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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sexual dysfunction is common in diabetes, with both male and female patients suffering problems with libido, arousal and orgasm. Erectile failure is particularly common and can be treated effectively by pharmacological and mechanical methods. However, psychological and relationship factors may still be important. A comprehensive diabetes care service should routinely offer treatment for sexual dysfunction.
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PMID:Management of sexual problems in diabetic patients. 792 4

The examination of 217 males suffering from diabetes mellitus revealed copulative dysfunction in 111 (51.1%) of them. The investigation of sex, gonadotropic hormones, testicular reserves, sexual constitution and sexual formula was carried out in 22-55-year-old males with sexual dysfunction and healthy controls. It was an erectile phase of the sexual cycle that suffered most frequently. Reduced libido was observed in 19% of the patients. All the diabetes examined showed constitutional predisposition to impaired potency. The patients had high serum concentrations of prolactin, lutropin and dihydroepiandrosterone in low testosterone and insignificantly elevated follitropin and estradiol. There was also low gonadal resistance to choriogonin stimulation. These findings and literature data lead to the conclusion that insulin insufficiency entailing hyperglycemia brings about a rise in prolactin and dihydroepiandrosterone levels which may reduce the sensitivity of the receptors and lutropin in the testes and inhibit testosterone secretion. This is confirmed by inactive gonadal response to stimulation of chorionic gonadotropin. Spermatogenic disorders observed in 25% of the patients were associated with sexual affections and local structural changes (hypotrophy) of the testes.
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PMID:[The pathogenesis of sexual disorders in men with diabetes mellitus]. 794 Nov 46

In 1991 the National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Advisory Board published a long-range plan entitled "Window on the 21st Century." In that plan the Board recommended that Congress establish a new National Institute of Kidney and Urologic Diseases (NIKUD). This recommendation stemmed from the Board's appreciation that patient morbidity and mortality from kidney and urologic diseases continue to increase and that a focused, well funded research endeavor is the only real hope for reversing this trend. In 1992 the Board established a special subcommittee to consider further the establishment of a National Institute of Kidney and Urologic Diseases. The subcommittee sought input from a wide variety of extramural and intramural sources. American Urological Association: A new devoted institute would provide coordination and expansion of basic research into kidney and urologic diseases now fragmented and underfunded within multiple institutes. The research areas of kidney and urologic diseases are not currently receiving adequate or appropriate attention proportionate to their prevalence and their adverse impact upon society. American Society of Nephrology: The Society supports the establishment of a separate kidney and urology institute. First and foremost, our primary interest is to obtain more support for kidney and urologic diseases. Such research does not receive the emphasis and prominence that it deserves at the National Institutes of Health. The Society believes that a separate institute would provide increased focus for these diseases. National Kidney Foundation: The creation of such an institute is the highest priority of the medical and lay constituencies of the Foundation. American Foundation for Urologic Disease: The creation of a new (kidney and urology) institute within the National Institutes of Health is by far the most expeditious way to centralize and advance the research efforts in this critical field. Scope of a New Kidney and Urologic Diseases Institute: NIKUD should develop an intramural and extramural research program that focuses on all aspects of kidney and urology diseases. NIKUD should be organized so that its activities address issues in pediatric and adult kidney and urologic diseases, including renal failure, transplantation, hypertension, diabetes, cancer, incontinence, sexual dysfunction and male reproduction. NIKUD must foster research training and career development. The integrated scientific programs of the new institute will enhance the treatment and cure of kidney and urologic diseases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Proposal to establish a National Institute of Kidney and Urologic Diseases. Report of the National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Advisory Board. 801 99

Three contributions of psychology to diabetes management are considered in some detail: (a) measurement of psychological outcomes and processes, (b) optimizing blood glucose monitoring and (c) stress management. Two further applications are introduced: (d) weight management and (e) psychological treatments for sexual dysfunction. Six further applications of psychology to diabetes care are mentioned. The psychosocial, physical health and economic gains expected to result from the contributions considered are specified.
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PMID:Contributions of psychology to diabetes management. 817 38

In China, an estimated 30 million men have undergone vasal voluntary sterilization, and about 11.97% of Chinese couples rely on vasectomy, according to a 1990 survey. The no-scalpel vasectomy (NSV) and the percutaneous chemical vas occlusion methods are major developments in vasectomy technique with an effectiveness rate of over 98% for both. In a study in Thailand, complication rates were 0.4/100 cases for NSV and 3.1 for the incisional approach. Since 1971, over 10 million Chinese men have undergone NSV. Vas ligation is the most popularly used method in China. It has provided 98% of effectiveness in a comprehensive survey involving 64,656 vasectomies in 8 provinces. As an alternative to vas ligation, electrocoagulation creates a firm scar that effectively occludes the ends of the vas. The contraceptive efficacy of electric cautery was reported at 99.62%-100% in 7439 vasectomies during a period of 10 years; azoospermia and complication rates were 0% and 0.53%, respectively, in 1088 vasectomies. The complication rate was less than 2%, including hematoma, infection, painful sperm granuloma, epididymitis, and sexual dysfunction, in a comprehensive survey involving 179,741 vasectomies in 8 provinces. 2 large cross-sectional epidemiologic studies done in Sichuan Province showed that men with vasectomies were not at greater risk of coronary heart disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes than men who had not undergone the procedure. Recently, 2 epidemiological studies conducted in the US suggested that vasectomy may be associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer. The risk of developing prostate cancer by the age of 80 is about 1 in 500 in Shanghai. Whereas approximately 1 of 11 men in the US will develop prostate cancer. It is possible that the disease goes undiagnosed, but a combination of diet and hormonal factors related to race may help explain some of the variation.
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PMID:Vasal sterilization in China. 822 55

