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

Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), serum albumin concentrations, and arterial oxygenation (PaO2) were monitored during crystalloid loading in 10 patients with severe decompensated diabetic states (SDDS). Rapid infusion of crystalloid induced marked rises in PCWP (median 6 mmHg, range 1-21 mmHg) and falls in albumin concentrations (median 5 g/l, range 0.8-15 g/l) over the first few hours of treatment. PaO2 was significantly related (r(s) = -0.25, p less than 0.05) to the calculated hydrostatic forces across the pulmonary capillary bed. However, hypoxaemia was found at initiation of therapy in 2 patients where calculated COP greatly exceeded PCWP. Hypoxaemia developing during crystalloid loading for SDDS may imply the formation of sub-clinical pulmonary oedema and the subsequent fluid replacement regimen should then be appropriately reviewed.
Diabetes Res 1987 Feb
PMID:Changes in pulmonary venous pressure and albumin concentration during treatment of severe diabetic decompensation. 310 69

Achromobacter xylosoxidans is an uncommon nosocomial pathogen known to cause many serious infections. A 69-year-old woman with diabetes mellitus and chronic renal failure was admitted with pulmonary edema. The patient developed fever and pulmonary infiltrate with bilateral pleural effusions while she was on a respirator in the intensive care unit. Culture of sputum, pleural fluid and blood grew A. xylosoxidans. Bilateral chest tubes were inserted and the patient was treated for one month with piperacillin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. Gradual response, both clinically and radiologically, was noted after prolonged therapy. A review of the literature on infections due to A. xylosoxidans, the unique susceptibility pattern of the organism to various antibiotics and the use of combination therapy in Achromobacter infections are discussed.
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PMID:Infections due to Achromobacter xylosoxidans. Case report and review of the literature. 381 5

Beta-adrenergic agonists tocolysis is currently the most popular treatment modality in the United States. However, magnesium sulfate is receiving increasing attention as an alternating tocolytic agent in the presence of various clinical situations, such as the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes. While there is an abundance of information about the maternal and fetal side effects associated with beta-adrenergic tocolysis, little information is available about maternal adverse side effects of magnesium sulfate treatment for preterm labor. Side effects such as pulmonary edema, respiratory depression, hypocalcemia, and hypermagnesemia have been reported in patients receiving this agent for either tocolysis or pre-eclampsia, though their occurrence is quite rare. One of the infrequent complications of beta-adrenergic agonist tocolysis is the occurrence of a paralytic ileus, which to our knowledge has not yet been reported in association with magnesium sulfate tocolysis. This article therefore concerns the development of a paralytic ileus in a patient receiving parenteral magnesium sulfate for tocolysis. The clinical features are described and the possible mechanisms involved discussed.
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PMID:Maternal paralytic ileus as a complication of magnesium sulfate tocolysis. 383 78

A large retrospective autopsy study of patients was analyzed to evaluate the major etiologic and pathologic factors contributing to fatal acute pancreatitis (AP). From an autopsy population of 50,227 patients, 405 cases were identified where AP was defined as the official primary cause of death. AP was classified according to morphological and histological, but not biochemical, criteria. Patients with AP died significantly earlier than a control autopsy population of 38,259 patients. Sixty percent of the AP patients died within 7 days of admission. Pulmonary edema and congestion were significantly more prevalent in this group, as was the presence of hemorrhagic pancreatitis. In the remaining 40% of patients surviving longer than 7 days, infection was the major factor contributing to death. Major etiologic groups in AP were chronic alcoholism; postabdominal surgery; common duct stones; a small miscellaneous group including viral hepatitis, drug, and postpartum cases; and a large idiopathic group comprising patients with cholelithiasis, diabetes mellitus, and ischemia. The prevalence of established diabetes mellitus in the AP group was significantly higher than that observed in the autopsy control series, suggesting that this disease should be considered as an additional risk factor influencing survival in AP. Pulmonary complications, including pulmonary edema and congestion, appeared to be the most significant factor contributing to death and occurred even in those cases where the pancreatic damage appeared to be only moderate in extent. Emphasis placed on the early recognition and treatment of pulmonary edema in all cases of moderate and severe AP should contribute significantly to an increase in survival in this disease.
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PMID:Death due to acute pancreatitis. A retrospective analysis of 405 autopsy cases. 389

