia, and an agent such as dopamine should be administered if volume replacement fails to restore adequate blood pressure. A high dose of corticosteroids should have a beneficial effect, and, for neutropenic patients with gram-negative bacteremia or fever, transfusion with functional neutrophils improves survival.
...
PMID:Infections in immunocompromised patients. II. Established therapy and its limitations. 385 79
The histopathological findings of a study of temporal bones are reported. Each patient suffered from one of the following systemic vascular diseases:
leukemia
, hypertension, and
diabetes mellitus
. In each temporal bone, a differing strial pathology was observed: leukemic infiltration, dilatated strial vessels, and microaneurismata. Microvascular changes as seen in this study could make the human inner ear more vulnerable to inner ear traumata.
...
PMID:Three cases of vascular problems in the human stria vascularis. 386 54
A series of 24 consecutive patients presenting with a fundus picture characterized by a predominance of cotton-wool spots, or a single cotton-wool spot, is reported. Excluded were patients with known
diabetes mellitus
. Etiologic conditions found included previously undiagnosed
diabetes mellitus
in five patients, systemic hypertension in five patients, cardiac valvular disease in two patients, radiation retinopathy in two patients, and severe carotid artery obstruction in two patients. Dermatomyositis, systemic lupus erythematosus, polyarteritis nodosa,
leukemia
, AIDS, Purtscher's retinopathy, metastatic carcinoma, intravenous drug abuse, partial central retinal artery obstruction, and giant cell arteritis were each found in one patient. In only one patient did a systemic workup fail to reveal an underlying cause. The presence of even one cotton-wool spot in an otherwise normal fundus necessitates an investigation to ascertain systemic etiologic factors.
...
PMID:Cotton-wool spots. 386 24
A typical case of norwegian scabies is reported in a patient with
diabetes
and chronic lymphoid
leukaemia
under immunosuppressive therapy. Clinical differential diagnosis, diagnosis procedures, and frequent development of an epidemic of common scabies in contacts are emphasized.
...
PMID:[Norwegian scabies]. 390 May 99
Five hundred ninety-three nonstress tests were performed on 41 obstetric patients, at gestational ages ranging from 20 to 40 weeks. Diagnoses included 10 cases of prematurity, six cases of
diabetes mellitus
, five cases of collagen-vascular disease, five cases of poor obstetric history, three cases of cardiac arrhythmia, and one case each of asthma, polyhydramnios,
leukemia
, nonimmune fetal hydrops; and eight volunteers were without high-risk factors. All neonates had a 5-minute Apgar score greater than 8; 29 neonates weighed greater than or equal to 2500 gm, 12 weighed less than 2500 gm, and four weighed less than 1500 gm. One neonate died of prematurity, and one was small for gestational age. There were no congenital anomalies. There was a significant difference in the number of reactive nonstress tests and nonreactive nonstress tests between the 20- to 24-week, 24- to 28-week, 28- to 32-week, and 32- to 36-week gestational age groups. The increased incidence of nonreactive nonstress tests at earlier gestational ages may have clinical implications.
...
PMID:The relationship of the nonstress test to gestational age. 390 68
Kaposi's sarcoma (K.S.) is associated relatively frequently with
diabetes mellitus
and with a second often lymphoreticular neoplasia. On the basis of the three cases reported, which presented an association of
diabetes mellitus
, chronic lymphatic
leukaemia
, Hodgkin's lymphoma and K.S., the relationship between neoplastic diseases, immunological and lymphoproliferative disorders and virus infections is considered.
...
