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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The analysed clinico-biological manifestations, evolutive course and treatment of 30 patients with GCA are presented. The most frequent symptoms were fever and headache. 33% of patients had FOD criteria. 26% had various visual alterations. All patients were initially treated with steroids. Of the 26 patients followed up, 21 (81.7%) experienced some sort of complication: Cushing iatrogenic, osteoporosis, vertebrae collapse, aseptic necrosis of the femur head, arterial hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, hyperlipidemia, steroid
myopathy
. 6 patients were treated with cyclophosphamide, following severe complications secondary to steroid therapy, and all of them had a good clinical evolution.
...
PMID:[Giant-cell arteritis: the clinico-biological manifestations and the complications secondary to steroid treatment]. 191 67
Recording of cavernous electric activity was performed in 178 patients with erectile dysfunction and in 37 normal patients. In 34/37 normal patients, potentials of a uniform shape were recorded during flaccidity: At cut-off frequencies of 0.5-500 Hz, the length was 8-18 (mean 12.8, SD 2.8), the amplitude 250-750 (mean 444, SD 109) microV, and the polyphasity 8-22 (mean 13.8, SD 3.3). In impotent patients with upper motor neuron lesions or peripheral lesions, specific types of potentials were observed. In 11/14 impotent patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes
for over 20 years and clinical findings of cavernous
myopathy
, potentials showed low amplitude, irregular shape, and slow depolarizations. In 51% of the consecutive impotent patients, abnormal findings of cavernous electric activity were recorded. Our clinical study suggests that single potential analysis of cavernous electric activity (SPACE) may be useful in the diagnosis of cavernous autonomic neuropathy and cavernous smooth muscle
myopathy
.
...
PMID:Single potential analysis of cavernous electrical activity. 194 25
Effects of essential fatty acids on nerve conduction, hypoxic resistance, skeletal muscle contractile properties, and capillary density were examined in streptozocin-induced diabetic rats. Nondiabetic and diabetic controls and three diabetic groups treated with 10% supplements of corn oil, evening primrose oil (Efamol), or a mixture of 80% evening primrose oil and 20% fish oil (Efamol Marine) for 2 mo were used. Efamol and Efamol Marine increased plasma gamma-linolenic acid levels, but arachidonic acid was elevated only with Efamol.
Diabetes
resulted in 15-29% reductions in sciatic motor and sensory saphenous nerve conduction velocity. Efamol prevented conduction deficits more effectively than Efamol Marine, and corn oil had no effect. In vitro measurement of sciatic nerve hypoxic resistance revealed a 49% increase in the time taken for action potential amplitude to decline by 50% with
diabetes
. Corn oil had no significant effect. With Efamol, hypoxic resistance was within the nondiabetic range. Efamol Marine produced intermediate results. Functional improvements may relate to enhanced vasa nervorum perfusion, because endoneurial capillary density increased by 22% with Efamol, angiogenesis perhaps resulting from eicosanoid production from arachidonic acid. Soleus muscle contractions were prolonged by
diabetes
. This was partially corrected by treatment, Efamol being most effective. Extensor digitorum longus muscle had reduced tetanic tension with
diabetes
, and this was prevented by all treatments. Soleus showed a modest increase in capillarization with Efamol, which may have contributed to reduced susceptibility to fatigue. The data suggest involvement of abnormal fatty acid metabolism in the etiology of diabetic neuropathy and
myopathy
.
Diabetes
1991 May
PMID:Essential fatty acid diet supplementation. Effects on peripheral nerve and skeletal muscle function and capillarization in streptozocin-induced diabetic rats. 202 1
Acromegaly is often associated with neuromuscular disorders. Most of them are caused by compression of nerves with hypertrophic bone and soft tissues or complications of
diabetes mellitus
.
