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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Morbid obesity is a major health problem in this country and throughout the world. In addition to its social stigma (in the western world), obesity exacerbates several disease states such as
diabetes
, hypertension, cardiac disease and restrictive
lung disease
. When effective medical treatment of obesity becomes available, it will depend in part upon understanding the physiologic factors that control satiety. This review summarizes the information available on brain and gut control mechanisms of satiety. Brain nuclei located in the lateral hypothalamus, ventromedial hypothalamus, and other paraventricular areas are the sites of action for potent neuropeptides, such as cholecystokinin (CCK) and neuropeptide Y, that appear to regulate feeding. Exogenous CCK has been used clinically to decrease meal size in obese patients. The sites of the satiety cascade that are most often manipulated are the gastric and intestinal phases. Physiologic gastric distension is a potent inhibitor of feeding, whereas the intermeal interval may be regulated by intestinal signals released by food in the gut. Jejunal-ileal bypass has fallen from favor and has been replaced by gastric restrictive procedures that create a small proximal gastric pouch that empties into the small bowel (gastric bypass) or the distal stomach (gastroplasty). These operations rely partially on their ability to produce gastric distension in the proximal gastric pouch at an early stage during a meal. Thus, failure results if the pouch compensates by distending or if the stoma widens with subsequent loss of slow emptying. Improved medical and surgical treatment will be designed to intervene at specific sites of the satiety cascade as knowledge of the physiologic control mechanisms of satiety increases.
...
PMID:Physiologic approaches to the control of obesity. 229 39
We have discussed the relationship between systemic illness, infection, and
lung disease
. As we have seen, patients with a wide variety of disease states, including advanced age,
diabetes mellitus
, alcoholism, collagen vascular disease, cancer, heart failure, and organ transplantation are potentially at increased risk for pneumonia because of disease-related impairments in host defenses. In addition, two virtually ubiquitous conditions in hospitalized patients, malnutrition and therapeutic interventions (especially with common medications), frequently add to the risk of airway invasion by bacterial pathogens. Systemic illness not only makes lung infection more common, but may adversely affect outcome and resolution, as well as determine the clinical presentation of pneumonia. In one particular population, the intubated and mechanically ventilated patient, the risk of infection is particularly high, and nosocomial pneumonia is a major cause of mortality. To the extent that the host response itself leads to the symptoms and signs of infection, systemically ill individuals may have subtle clinical features when serious bacterial invasion is present. Many components of the host defense system can become abnormal with serious illness, but a common mechanism that ties many systemic diseases to pneumonia is an alteration in airway epithelial cell receptivity for bacteria, namely, bacterial adherence, a process that mediates airway colonization, the first pathogenetic step on the road to pneumonia. The impetus for understanding how serious illness promotes lung infection is that once these mechanisms are identified, potential preventative strategies to minimize infection risk in the individual with systemic disease may be developed. The relationship among systemic illness, the lung, and infection also exists in a different direction: infection of a systemic nature (the septic syndrome) can lead to disease in the lung (ARDS). We have described the features of the septic syndrome and identified how it may lead to lung injury, usually by indirect means, through activation of inflammatory mediators that are carried to the lung via the vasculature. Although it is frequently impossible to predict which specific patient with systemic sepsis will develop acute lung injury, the current state of knowledge does permit us to identify high-risk individuals. Surprisingly, clinical assessment rather than biochemical testing is the best predictor of the development of acute lung injury. Patients with severe injury, profound shock and multiple systemic insults are most prone to acute lung injury in the presence of systemic sepsis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Respiratory infections and acute lung injury in systemic illness. 268 63
We describe the first case report of community-acquired Acinetobacter pneumonia in Australia. Well recognised risk factors for this entity (alcoholism,
diabetes mellitus
and chronic
lung disease
) were present in our patient. His pneumonia ran a fulminant course, with death occurring within 24 hours of presentation to hospital. Whilst rare, this infection is being described with increasing frequency, particularly in developing countries including Papua New Guinea.
...
PMID:Community-acquired Acinetobacter pneumonia. 277 48
The authors estimated the sex- and age-adjusted prevalence of affective, substance use, and anxiety disorders in persons in a general population sample who identified themselves as having arthritis,
diabetes
, heart disease, high blood pressure, chronic
lung disease
, or no chronic medical conditions. Persons who reported ever having arthritis, heart disease, chronic
lung disease
, or high blood pressure had a significantly increased adjusted prevalence of each of the three groups of lifetime psychiatric disorders, relative to a no-chronic conditions comparison group (each p less than 0.05). Persons who ever had
diabetes
had an increased adjusted prevalence of lifetime affective and anxiety but not substance use disorder. Persons with current (i.e., active) arthritis, heart disease, or high blood pressure had a significantly increased adjusted prevalence of recent (6-month) anxiety disorder, whereas those with current chronic
lung disease
had an increased adjusted prevalence of recent affective and substance use but not anxiety disorder.
...
PMID:Affective, substance use, and anxiety disorders in persons with arthritis, diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, or chronic lung conditions. 279 44
The amounts of creatinine, protein, carbohydrate and sialic acid in the urine of 19 patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), 12 normal controls and 11 pathological controls with chronic
lung disease
have been determined. The mean creatinine excretion levels of the total CF group as well as the CF subgroups are significantly decreased when compared to normal controls but comparable to pathological controls. Mean urinary protein levels appear to be increased in patients with CF compared to normal controls and pathological controls but the increased levels resulted from factors (e.g., presence of
diabetes mellitus
) other than CF. No significant differences were found in amounts of total carbohydrate and sialic acid in urine and fractionated urinary preparations for the total group of nondiabetic patients with CF when compared to both normal and pathological controls. HPLC fractionation of low Mr (less than 10,000 Daltons) urinary preparations indicated the presence of an unknown peak in all of the antibiotic-treated CF patients, 43% of CF patients on low or no medication, 17% of the normal controls and 9% of the pathological controls. The present results illustrate the importance of including appropriate pathological controls and dividing patients with CF into subgroups according to clinical factors and types of therapy employed.
