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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty patients with
alcoholic cirrhosis
, ascitic during 13.6 +/- 13 months (mean +/- S.D.) were cured of ascites and followed up during 2 to 9 years (4.3 +/- 2.7 years). Twenty six were compared with a same number of cirrhotics, matched for age and sex, who died during the year after the first admission. Many biological data show statistical difference. Nevertheless no valuable prognosis can be predicted in an individual case. The clinical improvement is associated with major, sometimes total biological recovery. Other complications of cirrhosis (gastro-intestinal bleeding, hepatoma) may occur (7 cases with 5 deaths) or alcoholic hepatitis if alcohol withdrawal is stopped (3 cases, 2 deaths). Some associated diseases look unexpectedly frequent:
diabetes
(4 cases), obesity (9), nodular lipomatosis (14 cases) whose frequency looks higher than that can be calculated for a similar group of healthy subjects.
...
PMID:[Recovery after treatment for cirrhotic ascites : a study of 90 cases. Frequency of arterial hypertension (author's transl)]. 49 44
Inflammatory disorders of the salivary glands cause marked abnormalities in secretion of immunoglobulins. The changes are reversible, however, in a relatively short period of time. More subtle changes in immunoglobulin transport are present in such diseases as Sjogren's syndrome and
diabetes
. No changes are discernable in
alcoholic cirrhosis
. Apparently salivary gland basement membranes are much more resistant to derangement than plasma membranes and the secretory IgA system can continue to operate in the face of numerous affronts. If nothing else these findings suggest that vaccination procedures in the region of the salivary glands may produce an inflammatory response, but it would be readily reversible. In addition, one could anticipate a functioning s-IgA system even in salivary glands with alterations in electrolyte transport. It is difficult to anticipate the situation in immunologically compromised patients, such as those on hemodialysis. Fortunately these patients represent a small population and for them at least, caries is a relatively minor concern.
...
PMID:Salivary immunoglobulins in diseases affecting salivary glands. 74 16
Actinic granuloma is a rare condition. Its acceptance as a defined disease has been queried several times. The authors observed a classic case in a patient with
alcoholic cirrhosis
of the liver and
diabetes
. The possible role of metabolic disturbances in the pathogenesis of this syndrome is reviewed.
...
PMID:Actinic granuloma in alcoholic liver disease. 162 9
The relative importance and behaviour of plasma and platelet plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) in disease has not hitherto been examined. In this study the concentration of PAI-1 in the plasma and platelets of patients with a variety of disorders was examined using a specific ELISA and a functional assay. Mean plasma PAI-1 was elevated in groups of patients with
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension,
alcoholic cirrhosis
, angina and myocardial infarction. Plasma PAI-1 was raised in the post-operative phase and the PAI-1 released after surgery was not derived from platelets. In all groups PAI-1 in the platelet pool reflected the platelet count, except in type II diabetes mellitus and chronic renal failure, where a reduced quantity of PAI-1 antigen per platelet was found. In severe chronic renal failure, abnormal platelets and diminished platelet PAI-1 may contribute to the haemorrhagic tendency sometimes seen in this disorder. Plasma PAI-1 represents a larger proportion of total circulating PAI-1 in disease than it does in healthy individuals; PAI-1 per platelet is abnormal only in a minority of disorders. Plasma and platelet pools of PAI-1 vary independently in disease and both merit consideration in evaluating the importance, if any, of PAI-1 in thrombosis or haemorrhage.
...
PMID:The platelet and plasma pools of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) vary independently in disease. 220 5
As part of an ongoing epidemiologic study, the death rate and causes of death during 1975 through 1984 were determined in Pima Indians who resided in the Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) in 1965 and later. Death certificates were available for 677 of the 681 deaths. In 78% of the deaths, the underlying cause recorded on the death certificate agreed with the cause determined after review of all available relevant records. The age- and sex-adjusted average annual death rate for the GRIC population (1639/100,000) was 1.9 times (95% CI 1.7-2.0) the 1980 rate for the U.S. all races (878/100,000). In Pima males, whose death rate was substantially higher than that of Pima females, the age-adjusted death rate was 2.3 times that in U.S. males, all races. Moreover among males 25-34 years of age, the Pima death rate was 6.6 times that for the U.S. all races. Diseases of the heart and malignant neoplasms caused 59% of U.S. deaths in 1980, but only 19% of GRIC deaths. By contrast, the age- and sex-adjusted mortality rate in the GRIC Pima was 5.9 times the rate of the U.S. all races for accidents, 6.5 times for cirrhosis, 7.4 times for homicide, 4.3 times for suicide, and 11.9 times for
diabetes
. Tuberculosis and coccidioidomycosis were important causes of death in the Pima, for whom infectious diseases was the tenth leading cause of death. The findings indicate that programs to improve the adverse mortality experience of the GRIC population should emphasize factors related to fatal accidents,
alcoholic cirrhosis
, homicide, suicide,
diabetes mellitus
, and infectious diseases. Young Pimas, especially the males, should be the primary focus of such preventive efforts. These findings and recommendations probably apply to many Native American populations.