Myopathy
has rarely been reported in the Japanese literature. We report two cases with
myopathy
out of 14 cases of acromegaly. Case 1 is a 62-year-old woman who developed muscle weakness and atrophy in the shoulder girdle, pelvic girdle and femoral regions after a 10-year history of acromegaly. She showed positive Gowers' sign and normal DTRs. Basal growth hormone (GH) level in plasma was 1076 ng/ml. Electromyograms (EMG) obtained from the deltoid and rectus femoris muscles revealed typical myopathic abnormalities; an excess of small-amplitude, short-duration, polyphasic motor unit potentials. Histological examinations of the rectus femoris muscle showed diffuse atrophy of both type I and type II fibers. She also had bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and bilateral tarsal tunnel syndrome, which were confirmed by nerve conduction studies of median nerves and posterior tibial nerves. A cranial computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrated sellar mass with suprasellar extension. She underwent transsphenoidal adenomectomy and radiation therapy. GH level lowered to 29 ng/ml, however,
myopathy
remained unchanged for 3 years after the surgery. Case 2 is a 38-year-old woman who had undergone partial removal of a pituitary adenoma 9 years after the onset of acromegaly. Basal GH level in plasma before the surgery had been 1694 ng/ml and was still high after the surgery (100-505 ng/ml). The patient developed proximal muscle weakness and atrophy 4 years after the surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Myopathy in acromegaly. Report of two cases]. 228 72
The long-acting somatostatin analog (octreotide) was administered to a 37-yr-old woman with the ectopic ACTH syndrome. The patient had diffuse metastatic spread of a nonpituitary tumor, presumably of pancreatic origin, and severe and rapidly progressive hypercortisolism with extreme
myopathy
, hypokalemia, and
diabetes mellitus
. Plasma ACTH and lipotropin levels and 24-h urinary cortisol excretion were greatly elevated [218 pg/mL (48 pmol/L), 1340 pg/mL (220 pmol/L), and up to 830 micrograms/24 h (2290 nmol/day), respectively]. Urinary cortisol excretion decreased to normal within 3 days after the initiation of octreotide therapy (150, 300, and 600 micrograms/day), and plasma ACTH and lipotropin levels also decreased. Urinary cortisol excretion remained normal for 2 months during chronic octreotide therapy, and her general condition improved dramatically. The only side-effect was a slight increase in the number of bowel movements. Tumor progression, however, was not controlled, and she eventually died of hepatic insufficiency. These data indicate that octreotide can be a highly effective treatment for patients with the ectopic ACTH syndrome.
...
PMID:Suppression of ectopic adrenocorticotropin secretion by the long-acting somatostatin analog octreotide. 256 15
Five patients with childhood scleroderma, were studied from a total group of 50 cases with the disease, 39 of them with diffuse systemic sclerosis and 11 with the CREST syndrome. The average age for these five patients when the disease onset was 13 (the age ranged from 5.5 to 16 years) with an average follow-up of 3.6 years (ranging from 1 to 6.5 years). Of the five, four girls were classified as having diffuse systemic sclerosis and the remaining boy, as suffering from the CREST syndrome. We found no family history or personal and occupational antecendents related with the appearance of the illness. Also excluded were conditions associated with changes similar to scleroderma as are seen in cases of
diabetes mellitus
, phenylketonuria, toxic oil syndrome, or graft-host rejection reactions. The clinical manifestations seen at the start of the disease included the Raynaud phenomenon, subcutaneous edema and muscular-skeletal abnormalities as arthralgia and myalgia with objective data of inflammatory
myopathy
. Proximal scleroderma was seen in all five patients; three of them, in addition, developed rapidly progressive cutaneous changes, causing the loss of elasticity and cutaneous hardening of the face during the first year of the disease. In all of the cases, the skin biopsy showed histopathological changes compatible with the diagnosis already given. The most important changes seen in the organs of these children were oesophageal dysfunction and fibrosis of the lung. The X-rays of three of the patients showed them to suffer from intestinal malfunction. We found no kidney, liver or nervous system disorders.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Generalized sclerosis (scleroderma) in children]. 269 12
The authors compared pupil responsiveness to light, convergence, and the effects of topical cocaine 4%, epinephrine 1%, phenylephrine 1%, homatropine 10%, and pilocarpine 1% in a group of 62 diabetics with a sex- and age-matched group of normal subjects. The duration of disease, metabolic control, and type of
diabetes mellitus
, the presence and severity of diabetic retinopathy, and evidence of systemic vegetative neuropathy were considered. It was found that sympathetic denervation was related significantly to the duration of disease and to the development of systemic autonomic neuropathy. There were also signs of iris
myopathy
in the pupil alterations of long-standing diabetics, explaining the poor pupil responsiveness to mydriatics occasionally found in these patients. Pupillary autonomic diabetic neuropathy should be considered an early and major sign of the development of systemic vegetative diabetic disease.