...
PMID:Analysis and HPLC fractionation of urine from patients with cystic fibrosis, chronic lung diseases and normal controls. 280 41
Diuretics and beta blockers are the mainstay in treating mild and moderate systemic hypertension, but there is controversy as to which should be used first. Recent evidence of an increase in sudden death and a greater number of intolerable side effects in the diuretic-treated groups in the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial in the U.S. and the Medical Research Council Trial in Great Britain has prompted some to suggest beta blockers as first-line therapy. However, beta blockers also have side effects, such as decreased ventricular function in patients with mild heart failure, increased airways resistance in those with chronic obstructive lung disease, increased plasma lipids, in particular low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and increased problems in patients with peripheral vascular disease and those with
diabetes
requiring insulin treatment. Many new beta-blocking drugs with different pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties allow the physician to choose the best one for each patient. beta-blocking drugs with long durations of action, high levels of bioavailability, beta 1 selectivity and intrinsic sympathomimetic activity appear most suitable for therapy. Cardioselectivity is suggested for patients with obstructive
lung disease
and peripheral vascular disease, and diabetic patients who take insulin. Long durations of action permit infrequent administration and recently agents with intrinsic sympathomimetic activity have been shown to have less effects on plasma lipid levels. Acebutolol also reduces ventricular arrhythmias, and may therefore be used to reduce sudden death in patients with coronary artery disease. The pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of beta-blocking drugs can indicate the most appropriate choice for hypertensive patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of beta-blocking drugs influencing choice in treatment of systemic hypertension. 288 49
The efficacy and tolerance of nicardipine were evaluated in 2184 ambulatory hypertensive patients with or without concomitant diseases in a 24-week Italian multicenter study. Of the total patient group 1083 had one or more concomitant diseases (
diabetes mellitus
, coronary heart disease, cardiac failure, mild renal failure, chronic cerebrovascular disease, obstructive
lung disease
, and peripheral vascular disease); of these patients, 419 were aged over 65 years. Patients were seen on an outpatient basis and after a 2- to 4-week washout period were admitted to the study. The initial nicardipine dose of 20 mg three times a day was titrated in subsequent weeks; thereafter a second antihypertensive drug was added if seated diastolic blood pressure was not reduced below 90 mm Hg. The nicardipine-based therapy significantly lowered seated blood pressure in the whole population (mean 185/102 to 152/86 mm Hg) without clinically and statistically significant differences between the patient subgroups with concomitant diseases. There were no changes in either symptoms, or biochemical and instrumental tests of the concomitant diseases. The incidence of side effects was low; in particular, there was no orthostatic hypotension. Nicardipine-based treatment is therefore effective, safe, and well tolerated in elderly hypertensive patients with concomitant disease.
...
PMID:The clinical performance of nicardipine in elderly hypertensive patients with concomitant diseases. 291 86
The first 100 consecutive patients undergoing isolated coronary artery bypass surgery in 1975 were evaluated with respect to the incidence of operative risk factors and outcome. When compared with an identically selected group from 1985, there was significant worsening of the preoperative condition over the decade with regard to mean age (p less than 0.0005), presence of congestive heart failure (p less than 0.05), left ventricular dysfunction (p less than 0.05), severity of coronary artery disease (p less than 0.001) and incidence of emergency operation (p less than 0.05). More patients in 1985 had associated medical diseases such as
diabetes
(p less than 0.01) and chronic
lung disease
(p less than 0.005). There was an increase in the occurrence of vascular diseases (hypertension, renal dysfunction, peripheral vascular and cerebrovascular disease) (p less than 0.05). Overall operative mortality increased from 1 to 8% (p less than 0.05) over the decade. Despite the deterioration in the clinical profile of the patient undergoing coronary bypass surgery, elective procedures were still performed with low mortality. The significant increase in overall mortality was chiefly in patients undergoing emergency operation (p less than 0.05). There were also increases in operative morbidity including low output syndrome (p less than 0.01) and respiratory (p less than 0.005) and neurologic (p = 0.06) complications.
...
PMID:The changing profile of the patient undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. 296 51
The authors studied data on psychiatric disorders and eight chronic medical conditions in a community sample of 2,554 persons. The sex- and age-adjusted prevalence of any psychiatric disorder in the preceding 6 months was 24.7% and of lifetime psychiatric disorder was 42.2% among persons with one or more medical conditions, compared to 17.5% and 33.0%, respectively, for persons with no medical condition. Persons with chronic medical conditions were more likely to have lifetime substance use disorders and recent affective and anxiety disorders. Arthritis, cancer,
lung disease
, neurological disorder, heart disease, and physical handicap were strongly associated with psychiatric disorders, but hypertension and
diabetes
were not.
...
PMID:Psychiatric disorder in a sample of the general population with and without chronic medical conditions. 296 99
A 38 year old woman with
diabetes mellitus
and bronchial asthma was admitted to hospital with pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae; she recovered promptly on erythromycin treatment. Six weeks later she presented with aortic valve endocarditis without concurrent
lung disease
. A concurrent increase in titres of antibody to Legionella bozemanii, L longbeachae, and L jordanis indicated a Legionella infection. Legionella infection should be considered, even in the absence of pneumonia, in cases of endocarditis where no other cause can be detected.
...
PMID:Aortic valve endocarditis associated with Legionella infection after Mycoplasma pneumonia. 311 81
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