Sexual desire can be influenced in elderly men by a number of factors such as hormonal abnormalities, socio-cultural conditions, chronic diseases, drugs. Testosterone decrease per se is not sufficient to impair sexual function in the elderly; social and psychological factors are probably of relevance as it can be observed in people living in nursing homes. Diabetes may have a major impact on sexual desire. Drugs usually associated with impairment of libido (psychotropic drugs, anti-hypertensives) are frequently used by elderly people; alcohol is a leading cause of sexual dysfunction, particularly in unfavourable social conditions.
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PMID:[Libido-related changes in the elderly]. 825 75

Diabetes mellitus, a major health problem afflicting 500,000 Americans each year, is a leading cause of male erectile difficulties. Diabetic women may be susceptible to a similar diabetic pathogenesis for sexual problems but information about the effect of diabetes on female sexual response is sparse and conflicting. Past research has been based upon self-report measures, a methodology flawed by susceptibility to response bias. Whether diabetic women differed from a matched nondiabetic control group in their physiological as well as subjective response to erotic stimulus exposures was investigated. Vaginal photoplethysmographic measures of capillary engorgement were taken while subjects individually viewed counterbalanced erotic and non-erotic videotape presentations. Graphically and statistically analyzed results indicated that diabetic women demonstrated significantly less physiological arousal to erotic stimuli than controls, whereas their subjective responses were comparable. These objective, physiological findings support and extend previous subjectively based research which found potential diabetes-related sexual dysfunction in female diabetics. The groups did not differ, however, in the reported occurrence of sexual difficulties.
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PMID:Sexual arousal in diabetic females: physiological and self-report measures. 828 46

Hypertension and diabetes mellitus are interrelated diseases that, if untreated, strongly predispose to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and renal disease. More than 3 million Americans have both hypertension and diabetes, which are particularly prevalent in the socioeconomically disadvantaged. Hypertension contributes substantially to morbidity and mortality in people with diabetes. This report is an update of the 1987 working group report on hypertension and diabetes and includes important new information on the management of hypertension in people with diabetes. Although treatment of hypertension in most people with diabetes does not differ from that in people who do not have diabetes, this report outlines some special considerations relevant to the presence of both diseases. Lifestyle modification is considered as an initial treatment modality or as an adjunct to pharmacologic measures. This report also includes a discussion of the treatment of hypertension and diabetes in children, an expanded review of sexual dysfunction, and an increased emphasis on the effect of hypertension and diabetes on target organs. A treatment algorithm represents a practical guideline for the physician. Since the previous report, there has been an increased awareness, through clinical trials and pharmacologic research, of the importance of flexibility in the use of antihypertensive drugs as well as a refinement of nonpharmacologic approaches in treating people with both hypertension and diabetes.
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PMID:National High Blood Pressure Education Program Working Group report on hypertension in diabetes. 830 22

Health educators are ideally placed to identify sexual problems and provide sex education for women with diabetes. Important pre-requisites are for the educator to have an understanding of the human sexual response; knowledge of the evidence for sexual dysfunction in diabetic women and to be comfortable with their own sexuality. This paper aims to discuss aspects of female sexuality; the effects of diabetes on female sexuality and sexual responsiveness. The evidence for and possible causes of, sexual dysfunction in diabetic females as documented in the literature are explored and strategies for identifying sexual problems outlined.
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PMID:Sexuality and women with diabetes. 833 4

Physicians need to weigh the efficacy, adverse effects and cost of first-line antihypertensive agents. Calcium channel blockers lower blood pressure, improve coronary blood flow and depress cardiac contractility by relaxing smooth muscle and cardiac muscle. They have beneficial or neutral effects in hypertensive patients with angina, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, postural hypotension, peripheral vascular disease, depression, sexual dysfunction, diabetes and hyperlipidemia. The major adverse effect of some calcium channel blockers is that they may worsen congestive heart failure in some patients. Because calcium channel blockers are metabolized in the liver, the dosage must be lowered in the elderly and in patients with hepatic disease. Diltiazem, verapamil and nifedipine represent prototypes of the three classes of calcium channel blockers, each with slightly different effects.
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PMID:Calcium channel blockers in the treatment of hypertension. 836 95


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