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We describe the incidence and clinical features of patients with tuberculosis who had undergone gastric resection in our hospital. A total of 26 patients with tuberculosis who had undergone gastric resection were studied. The prevalence of gastrectomy among patients with tuberculosis was 8.0% (7/87) in 2000, 5.1% (4/78) in 2001, and 13.2% (10/76) in 2002. The average 3-year incidence was 9.1%. The patients' body mass indexes (BMIs) were below 18 kg/m2 in 9 of the 21 patients in whom it was possible to determine BMI and above 22 kg/m2 in only 2 of these 21 patients. Analysis of impaired glucose tolerance revealed oxyhyperglycemia or diabetes mellitus as one risk factor for the development of tuberculosis. Furthermore, poor nutrition among patients who have undergone gastrectomy may provide prognostic information for the development or reactivation of tuberculosis. In Japan, a fairly large percentage of elderly people have undergone gastrectomy for gastric cancer or gastric ulcer, and many have a past history of tuberculosis. Gastrectomy may be a risk factor for the reactivation of tuberculosis.
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PMID:Tuberculosis associated with gastrectomy. 1616 66

Although the clinical significance of gastric xanthelasmas is unclear, they are important lesions because they may be confused with malignant lesions. The etiopathogenesis is also unclear, but chronic gastritis, Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection, diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia have been implicated. Xanthelasma is more frequent in women and its incidence increases with age. The lesions are frequently located in the stomach, and less frequently in the esophagus, duodenum and the colon. The lesions have a yellowish-white appearance, are between 0.5 and 10 mm in size and can be single or multiple. Xanthelasmas were found to be associated with chronic gastritis, gastrointestinal anastomoses, intestinal metaplasia, and H. pylori infection. These lesions are predisposing conditions for gastric cancer. Therefore, endoscopic biopsy is mandatory and careful follow-up is required. In this paper, four patients who attended hospital with abdominal pain and dyspepsia and by chance were found to have xanthelasmas on endoscopic examination are presented, and gastric xanthelasmas are discussed.
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PMID:An uncommon lesion: gastric xanthelasma. 1624 31

The results of prospective studies of the association between dietary salt intake and gastric cancer occurrence remain controversial. To examine this issue in a cohort study of a general population, 2,476 subjects aged 40 years or older were stratified into 4 groups according to the amount of daily salt intake: namely, <10.0, 10.0-12.9, 13.0-15.9, and > or = 16.0 per day and were followed up prospectively for 14 years. During the follow-up period, 93 subjects developed gastric cancer. The age- and sex-adjusted incidence was significantly higher in the second to fourth groups than in the first group (age- and sex-adjusted hazard ratio [95% confidence interval], 2.42 [1.24-4.71] for the second group; 2.10 [1.03-4.30] for the third group; 2.98 [1.53-5.82] for the fourth group). This association remained substantially unchanged even after adjusting for other confounding factors such as age, sex, Helicobacter pylori infection, atrophic gastritis, medical history of peptic ulcer, family history of cancer, body mass index, diabetes, total cholesterol, physical activity, alcohol intake, smoking habit and other dietary factors. In the stratified analysis, a significant salt-cancer association was observed only in subjects who had both Helicobacter pylori infection and atrophic gastritis (age- and sex-adjusted hazard ratio, 2.87 [1.14-7.24]). Our findings suggest that high dietary salt intake is a significant risk factor for gastric cancer; moreover, this association was found to be strong in the presence of Helicobacter pylori infection with atrophic gastritis.
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PMID:A prospective study of dietary salt intake and gastric cancer incidence in a defined Japanese population: the Hisayama study. 1645 Mar 97

