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

Diagnostic significance of a simple and rapid screening procedure for determining the relative amounts of pancreatic and salivary isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor was evaluated in 242 subjects (controls 84, acute pancreatitis nine, chronic pancreatitis 28, pancreatic cancer 14, peptic ulcer 25, liver cirrhosis 15, cholelithiasis 24, irritable colon syndrome 13, diabetes mellitus 13, mumps seven, and chronic renal failure 10). Electrophoretically separated isoamylases of saliva and pure pancreatic juice were all inhibited at similar degrees to the corresponding unfractionated amylases. Total amylase and pancreatic isoamylase were elevated in all nine patients with acute pancreatitis. Pancreatic isoamylase was decreased in 12 of 28 patients (43%) with chronic pancreatitis and increased in nine of 14 patients (64%) with pancreatic cancer. The mean pancreatic isoamylase activity in the patients with acute pancreatitis was significantly higher (p less than 0.01), while that of chronic pancreatitis was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) when compared with controls. The inhibition method offers simple, rapid, and specific analysis of serum isoamylase for the differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia in cases of emergency.
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PMID:Differential determination of serum isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor and its clinical application. 396 56

A total of 107 patients with chronic pancreatitis from the London area seen between 1968 and 1973 have been reviewed; they comprised 30 with calcific pancreatitis and 77 with chronic or chronic relapsing pancreatitis without calcification. The commonest clinical features were pain, diabetes, malabsorption, and peptic ulcer. Alcohol was a probable aetiology in nearly half the cases, a different finding from those of previous surveys and possibly associated with the increased consumption of alcohol in England in the last 20 years.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis in England: a changing picture? 482 Oct 40

A retrospective analysis was done of 106 patients who received radiation therapy for brain metastasis. Dexamethasone therapy was instituted in 97 patients. Peptic ulcer disease developed in 5 of 89 patients (5.6 percent) who received a dosage of at least 12 mg a day, but did not occur in patients who received a lower dose or in those who did not receive steroids. The interval between institution of dexamethasone therapy and the development of peptic ulcer disease ranged from three to nine weeks. Two patients had perforated ulcers, one of whom required surgical resection. Peptic ulcer disease contributed to the general deterioration and death of three of the five patients. Overall, in 14 of the 89 patients (15.7 percent) a complication of steroid therapy developed in the form of peptic ulcer disease, steroid myopathy or diabetes mellitus (or a combination of these).
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PMID:Peptic ulcer disease and other complications in patients receiving dexamethasone palliation for brain metastasis. 618 92

A postal survey among 2% of men in Leeds showed that the prevalence of urinary stone disease is 3.8%. The prevalence of upper urinary tract and spontaneously passed stones increases progressively from 0.7% in social class 5 to 5.0% in social class 1 but that of bladder stones (0.7% in the group as a whole) is independent of social class. There is an initial peak of upper urinary tract and spontaneously passed stones commencing at age 20 and having a projected prevalence at age 90 of 5.7% and a second peak of bladder stones, commencing about age 50, with a projected prevalence of 1.9%. The prevalence of stone disease increases according to the order: single less than divorced/separated less than married less than widowed men. A family history of stones tends to be higher amongst relatives of stone-formers than amongst the corresponding relatives of control subjects, the male/female ratio being 2:1. The occurrence of urinary stones is significantly associated with that of gallstones, high blood pressure, backache, arthritis and gout but not with that of peptic ulcer, diabetes, thyroid disease or bronchitis.
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PMID:Studies on the prevalence and epidemiology of urinary stone disease in men in Leeds. 622 82

The clinical features, diagnosis and surgical considerations in 41 patients with insulinoma treated at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center are presented along with a review of the literature. One hundred percent of patients surviving surgery for benign functional beta cell tumors were cured of hypoglycemia. A detailed long-term follow-up study in the majority of patients after surgical cure documented a statistically significant incidence of neuropsychiatric aberration, adult-onset diabetes mellitus and peptic ulcer disease. Patients who have undergone surgery for endogenous hyperinsulinism should be followed up carefully for the development of these disorders, and their overall prognosis should be considered cautiously.
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PMID:Insulinoma: diagnosis, surgical management and long-term follow-up. Review of 41 cases. 625 53

The pancreas was generally ignored in antiquity, both as an organ and as a seat of disease. The first description of the pancreas is attributed to Herophilus. It was in the 17th century that the main duct of the organ was described and its significance demonstrated. At that time, Brunner thought that the pancreas was not essential to digestion, and he failed to associate the pancreas with diabetes. Claude Bernard discovered the function of the pancreas in digestion. In 1922, Banting and Best obtained isletin and demonstrated the capacity of the substance to cause a dog to recover from diabetic coma. In 1889, Reginald Fitz firmly established pancreatitis as a disease entity. In 1927, the first case of hyperinsulinism due to a tumor of the islet cells was reported. Twenty-eight years later, Zollinger and Ellison described two patients with unusually severe peptic ulcer disease, both of whom had noninsulin-secreting tumors of the pancreatic islets. Subsequently, gastrin was isolated as the hormone responsible for this syndrome. In March 1940, Dr. O. Whipple performed the first recorded one-stage pancreaticoduodenectomy. Much progress has been made since then and today transplantation of isolated islets and portions of whole pancreas is a reality.
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PMID:History of the pancreas. 635 46

