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)

A 47-year-old patient with panlobular emphysema and insulin-dependent diabetes had an alpha-1-antitrypsin phenotype Pi ZZ deficiency. Liver function tests were abnormal, and postmortem examination of the liver demonstrated abnormal intrahepatocytic globules of A1AT (a typical finding when the allele Z is present), but also fibrosis with steatosis. The patient's sister, Pi ZZ, had neither diabetes nor bronchopneumopathy, and no anomalies in liver function. Needle puncture biopsy of the liver had not been conducted. The phenotype Pi ZZ is typically associated with panlobular emphysema in adults, and cholestatic hepatitis in children. From reports in the published literature, it appears that isolated hepatic lesions or those associated with emphysema are rare. The fortuitous association of diabetes and hepatic lesions in this typical case of pulmonary affection in an adult is discussed.
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PMID:[Pulmonary emphysema, hepatic lesions, and insulin-dependent diabetes in a patient with alpha-1-antitrypsin (Pi ZZ) deficiency (author's transl)]. 697 May 36

The surgery of the gall bladder by gallstones, bile duct and alterations of the duodenal papilla are conducted with an increase of lethality. This increased lethality is caused by accompanying ill effects, especially chronical pancreatitis, cholangitis, disturbances of the liver. The indications to operate old patients are occlusions of duodenal papilla relapsing colics with or less occlusing icterus, emphysema of gall bladder or perforation. A careful narcosis is necessary by disease of circulation, diabetes, bronchitis and emphysema of the lung. Simple cholestectomies in old patients have a mortality of 0-1%. Interventions on bile ducts, transduodenal papillotomia, choledochoduodenotomy have an mortality of 4-8%. The intraoperative cholangiography is always necessary. Operations on bile duct are finished by inserting a T-drain. The distal portion of the T-drain are not emissed through the duodenal papilla, because a pancreatitis can be released. The principal postoperative complication is the pancreatitis, consumption coagulopathy, bronchopneumonia, cholangitis with intermitting fever and injuries of the liver parenchym. The persisting pancreatitis can be treated with infusions.
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PMID:[Surgical interventions on the gallbladder and the biliary tract in the aged]. 712 73

Morphological examinations in the lungs in patients with diabetes mellitus of different degrees of severity and duration (28 autopsy observations) were carried out. Diabetic microangiopathy in the lungs was found to involve the capillaries of alveolar septa and arterioles as well as pleural arterioles, and is manifested by plasmorrhagia, insudation, thickening of basal membranes and hyalinosis of the vessels. Moreover, intraseptal nodules, granulomas in small artery walls, focal proteinosis develop in the lungs followed by sclerosis of the microcirculatory bed vessels and centrilobular emphysema. All these comprise a favourable background for the development of pneumonias which, along with pulmonary-cardiac insufficiency are one of the most frequent causes of death of patients with diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:[Changes in the lungs in diabetes mellitus]. 712 37

As of April 30, 1980, 83 nosocomial cases of sporadic legionellosis had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). In all 83 cases the patients had pneumonia; the median age of the patients was 56.5 years. All but one patient were hospitalized at the time of onset. Of 71 patients for whom the outcome is known, 22 (31 percent) died of causes directly attributed to their infection. Eleven patients had end-stage renal disease, 28 were receiving systemic immunosuppressive medications, 17 had cancer, 12 had chronic bronchitis or emphysema, 29 were smokers, and four had diabetes mellitus. Risks of acquiring nosocomial sporadic legionellosis for patients with these conditions relative to the general United States population = 340, 26, 11, 3.7, 1.9 and 1.3, respectively. These risk factors are similar to those identified for sporadic community-acquired legionellosis and for epidemic nosocomial legionellosis. Methods for preventing nosocomial legionellosis are not known, but comparing Legionella to other water-associated organisms which have been spread from medical devices to cause pneumonia may be fruitful.
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PMID:Sporadic and epidemic nosocomial legionellosis in the United States. Epidemiologic features. 721 4

As of 30 September 1979, 1005 confirmed cases of sporadic legionellosis caused by Legionella pneumophila serogroups 1 to 4 in U.S. residents had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control; 19% were fatal. All but 2% of the 1005 cases were associated with pneumonia documented by chest radiograph. About 75% of the cases occurred in June through October. The risk of acquiring sporadic legionellosis was increased among males and persons 50 years or older; persons with renal disease necessitating dialysis or transplantation, with chronic bronchitis or emphysema, with diabetes mellitus, and with cancer (10 selected sites or types); persons who smoke; and persons being treated with immunosuppressive drugs. Increasing age and chronic bronchitis or emphysema were associated with increased risk of death. The sensitivity of culturing L. pneumophila from specimens positive by direct immunofluorescence was estimated to be 45%. The distribution of serogroups 1, 2, 3, and 4 of L. pneumophila in 57 fresh, not previously examined direct fluorescent antibody-positive specimens was 84%, 11%, 4%, and 2%, respectively; all 26 strains isolated from these specimens were of one of these four serogroups.
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PMID:Sporadic legionellosis in the United States: the first thousand cases. 746 7