The study examined the association of diabetes mellitus (DM) history with total and common site-specific cancers using a large cohort of 23,378 men and 33,503 women, extracted from 127,477 healthy participants of the JACC Study who were aged 40-79 years and living in 24 municipalities in Japan. At enrollment during 1988-90, each subject completed a self-administered questionnaire including items for age, sex, body mass index (BMI), smoking, drinking, past history of DM and cancer. Adjusting for age, BMI, smoking, and drinking in the Cox's proportional hazard model, incidence rate ratios (IRR) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) were estimated for both sexes. During the follow-up period, total cancers and site-specific cancers were identified. A history of DM was reported by 7.5% of men and 4.6% of women. DM significantly increased the risk of liver cancer for both men (IRR=2.30; 95%CI=1.47-3.59) and women (IRR=2.70; 95%CI=1.20-6.05). Significant increased and reduced risk due to DM for men were also found for non-Hodgkin lymphoma (IRR=2.77; 95%CI=1.04-7.38) and stomach cancer (IRR=0.67; 95%CI=0.46-0.99) respectively. For females, a reduced risk of stomach cancer due to DM (IRR=0.49; 95%CI=0.23-1.04) was also revealed. Since a history of DM here demonstrated significant associations with some site-specific cancers, their relationships should be studied further in Japan for validation.
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PMID:Site-specific cancer risk due to diabetes mellitus history: evidence from the Japan Collaborative Cohort (JACC) Study. 1683 19

We report about a 27-year-old female with type I diabetes who was admitted with progressive fatigue and a sudden onset of icterus. As the underlying cause, we found pernicious anemia with hemolytic activity as part of polyglandular autoimmune syndrome (PAS) type II. Under vitamin B(12) substitution we saw a quick rise in hemoglobin and improvement of complaints. Type I diabetes is the most frequent component of PAS II, whereas pernicious anemia is a rather rare component; however, a latent form is seen in about 12% of patients with type I diabetes. Therapy for pernicious anemia consists of parenteral vitamin B(12) substitution. Because of an increased incidence of gastric cancer in chronic atrophic gastritis, endoscopic follow-ups of the chronic atrophic autoimmune gastritis seem to be recommended. Due to the diverse characteristic of PAS II, with development of additional components after years of latency, regular follow-up clinical examinations and lab work are mandatory to detect further need of hormone and vitamin replacement that may sometimes be substantial for survival.
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PMID:[Fatigue and icterus in a 27-year-old patient with diabetes mellitus type I]. 1696 70

Previous studies have lacked sufficient power to assess associations between early-life socioeconomic position and adult cause-specific mortality. The authors examined associations of parental social class at age 0-16 years with mortality among 1,824,064 Swedes born in 1944-1960. Females and males from manual compared with nonmanual childhood social classes were more likely to die from smoking-related cancers, stomach cancer, respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. Males from manual compared with nonmanual social classes were more likely to die from unintentional injury, homicide, and alcoholic cirrhosis. The association with stomach cancer was little affected by adjustment for parental later-life and own adult social class or education. For other outcomes, educational attainment resulted in greater attenuation of associations than did adjustment for adult social class. Early-life social class was not related to suicide or to melanoma, colon, breast, brain, or lymphatic cancers or to leukemia. With the exception of stomach cancer, caused by Helicobacter pylori infection acquired in childhood, poorer social class in early life was associated with diseases largely caused by behavioral risk factors such as smoking, physical inactivity, and an unhealthy diet. Educational attainment may be important in reducing the health inequalities associated with early-life disadvantage.
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PMID:Association of childhood socioeconomic position with cause-specific mortality in a prospective record linkage study of 1,839,384 individuals. 1698 23