Forty five cases of chronic pancreatitis have been diagnosed between January 1966 to July 1983 in the Hospital A. Posadas. The diagnosis was confirmed by the presence of one or more of the following data: pancreatic calcifications positive in 35, abnormal secretin test 37, ultrasonography and computed tomography pathological findings 10. Surgical operations were carried out in 25 patients and biopsy taken in 5. Thirty nine (86.6%) were males, 6 (13.3%) females, the mean age in each group was 47.4 and 39.8 years. Chronic alcoholism was certain in 41 (91.9) patients, in the remainder 4 no other etiologic factors were found. The main clinical data were: Weight loss 38 (84.4%) diabetes 34 (75.5%) pain 33 (73.3% in 7 as acute pancreatitis) Steatorrhea 23 (51.1%) jaundice 16 (35.5%- 11 by extrahepatic biliary tree obstruction, 5 by hepatic cirrhosis) pseudocysts 12 (26.6%). The more common associated diseases were: hepatic cirrhosis 6, fatty liver 2 (17.7%) gastroduodenal ulcer 6 (13.3%) cancer 4 (8.8%--gastric 1, pancreatic 3). In order to study the frequency of the clinical data the patients were grouped according to the presence or absence of calcifications and the etiologic factor Symptoms and signs were matched and statistic analysis (coefficient association phi) was made. Only a moderate association between acute pancreatitis in no calcified group and diabetes in calcified group were found. The chronologic study of certains clinical data shows that acute pancreatitis, jaundice, pseudo-cyst and surgical operations were significative more frequent in the first five years while diabetes has little more frequency in the second five year period. Twenty six surgical operations were carried out in 25 patients; 20 (76.9%) due to complications, 6 (23.1%) secondary to pain (pancreatic resection 3, pancreatoyeyunostomy 2, exploration 1). Twenty three patients were lost to follow-up, 12 died and 10 are still alive. This last group was followed at regular period, 8 remained asymptomatic and 2 have intermittent abdominal pain related to alcoholic ingestion.
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PMID:[Chronic calcified pancreatitis. Our experience]. 639 6

We studied the factors related to delayed gastric emptying after operation for obstructing peptic ulcer disease. The records of 76 consecutive patients who underwent operation for obstructing peptic ulcer were examined retrospectively. Delayed gastric emptying (unable to tolerate solid food for at least 2 weeks after operation) occurred in 11 of 76 patients (14.5%). It was not related to the type of operation performed, including procedures that employed truncal vagotomy. It did not correlate with the preoperative severity of obstruction, duration of preoperative nasogastric decompression, or the nutritional status of the patient. Delayed emptying occurred in four of six patients (66.7%) with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus but only 10 of 70 patients (14%) without insulin-dependent diabetes (p less than 0.001). It was seen in six of 16 patients (37.5%) receiving long-term cimetidine therapy (more than 3 months) but only five of 60 patients (8.3%) not receiving long-term cimetidine therapy (p less than 0.01). Patients receiving long-term cimetidine therapy had an average number of 2.3 prior hospitalizations for ulcer disease while those not receiving long-term cimetidine therapy had an average of 1.4 prior admissions (p less than 0.01). Thus we advise against the long-term use of cimetidine in chronic peptic ulcer disease complicated by obstruction. Patients with diabetes mellitus who require insulin appear to be at particular risk for delayed gastric emptying after operation for obstructing peptic ulcer.
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PMID:Delayed gastric emptying after operation for obstructing peptic ulcer disease: the influence of cimetidine. 648 3

Fifteen patients with symptomatic cryoglobulinaemia were subjected to apheretic treatment when acute renal insufficiency, glomerulonephritis, severe generalized vasculitis and polyneuropathy unresponsive to conventional therapy or complications due to steroids, such as vertebral collapse, peptic ulcer and steroid diabetes, had appeared. Treatment was performed by discontinuous flow centrifugation or cascade filtration: when discontinuous flow centrifugation was employed, a mixture of saline, gelatin and fresh frozen plasma was used for replacement. Cytotoxic drugs were administered to patients with lymphoma (4 patients) or chronic active hepatitis (5 patients) and also to patients suffering from essential mixed cryoglobulinaemia. Exchanges were organized into courses of 3 to 5 sessions over 5 to 10 days and employed as a supportive measure. No patient underwent long-term treatment. A complete resolution of kidney damage, skin involvement and neurologic signs was observed when treatment was started early in the course of the disease, whereas unequivocal but moderate improvement was obtained in the case of long-lasting symptoms such as polyneuropathy. Relapses were seen in most patients when cytotoxic drugs had been discontinued abruptly. In 8 patients the solubility of cryoglobulins was studied by a recently developed turbidimetric assay. Following treatment the solubility increased; when solubility decreased, 2 patients of this group had a relapse. On the basis of these preliminary observations it appears that the possibility of predicting relapsing disease or the need of continuing therapy can eventually be achieved.
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PMID:Plasmapheresis and cytotoxic drugs for mixed cryoglobulinemia. 653 39

We retrospectively reviewed the clinical and laboratory data of 1154 patients with biopsy-proven CAH observed in 12 Italian referral liver units. The data obtained at the time of hospitalization were recorded and computerized. The data were analyzed for the presence or absence of HBsAg, sex, classes of age and three different degrees of the histological severity of CAH (mild, severe, with cirrhosis). HBsAg was present in 700 patients (61%). As compared with HBsAg negative patients HBsAg positive patients were younger, showed higher values of aminotransferases, were more frequent males and less frequently showed histological evidence of cirrhosis and associated diseases (diabetes, peptic ulcer and biliary stones). Patients younger than 15 years showed higher AST and lower gammaglobulins levels than patients in other age classes. Moreover, both in HBsAg positive and HBsAg negative CAH, patients with cirrhosis were older than patients without histological evidence of cirrhosis.
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PMID:Chronic active hepatitis in Italy: a multicentric study on clinical and laboratory data of 1154 cases. A report from the study group for CAH of the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver. 662 2


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