This paper reports that substitution of Glucosidorum Tripterygii Totorum (GTT) for cortical hormone used to treat corticosteroid-dependent type of aspirin asthma, 60 mg, 3 times a day. The result showed that total effective rate was 100% including 31 cases of marked effective (86.11%) and 5 cases of effective (13.89%). Corticosteroid in the blood was significantly elevated to normal level after treatment (P < 0.001), Cushing's syndrome was cleared up gradually. The blood glucose in 9 cases complicated with diabetes mellitus was recovered and glucosuria test was negative. The value of peak expiratory flow (PEF) was increased to some extent (P of male < 0.01, of female < 0.05), especially on those not complicated with emphysema. There was no side-effect during the treatment and could avoid the side-effect of cortical hormone. This therapy was valuable.
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PMID:[Treatment of 36 corticosteroid-dependent type of aspirin asthma patients with Glucosidorum Tripterygii totorum]. 771 7

Acute care hospital morbidity of the Blood Indian Band was compared with that of all Albertans between April 1, 1984 and March 31, 1987. The Blood Indians had over 2.5 times as many hospital separations and 2.2 times as many patient days as the Albertans. The highest separation rare ratios by ICD-9-CM chapter for both Blood males and females were for endocrine, metabolic and nutritional disorders. Blood females had higher rate ratios for hospitalizations for all chapters except neoplasms and Blood males had higher rate ratios for all except congenital anomalies and neoplasms. For individual conditions, Blood males had the highest separation rate ratios for alcohol dependence syndrome, gastritis/duodenitis and diabetes mellitus. Bronchitis/emphysema and diabetes mellitus had the highest rate ratios for Blood females. The results are consistent with those reported in other studies of North American Indians. Their health status is more consistent with a developing country than that expected in Canada and does not appear to be improving.
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PMID:Acute care hospital morbidity in the Blood Indian Band, 1984-87. 780 35

A 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed on 18 patients with chronic respiratory failure and without fasting hyperglycemia, positive urine glucose, or hepatic/pancreatic disorders. Underlying diseases in these patients were pulmonary emphysema (11 cases, 61%), pulmonary tuberculosis (5 cases, 28%), and chronic bronchial asthma (2 cases, 11%). The body mass index (mean +/- SD, 17.6 +/- 2.2 kg/m2, P < 0.001) in these patients was significantly lower than that (23.8 +/- 3.1 kg/m2) in normal subjects. The OGTT results showed an impaired glucose tolerance pattern in 9 cases (50%) and a diabetes mellitus pattern in 6 cases (34%). The mean two-hour plasma glucose value in the patients was 9.8 mmol/L. However, insulin secretion responded well to glucose loading. These results suggest that a high proportion of chronic respiratory failure patients may have an intolerance for glucose loading but a normal insulin secretion pattern.
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PMID:Glucose intolerance in chronic respiratory failure. 797 7

In a prospective study during the period January-May 1992, 362 consecutive out-patients above 65 years of age, attending the pulmonary department for chronic obstructive airways disease (COPD), were ultrasonographically screened for an aneurysm of the abdominal aorta (AAA). Data from pulmonary function tests together with history of cardiac disease, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia, peripheral arterial obstructive disease, smoking and corticosteroid medication were collected. 30/282 men and 6/80 women with COPD had an AAA > or = 30 mm in diameter, which equals a prevalence of 9.9% (95% confidence limits: 6.8-13.0%). COPD patients with severe emphysema, having a decreased forced expiratory volume/vital capacity ratio (FEV/VC) of < 55%, have a significantly higher prevalence of aortic dilatation or AAA compared to COPD patients with mild or moderate decreased FEV/VC (chi-squared test: p < 0.05, alpha = 0.05). In the group of patients with AAA, significantly more smokers were seen compared to the group with normal and dilated aortas (chi-squared test: p < 0.05).
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PMID:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and abdominal aortic aneurysms. 835 93

A retrospective analysis of 812 patients admitted to the Ross Tilley Burn Centre between 1984 and 1992 resulted in 37 cases of burn injuries which were directly related to premorbid disabilities. The majority of these burns (83.8 per cent) occurred in the patient's home, most commonly as scald injuries in the bath tub, the shower, or following hot water spills. Nineteen patients were male, 17 were female. The median age was 58 years. Six patients had spinal cord disorders: four had traumatic cord damage, two had spina bifida. Six patients had seizure disorders. Five of these patients had been taking anti-seizure medications, but all had subtherapeutic blood levels on admission to hospital. Two patients had diabetes mellitus with peripheral neuropathies. Thirteen patients had four miscellaneous neurological disorders, including: tardive dyskinesia (two), CVA (four), Parkinson's disease (two), Alzheimer's disease (two), cerebral palsy (one), multiple sclerosis (one) and blindness (one). Three patients had a diagnosis of syncope. Two patients had emphysema, and four were morbidly obese. The average length of stay (LOS) for the disabled patients was 27.6 days for a median burn size of 10 per cent body surface area (BSA), compared to an average LOS for the general population of 25.7 days for a larger median burn size of 21 per cent BSA. The mortality rate was also much higher in the disabled population (22.2 per cent vs. 6.0 per cent). Most of these burn injuries were preventable. A series of burn prevention guidelines is presented, in an attempt to reduce the incidence of these burn injuries in disabled patients.
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PMID:Burns in the disabled. 850 62


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