Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Surgery currently is the only curative option in the treatment of gastric cancer. For early gastric cancer, an endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) is adequate for intramucosal cancer less than 2 cm in diameter without ulcer. For early cancers ineligible for EMR, limited surgical operation (proximal gastrectomy, segmental resection, and pylorus-preserving distal gastrectomy) can be recommended to reduce surgical risk and achieve improvements in quality of life without decreasing survival. Subtotal/total gastrectomy plus D2 lymph node dissection is the standard surgery for advanced gastric cancer in Japan. Pancreas-preserving total gastrectomy is recommended due to the reduced risk of pancreatic fistula and postoperative diabetes. Regarding extended surgery, results of a phase III study to evaluate the role of paraaortic node dissection will be analyzed in a few years' time after the accrual of more than 500 patients in a Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG) study. For scirrhous gastric cancer, left upper abdominal exenteration appears to be associated with improved survival and should be tested in another controlled trial.
Gastric Cancer 2002
PMID:The role of surgery in the current treatment of gastric carcinoma. 1277 81

This study examines the association between education and mortality from specific causes of death based on mortality records for 1996 and 1997, and 1996 population census data from the Region of Madrid (Spain). Poisson regression models were used to estimate the percentage increase in mortality associated with 1 year less education. The percentage increases in mortality from stomach cancer, lung, bladder and liver cancers, for aids, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pneumonia and influenza, and chronic liver disease and cirrhosis were higher in men than in women, whereas the percentage increases in mortality from colon cancer, diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease and nephritis, nephrosis and nephrotic syndrome were higher in women. The results found for some causes of death--lung cancer, ischemic heart disease, diabetes mellitus and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease--reflect the variations by educational level in the prevalence of lifestyle-related risk factors in men and women. Various hypotheses have been suggested for other causes of death, but it is not known why the magnitude of the association between education and mortality from some causes of death differs between men and women. Future studies of this subject may provide some clues as to the underlying mechanisms of this association.
...
PMID:The size of educational differences in mortality from specific causes of death in men and women. 1288 84

Specific features of dilatation tracheostomy (DTS) were studied in 45 patients with hemorrhagic syndrome; 37 of them had thrombocytopenia; 6 patients had thrombocytopenia and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC); and 2 patients had congenital coagulopathy. Besides, there were patients, among the examined ones, with hemoblastosis (36), with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (1), with aplastic anemia (1), with HELLP-syndrome (1), with diabetes mellitus (1), with rheumatoid arthritis, with stomach cancer (2) and with hemophilia A (2). Commercial sets were made use of for DTS ("Portex"). DTS can be safely made provided the blood platelets' level is not below 40-50 x 10(9), and the time of bleeding is below 3 min; in hemophilia, the procedure is possible after the administration factor's preparations; and in DIC--after plasma transfusion and after ensuring the normal coagulation. Obturation of lumens of the trachea and bronchi with blood grumes is an often complication in DTS, which makes it necessary to make bronchoscopy immediately after DTS.
...
PMID:[Dilatation tracheostomy in patients with hemorrhagic syndrome]. 1291 1

The ABO blood group and ABH secretor status have been determined for 368 patients with a duodenal ulcer, 202 patients with a gastric ulcer, 83 patients with a stomal ulcer, 105 patients with gastric cancer, 102 patients with diabetes mellitus, and a control group of 610 subjects consisting of healthy persons and of patients with other conditions attending the same hospital. The results have been analysed in conjunction with those reported in two other large series. For duodenal ulcer the results show that the relative incidence among non-secretors compared with secretors is 1.80 to 1, with 95% confidence limits of 1.55 to 1 and 2.03 to 1. For gastric ulcer the relative incidence is 1.42 to 1, with 95% confidence limits of 1.16 to 1 and 1.74 to 1. Comparison of the results for the two types of peptic ulcer shows that they are significantly different from one another. For both types of ulcer, the estimated risk among non-secretors was similar for blood group O and for the other blood groups and the results suggest that the specific risks associated with blood group O and with non-secretion multiply one another. It is concluded that the mechanisms by which blood group O and non-secretion affect the risk of developing a gastric or duodenal ulcer are related to one another; but that they do not depend on the presence of the blood group substances in the secretions. The proportion of non-secretors among patients with a stomal ulcer (49%) was higher than among patients with a duodenal ulcer (37%) and the order of the relationship between non-secretion and the three types of peptic ulcer (stomal, duodenal, and gastric) was the same as that for blood group O. Other data suggest that there may be a slight increase in the risk of gastric cancer among non-secretors, but that the occurrence of diabetes mellitus is independent of ABH secretion.
...
PMID:Secretion of blood group substances in duodenal, gastric and stomal ulcer, gastric carcinoma, and diabetes mellitus. 1388 45

Epidemiologic evidence strongly suggests that improved standards of living are associated with an increased incidence of immune system-mediated disease. Allergy, autoimmunity, and within the focus of our laboratory, idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease, most notably Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, and progression of chronic gastritis to gastric cancer, are all mediated by proinflammatory immune responses induced by known or unknown antigens. A popular theory, known as the 'hygiene hypothesis' (1), suggests that improved health standards achieved through sanitation and vaccination, may in part be responsible for the apparent increase in immune system-mediated disease due to decreasing microbial and parasitic infections in humans, particularly in children. As antigenic exposure of children to infectious agents, especially parasites, has rapidly decreased, it is suspected that normally protective counter-regulatory Th2-type immune responses fail to develop, increasing the risk for aberrant pro-inflammatory responses in otherwise genetically pre-disposed individuals. This hypothesis has stimulated significant interest in development of animal models of Th1- and Th2-mediated disease to test this paradigm. This review illustrates some of the exciting evidence that Th1-mediated pathology in mouse models of helicobacter disease and diabetes is ameliorated by concurrent anti-inflammatory Th2 responses to parasite antigens and that initial application of these principles is benefiting human patients. The results from developing animal models of human disease not only support the hygiene hypothesis but also have led to novel therapies using parasite antigens to stimulate anti-inflammatory Th2-type responses to restore homeostasis in patients with aberrant Th1-type immune-mediated disease.
...
PMID:Th1-mediated pathology in mouse models of human disease is ameliorated by concurrent Th2 responses to parasite antigens. 1496 4