Despite having implemented rigorous glucose control for women with gestational diabetes early in the third trimester, we found excessive morbidity among the neonates of these women. To accurately assess the risk of newborn complications, we did a five-year review (1977 to 1981) of infants of class A diabetic mothers to determine the incidence and scope of morbidity in these infants. Fifty-one infants of class A mothers were identified (group 1) and randomly matched with 102 infants of nondiabetic mothers (group 2). The distribution of morbidity between the two groups was as follows: hypoglycemia 9/51 (18%) vs 0/102 (P less than .001); birth injuries 4/51 (8%) vs 1/102 (2%) (P less than .05); pulmonary edema 3/51 (6%) vs 0/102 (P less than .05); respiratory distress 4/51 (8%) vs 7/102 (7%) (NS); macrosomia 18/51 (35%) vs 23/102 (23%) (NS); and hyperbilirubinemia 3/51 (6%) vs 8/102 (8%) (NS). There were two fetal deaths and three infants with major congenital anomalies among the diabetic pregnancies compared to none from the nondiabetic pregnancies. Compared to insulin-dependent diabetes, class A diabetes is accompanied by relatively mild metabolic disturbances in the mother. On the other hand, the infant of a mother with class A diabetes appears to be at risk for serious and life-threatening complications, both before and after birth. These results raise the question of whether earlier identification, subsequent meticulous diabetic management, and altered timing of delivery might reduce the complications experienced by these infants.
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PMID:Continuing neonatal morbidity in infants of women with class A diabetes. 649 59

On eight separate occasions, four functionally anephric diabetic patients (on maintenance hemodialysis) experienced episodes of severe hyperglycemia with acute interstitial and alveolar pulmonary edema demonstrated clinically and by chest x-ray without electrocardiographic or enzymatic evidence of an acute myocardial lesion. Three patients had normal stress 201T1 scanning. The fourth patient, who experienced three such episodes, had normal coronary angiograms and only a mild elevation of the left-ventricular end-diastolic pressure. Clinical and chest x-ray improvement were immediate following insulin therapy and control of hyperglycemia, without phlebotomy or dialysis. Since these episodes were observed during a 1-yr period, this syndrome may be more common than suspected. It is concluded that in functionally anephric diabetic individuals: (1) pulmonary edema can be precipitated by uncontrolled diabetes; (2) endogenous fluid shifts may contribute to the cause of acute pulmonary edema; (3) clinical and radiologic improvement can be achieved with adequate insulin therapy; and (4) blood glucose levels should be monitored and controlled in diabetic patients with renal failure.
Diabetes Care
PMID:Reversible acute pulmonary edema due to uncontrolled hyperglycemia in diabetic individuals with renal failure. 676 26

The authors report a case of severe hypertriglyceridemia (148.5 mmol/l) in a 27-year-old woman admitted for coma of unknown origin. Initial investigations revealed ketoacidosis, pancreatitis and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema. The diabetes was unknown. Ketoacidosis was rapidly controlled. The hypertriglyceridemia was corrected by one course of plasma exchange (4,400 ml) during which the patient returned to consciousness. The patient recovered without any sequelae. Only 2 similar cases, treated by plasma exchange, have been reported in the literature until now.
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PMID:Treatment by plasma exchange of a patient with hyperlipidemia and diabetic ketoacidosis with lesional pulmonary edema and acute pancreatitis. 681 94

Non-cardiac pulmonary edema in a woman with long-lasting diabetes resulted in a distressing pulmonary fibrosis. It is suggested that pulmonary edema of non-cardiac origin might be more common in diabetes because of increased capillary permeability in this disease. Early recognition is important, and steroid treatment should be instituted to prevent development of pulmonary fibrosis.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome and diabetes. 708 Aug 68

Simple criteria were used to select a low-risk group of patients after acute myocardial infarction. The criteria depended on the presence or absence of diabetes, pulmonary oedema, serious rhythm disorders, and recurrent cardiac pain. Patients in the low-risk category with a suitable home environment were discharged from hospital after five to seven days (mean 6.2 days); they constituted 47% of the 267 hospital survivors over 18 months. Mortality in the selected patients was 2.4% at six weeks and 7% at one year. Most complications preventing early discharge were identified on the first day. Provisional selection for a short hospital stay was made after two days, and 76% of those judged suitable at 48 hours remained free of complications. Early selection of a low-risk category is justifiable and of practical value, though subsequent events will delay discharge for some patients. All patients who died in hospital or within two weeks after infarction had developed overt complications by the end of the fourth day. The results suggest that a policy of hospital discharge after four days would be justifiable for a low-risk group selected by the present criteria.
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PMID:Policy for early discharge after acute myocardial infarction. 738 61

The clinical course of myocardial infarction (MI) was compared between 154 known diabetic (Ds) and nondiabetic (NDs) MI patients matched for age, sex, and hospital ward. In both groups similar numbers of cases with cardiac rupture, shock, pulmonary edema, and clinically observed arrhythmias were found. In contrast, Ds patients had significantly more frequent A-V and intraventricular conduction disorders than NDs (P less than 0.02). Ds also died twice more often from MI (36%) than matched controls (18%). The excess case fatality rates from MI among Ds were limited to the period between the second and seventh day of hospitalization. The excessive fatality of Ds from MI resulted mainly from the high liability of insulin-dependent diabetic patients (IDDs), with the relative risk of over 4 in relation to NDs. Ds with arrhythmias and/or conduction disorders had a particularly poor prognosis for surviving, the relative risk exceeding 3. No ready explanation of this phenomenon is presently available.
Diabetes Care
PMID:Clinical course of myocardial infarction among diabetic patients. 746 Jul 22


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