...
PMID:Pupil responsiveness in diabetes mellitus. 272 17
Hepatic clearance and biliary excretion of model substrates for each of four carrier-mediated transport systems were studied in male Sprague-Dawley rats treated 28 days earlier with 45 mg/kg streptozotocin iv to induce uncontrolled insulin-deficient
diabetes
. Diabetic rats exhibited hyperglycemia (560 mg/dl), polyuria (160 ml/24 hr), polyphagia, polydipsia, and generalized
myopathy
. The plasma disappearance, biliary excretion, and elimination half-life of the anionic dye phenol red was unchanged in diabetic rats, but total clearance of phenol red was increased. Conjugation of phenol red with glucuronic acid appeared to be increased in diabetic rats, whereas acetylation of procainamide ethobromide was decreased. Plasma elimination and total clearance of cationic procainamide ethobromide, uncharged ouabain, and the bile acid taurocholate were significantly increased in diabetic animals. Biliary excretion of these three compounds was only slightly elevated in the first 15 min after administration and was decreased after 1 hr. Biliary and total systemic clearance were also increased from 2-3-fold for procainamide ethobromide, ouabain, and taurocholate. These changes in clearance are predominantly due to the 2-5-fold increase in steady state volume of distribution. Basal bile flow rates were increased by 62% after the induction of
diabetes
to 88 microliter/min/kg. Diabetic rats secreted higher levels of bile acids, cholesterol, and phospholipids into bile. These data indicate that long term insulin-dependent
diabetes
does alter hepatic excretory function.
...
PMID:Alterations in biliary excretory function by streptozotocin-induced diabetes. 288 74
A quantitative ultrastructural study has been made of the innervation of 461 arterioles in 114 skeletal muscle biopsies of patients with or without neuromuscular disease excluding
diabetes
and autonomic neuropathy. In 18 controls the number of nerves and Schwann cells around each vessel was related to the size of the vessel, whether the vessel was within a muscle fascicle or between muscle fascicles. The innervation of arterioles increased with increased diastolic blood pressure. There was no statistically significant change in innervation with increased systolic blood pressure or with age, from 4 to 85 years. In 96 cases of neuromuscular disease and especially in motor neurone disease, axonal varicosities in cross section tended to be larger, more often contained no vesicles or only a few and had altered satellite cell cover depending on the location of the arteriole. Whilst the numerical density of Schwann cells did not change with disease, fewer varicosities were identified within Schwann cells in motor neurone disease, metabolic
myopathy
and neuropathy and
myopathy
due to toxins or vascular disease. Preterminal axons in nerve fascicles adjacent to arterioles were lost in polymyositis and muscle disease due to toxins or vascular disease. In polymyositis, metabolic
myopathy
and motor neurone disease there was some evidence of compensatory nerve sprouting, either in the nerve fascicles or in the adventitia of the arterioles. These structural changes may be related to the changes in blood flow or vascular reactivity described by others in motor neurone disease, polymyositis and metabolic
myopathy
. It is concluded that the ultrastructure of the vascular innervation of human skeletal muscle is similar to that in other mammals and is changed more with increased diastolic blood pressure and neuromuscular disease than with age.
...
PMID:Vascular innervation in human skeletal muscle with and without neuromuscular disease. A quantitative ultrastructural study with references to the effects of age and different blood pressure. 318 43
Although diabetic neuropathy is well documented, diabetic
myopathy
is not, except for descriptions of diabetic patients with muscular weakness thought to be due to metabolic changes in the muscle. Muscle and nerve are dependent on each other for normal structure and function; since the peripheral nerve is damaged in
diabetes
, one would expect concomitant changes in the muscle. This study examines the cytoarchitecture of diabetic muscle. The extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles from 165-day-old C57BL/KsJ dbm mice were examined using electron microscopy. Morphological analysis of the diabetic EDL revealed that a significant number of the myofibers, examined within the midbelly region of the muscle, exhibited various degrees of degeneration, signs of denervation, and abnormal lipid stores. Both myoneural junctions and muscle spindles showed significant signs of degeneration, denervation, and abnormal structure. Thus the morphologic changes seen could account for the physiologic changes seen in diabetic muscle.
...
PMID:Cytoarchitecture of muscle in a genetic model of murine diabetes. 321 21
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