We investigated the clinical features and measures for tuberculosis with diabetes mellitus, AIDS, gastrectomy, malignant tumor, or receiving anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha. In these days, tuberculosis patients with diabetes mellitus are increasing. Their tuberculosis is often found in advanced cases and the periods of symptomatics are short. In short, in tuberculosis with diabetes mellitus, the progress of tuberculosis is fast. Japanese patients of tuberculosis with AIDS are frequent in mid-life and increasing. Extra-pulmonary tuberculosis including disseminated tuberculosis is frequent with patients of AIDS. The prognosis of them is improved with the spread of HAART treatment. The most frequent occasion for gastrectomy is gastric cancer and the prognosis is good. Many of them are thin and malnutrition. The prognosis of tuberculosis with malignant tumor is bad, especially with lung cancer and malignant lymphoma. People receiving infliximab, an antitumor necrosis factor-alpha, are frequent to have onset of tuberculosis. Particularly, extra-pulmonary tuberculosis, including disseminated tuberculosis are often. Tuberculin reaction before receiving infliximab are weak. No one, receiving chemoprophylaxis, has onset of tuberculosis. When the rate of chemoprophylaxis increases, the number of tuberculosis patients decreases. Immunocompromised hosts need to be examined periodical or extraordinary when they had symptoms of tuberculosis to discover the onset of tuberculosis. To prevent the onset of tuberculosis, patients who previously infected tuberculosis should receive active chemoprophylaxis regardless of their age.
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PMID:[The clinical features for tuberculosis in compromised hosts]. 1709 86

The patient was an 80-year-old man whose complaint was coffee-grounds vomit. He was diagnosed with advanced gastric cancer, T2N1H0P0M0, stage II. Though the curative operation was explained to the patient, he declined it because of complications of advanced age, diabetes and bronchial asthma; chemotherapy was chosen instead. TS-1 (80 mg/day) was administered for 28 days, followed by 14 days rest as one course. A partial response was observed after the first course, and no cancer cells were confirmed by endoscopic biopsy after the fifth course. Moreover, after the 14th course, CT showed a complete regression of lymph node metastasis, and no cancer cells were confirmed by endoscopic biopsy, for a complete response (CR). From now on, as society grays more and more, it is considered that elderly advanced gastric cancer patients with complications will increase. TS-1 single treatment is considered to be safe and outpatient treatment possible as one of the useful cures.
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PMID:[Complete response in an elderly patient with advanced gastric cancer treated with TS-1]. 1735 36

The objective of this study was to assess the frequency and characteristics of false-positive results for tumor markers after curative gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Carcinoembryonic antigen and/or carbohydrate antigen 19-9 were periodically assessed for 168 patients who underwent curative gastrectomy. Cancer recurrence was observed for 17 (10.1%) patients and 151 (89.9%) were disease-free during the mean follow-up period of 23.1 months after the operation. The frequency of false-positive findings for tumor markers after gastrectomy was 14.3% (24/168) for all followed-up patients. Three different patterns of marker elevation were observed in the false-positive group. A false-positive finding for these markers was observed for patients with early-stage cancer and for those with chronic benign diseases, for example bronchitis, liver dysfunction, diabetes mellitus, and renal dysfunction. For most patients with false-positive findings for a marker a spontaneous decrease in the tumor marker was observed 1-2 months after the marker was first observed at a high level after the operation. Surgeons and oncologists should therefore keep in mind the high frequency of false-positive findings for tumor markers after curative gastrectomy for gastric cancer.
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PMID:False-positive findings for tumor markers after curative gastrectomy for gastric cancer. 1747 95

We report on two patients with gastric tumors (early cancer and adema) and diabetes mellitus who were treated with argon plasma coagulation (APC) therapy. Case 1. A 78-year-old woman visited the Nippon Medical School Musashi Kosugi Hospital because of epigastric pain. An early gastric cancer (IIc) in the anterior wall of the gastric antrum was diagnosed on the basis of the results of a gastric endoscopy examination. The patient had had diabetes mellitus for 18 years and had injected insulin (NovoRapid 30 Mix, 72 units/day) by herself everyday for 10 years. Case 2. A 61-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of a gastric tumor. A gastric adenoma in the anterior of the gastric antrum was diagnosed on the basis of the results of a gastric endoscopy examination. The patient had had diabetes mellitus for 12 years and had been taking oral medication for 2 years. Endoscopic APC was performed in both patients to remove the gastric tumors. These patients have been well for 28 months and 30 months, respectively, after undergoing APC treatment. APC therapy appears to be a safe and useful treatment for patients with diabetes and gastric mucosal lesions.
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PMID:Successful use of endoscopic argon plasma coagulation for patients with early gastric cancer and diabetes mellitus. 1762 75


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