The olive tree has been one of the agriculture bases in Mediterranean countries with a great economic and social significance. The oil derivative from it fruit can be classified in different kinds according with their quality, being the highest exponent the so-called pure olive oil that contribute in unquestionable benefits for the maintenance of health, illness prevention as well as a better evolution when the illness is present. There are some studies that prove these benefits in pathologies like cancer specially breast and stomach cancer (colon, endometrium and ovary cancer too). Gastrointestinal pathology like peptic ulcer, cholelithiasis and gastric mobility. Rheumatoid arthritis decreasing it development risk and improving it evolution. Diabetes mellitus increasing insulin sensibility and decreasing blood pressure and atherogenic lipoprotein.
...
PMID:[Olive oil: influence and benefits on some pathologies]. 1504 96

We recently encountered a rare case where gastric cancer developed in the long-term postoperative stage after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) using the right gastroepiploic artery (RGEA) and distal partial gastrectomy was performed to treat the cancer. The patient was a 64-year-old man. In November 2001, he underwent three-vessel CABG, involving bypassing between the right coronary artery (RCA) and the RGEA, to treat an old myocardial infarction. In May 2003, he was admitted to our hospital because of exacerbation of diabetes mellitus and anemia. Gastric endoscopy revealed gastric cancer affecting the pylorus. Preoperative abdominal angiography showed the RGEA graft remained well patent. In June 2003, he underwent distal partial gastrectomy and regional lymph node dissection. Because the RGEA had been freed adequately to the point of bifurcation of the gastroduodenal artery during the previous CABG, the RGEA graft was preserved during distal partial gastrectomy. When the RGEA is used for CABG, it seems advisable to free the RGEA adequately to a point of bifurcation of the gastroduodenal artery. If done so, regional lymph node dissection around the RGEA is easier to perform when gastric cancer has occurred in these cases, eventually reducing the risk for injury of the graft. Following CABG with the RGEA, it seems essential to perform periodical checks for gastric cancer to facilitate early detection of gastric cancer. The necessity of close follow-up of these cases is endorsed by the fact that healing of gastric cancer by endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) is highly probable if the cancer is detected at early stages.
...
PMID:Gastric cancer occurred after coronary artery bypass grafting using the right gastroepiploic artery. 1545 80

A genome-wide linkage equilibrium mapping is an emerging strategy to identify risk-modifying genes for common diseases, despite unsettled controversies upon many aspects, including its premises, designs, marker choices and cost benefits. One large-scale attempt in Japan aims to identify disease-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for five diseases among the Japanese population: Alzheimer's disease, gastric cancer, diabetes, hypertension and asthma. Following an initial screening of c.a. 100,000 SNPs on 940 subjects (five diseases x 188 patients) to select about 2,000 SNPs, we compared which subsequent screening design is more appropriate, and an additional one or two screens to further narrow down any disease-associated SNPs within a fixed total volume of 15,040,000 typings (2,000 SNPs x five diseases x 1,504 subjects, comprising 752 cases and 752 controls). We employed a Monte Carlo simulation to evaluate the probability of identifying truly disease-associated SNPs. The results suggest the single additional stage design (i.e., total two-stage design including the initial screening of 100,000 SNPs) was more practicable for the simple reason that the gain in probability is considered insufficient relative to an associated increase in study complexity in the three-stage design.
...
PMID:Designing a multistage, SNP-based, genome screen for common diseases. 1563 86

The ranking and frequency of the different causes of death vary according to social categories. The largest disparities in mortality are observed, at first for causes linked to alcohol consumption; then for diabetes, respiratory diseases, lung cancer, cerebrovascular diseases, stomach cancer, suicide, accidents, myocardial infarction, intestine and pancreas cancer. For most of the causes of death, there is an increase in time trends in the level of the over-mortality of the group "manual workers-clerical" in comparison with the group "high level professional workers". European comparisons outlined that France and Finland have the more marked social differences in mortality. For France, this trend concerns all the causes of death apart from cardiovascular diseases and violent deaths. The role of excessive alcohol consumption is outlined as an explanation of this specific position of France.
...
PMID:[Socio-economic differences in mortality]. 1573 32

A 55-year-old man, who had diabetes from age 46 years old had been treated for a lung abscess in the right upper lobe at age 51. He underwent an operation for stomach cancer at age 52. When he was 55 years old, a cavity lesion appeared in his right upper lobe at the site of the treated lung abscess. Pulmonary aspergillosis was diagnosed by bronchial biopsy. In this case, we controlled his diabetes and used micafungin which has a mechanism unlike other conventional antifungal agents. The shadow decreased and examination of the resected specimen showed that the fungus had disappeard. Pulmonary aspergillosis is an important mycosis profunda and micafungin seems to be an effective antifungal agent against it.
...
PMID:[Sucessful treatment by micafungin of pulmonary aspergillosis occurring in an old lung abscess]. 1596 68


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>