...
PMID:Adverse mortality experience of a southwestern American Indian community: overall death rates and underlying causes of death in Pima Indians. 224 58
The purpose of the study was to evaluate some of the hormones in 20 patients with
alcoholic cirrhosis
. We investigated the diurnal rhythmicity of some of the hormones (cortisol, follicle-stimulating hormone-FSH, luteinizing hormone-LH, growth hormone-LH, prolactin-PRL) and basal serum concentrations of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxine (T4) and testosterone, as well as gastrin and insulin, using provocative tests. Statistical analysis of the results obtained from the observed patients compared with controls, showed significantly lower concentrations of T3 (p less than 0.05), cortisol (p less than 0.05), testosterone (p less than 0.05) and FSH (p less than 0.05), and significantly higher (p less than 0.01) serum concentration of prolactin. Then, in the cirrhotic group the serum concentrations of gastrin and insulin increased significantly (p less than 0.01), together with the disorders of carbohydrate metabolism (impaired glucose tolerance and
diabetes mellitus
. The described disturbances of some of the observed hormones are complex, particularly in their relationship by which the clinical picture of the cirrhotic patients can be explained.
...
PMID:[Hormone levels in patients with alcoholic liver cirrhosis]. 249 Sep 94
The purpose of this study was to ascertain the influence of acute pancreatitis upon the course of chronic pancreatitis, its complications, the need for surgical treatment, and mortality, in alcoholic men. The studied population was composed of 222 men; 110 had never had acute pancreatitis and 112 had presented at least once with acute pancreatitis. The cumulative probability to have a first bout of acute pancreatitis was 41.5 percent, 2 years after the onset of chronic pancreatitis. There was no difference in follow-up but clinical onset of chronic pancreatitis was earlier in the "acute pancreatitis" group. There was no difference in the prevalence of biliary strictures, non-alcoholic hepatic disease or need for surgery. On the contrary,
diabetes mellitus
, alcoholic hepatic disease were less frequent and pseudocysts were more frequent in the "acute pancreatitis" group. We observed 56 deaths. The comparison of mortality and cumulative survival rates showed a lower mortality in the "acute pancreatitis" group (p less than 0.02 and 0.05, respectively). The main causes of death were alcohol-related hepatic disease, postoperative mortality, and carcinoma
Alcoholic cirrhosis
was more frequent in patients who died in the "no acute pancreatitis" group. We conclude that: a) acute pancreatitis is an early complication of chronic pancreatitis in one case out of two; b) clinical onset of chronic pancreatitis occurs earlier in patients who presented with acute pancreatitis; c) need for surgery is not different; d) alcoholic hepatic disease is more frequent in the "no acute pancreatitis" group; e) mortality is lower in the "acute pancreatitis" group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Influence of bouts of acute pancreatitis on the course of chronic alcoholic pancreatitis in man]. 262 83
Gastric bezoars were observed after esophageal variceal injection of polidocanol in 5 of 56 patients with
alcoholic cirrhosis
treated by endoscopic sclerosis. We suggest that endoscopic sclerotherapy could have induced a transient vagal injury resulting in delayed gastric emptying and subsequent bezoar formation. Although the volume of sclerosant (25-35 ml per session) and the length of the injector needle (4 mm) were the same in all patients, two reasons could explain the occurrence of bezoars in these five patients: a deeper injection of sclerosant, and a worsening of a preexistent vagal neuropathy due to
diabetes mellitus
and/or alcoholism.
...
PMID:Gastric bezoar: another side effect of endoscopic variceal sclerotherapy. 279 85
In view of the increasing incidence of primary hepatocellular carcinoma in western Europe and concern that this may in part be related to long-term use of drugs which cause hepatic microsomal enzyme induction, we undertook a comparison of long-term drug use in 105 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and equal numbers of age and sex-matched patients with colorectal tumours and with fractures of femur. We found no patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who were long-term anticonvulsant users and only one who used oral contraceptives. However, we observed a four-fold excess of diabetic patients among the group with hepatocellular carcinoma. This association did not appear to be due to pre-existing haemochromatosis,
alcoholic cirrhosis
or viral hepatitis. The association was strongest in patients receiving drug treatment for
diabetes
, but the data, although suggestive, were insufficient to determine whether any specific anti-diabetic agent could be responsible. Further studies are required to elucidate the nature of this unexpected association. An association of this magnitude with
diabetes mellitus
could account at least in part for the increasing incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma in western Europe.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus and primary hepatocellular carcinoma. 281 32
A patient with
alcoholic liver cirrhosis
,
diabetes mellitus
and porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) is described, who subsequently died of hepatocellular carcinoma. The literature relating PCT to the incidence of primary hepatoma is reviewed, and the mechanisms underlying this possible association are discussed.
...
PMID:Is porphyria cutanea tarda a risk factor in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma? A case report and review of the literature. 298 17
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