PMID:[Kaposi's sarcoma: on its frequent association with lymphoreticular neoplasms and diabetes mellitus]. 401 Oct 16
Workers in the corn wet-milling industry are exposed to grain dusts, pesticides and fumigants, acids, solvents, sulphur dioxide, and other chemicals used in the manufacture of starch, oil, syrup, and dextrins. In a preliminary investigation of the long-term health effects of occupational exposures in this industry, deaths among active and retired corn wet-milling workers were identified from records of a trade union. Underlying cause of death for workers who died between 1947 and 1981 was determined from death certificates. Cause-specific Proportionate Mortality Ratios (PMR's) were computed for white and black males using US males as a comparison with adjustments for age, race, and calendar year of death. There were deficits of deaths from respiratory and digestive diseases. Among whites, mortality from chronic nephritis, bladder cancer, and lymphatic and haematopoietic malignancies was elevated. There was an elevated frequency of deaths due to
diabetes
and a threefold excess of pancreatic cancer deaths among blacks. Crude work history information indicated a small cluster of pancreatic cancer deaths among whites and blacks who had worked in production processes that convert corn starch to syrup and dextrins. An elevated frequency of deaths from
leukaemia
was seen among white maintenance workers.
...
PMID:Proportionate mortality among male corn wet-milling workers. 405 10
Amikacin (AMK) by intravenous drip infusion was given to patients with infections in the field of internal medicine and the results were followings: AMK was administered to 19 patients. Diagnosis included sepsis or suspected sepsis (11 cases), pneumonia (2 cases), chronic respiratory tract infections (3 cases) and urinary tract infections (3 cases). Underlying disease included hematologic disease (13 cases), lung fibrosis (1 case), chronic respiratory insufficiency (1 case),
diabetes mellitus
(1 case), hepatic coma and bronchial asthma (1 case) and prostatic hypertrophy (1 case). Nineteen episodes responded to single therapy (2 cases) or combined therapy with other antibiotics (17 cases). AMK by intravenous drip infusion (dissolved in not less than 100 ml of saline or glucose) was administered at the dose of 200 mg/day to 600 mg/day divided into 2 or 3 times, over 1 hour to 2 hours. The mean duration of therapy was 10 days and the mean total dose was 4.3 g. Clinical effects: Excellent in 7 cases, good in 7 cases, fair in 3 cases and poor in 2 cases, and efficacy rate was 74%. Bacteriological effects: Disappeared in 3 cases, partly disappeared and unchanged in 3 cases, superinfection in 1 case and newly appeared in 1 case. Four strains out of 7 cases of which were detected the causative bacteria were disappeared. GM resistant bacteria (S. marcescens in 2 strains and C. diversus in 1 strain) were disappeared by the administration of AMK, also some clinical symptoms and signs were improved. No side effects and no abnormalities in laboratory findings were noted in any cases attributed to AMK. In conclusion, high efficacy rate was obtained without any side effects, intravenous drip infusion of AMK seemed to be useful for infections in patients with bleeding tendency (e.g.
leukemia
) or malignant disease.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of amikacin by intravenous drip infusion for infections in the field of internal medicine]. 407 2
Retinal changes resembling those of background diabetic or hypertensive retinopathy commonly occur in
leukemia
, whereas retinal neovascularization is rare. When neovascularization does occur, it is usually the result of hyperviscosity caused by a greatly increased number of circulating leukocytes. A 42-year-old woman with
diabetes mellitus
developed chronic myelocytic leukemia and peripheral retinal neovascularization. The hyperviscosity leading to the neovascularization was probably caused by an increased number of circulating platelets.
...
PMID:Platelet-induced retinal neovascularization in leukemia. 616 44
All 995 persons with Down's syndrome who died in the United States during 1976 and whose death certificates listed Down's syndrome as the underlying or a contributing cause of death were identified. This allowed the underlying causes of death of 793 affected persons to be analysed and compared to deaths in the whole US population for that year. Mortality ratios provided evidence that the excess risk of
leukemia
mortality continues into adulthood and that deaths from other hematopoietic malignancies also occur excessively among Down's syndrome adults. Congenital anomalies of all kinds in infancy and congenital defects of the heart in infancy and later were also excessive. Respiratory tract infections and pneumonia showed persistently high ratios.
Diabetes
was raised only at ages 24 to 34 years. Ischemic heart disease, non-hematopoietic cancers, accidents, suicides and violence were under-represented among the causes of death. Methodological limitations of proportional mortality analysis are discussed.
...
PMID:Leukemia and other cancers, anomalies and infections as causes of death in Down's syndrome in the United States during 1976. 621 2
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