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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of the study is to evaluate thyroid serum levels in a geriatric community to confirm the presence of a low T3 syndrome during normal ageing. The authors consider 413 subjects (125 male and 288 female) admitted to our Geriatric Division. The group affected by thyroid and extrathyroid disease (such us malnutrition,
diabetes mellitus
,
renal failure
, etc.) was withdrawn. In the selected patients (271) was operated a statistical evaluation to correlate the hormonal parameters (T3, T4, TSH, FT3, FT4) with age and sex. According to international literature, we confirm a progressive T4 and FT4 reduction (p less than 0.05) during ageing, both in male and in female. These data range within normal values. On the contrary, TSH shows no modifications with age and sex. Unlike all other parameters, T3 presents a more evident decrement with age, confirming a low T3 syndrome.
...
PMID:[Profile of thyroid hormones in aging: evaluation of a hospitalized elderly population]. 149 52
The authors have followed during 10 years a girl with Bartter's syndrome who developed severe insulin resistance with acanthosis nigricans. In this rare association, hypokalemia and
renal failure
did not appear to be relevant factors triggering the onset of
diabetes
. The therapeutic difficulties in this case have still not been resolved.
...
PMID:[Insulin resistant diabetes, acanthosis nigricans and Bartter's syndrome, a fortuitous association?]. 149 26
Fifty-seven patients underwent heart transplantation at our hospital between April 1986 and April 1991. In an attempt to assess the result of and the influence of contraindications seen in transplant recipients before transplantation on the outcome after transplantation, we have analyzed six of these "relative" contraindications: (1) age over 55 years (21% of patients); (2) pulmonary hypertension (pulmonary vascular resistance of more than 5 Wood units, and/or transpulmonary gradient of more than 12 mm Hg; 26% of patients); (3)
renal failure
(serum creatinine level of more than 2 mg/dl, and/or creatinine clearance of less than 35 ml/min; 11% of patients); (4) active infection (9% of patients); (5)
diabetes mellitus
(7% of patients); and (6) critical/unstable clinical condition before transplantation (25% of patients). An overall "risk score," obtained by adding one point for each contraindication, was also analyzed. Risk score was 0 (the "ideal" recipient) in 38% of patients, 1 in 25% of patients; 2 in 23% of patients; and 3 or more in 14% of patients. Actuarial survival was significantly lower for patients over 55 years of age (45% versus 68% at 18 months; p less than 0.05), for patients with elevated pulmonary vascular resistance (38% versus 72%; p less than 0.01), and for patients with
kidney failure
(16% versus 70%; p less than 0.01). On the contrary, survival at 18 months was not significantly different for patients with or without
diabetes mellitus
(50% versus 63%; not significant [NS]), active infection (60% versus 63%; NS), or critical/unstable condition (45% versus 69%; p less than 0.1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Influence on survival after heart transplantation of contraindications seen in transplant recipients. 149 36
Mucormycosis is an opportunistic infection that has been mainly described in adults with preexisting disease affecting immune status, eg,
diabetes
, leukemia, lymphoma, and
renal failure
on peritoneal dialysis. Few cases have been described in neonates. The presentation of mucormycosis as a cause of neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis is an unusual phenomenon. Three fatal cases of mucormycosis of the gut in premature infants in the period 1990 to 1991 are described. It is not clear whether this should be considered a separate disease or a variant of necrotizing enterocolitis. All three patients died soon after laparotomy from septic shock and the histological diagnosis of mucormycosis was made too late for effective chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Mucormycosis of the neonatal gut: a "new" disease or a variant of necrotizing enterocolitis? 150 Oct 34
Diabetic renal disease is a clinical syndrome in which proteinuria is followed by the development of
renal failure
, and is commonly associated with the concomitant development of hypertension. In insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients, hypertension often first appears in the microalbuminuric phase of diabetic nephropathy whereas in non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) patients, hypertension often antecedes nephropathy and may precede the diagnosis of
diabetes
. Antihypertensive regimens including diuretics, vasodilators such as hydralazine, beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors reduce proteinuria and delay the decline in renal function in IDDM patients with established nephropathy. No such data are as yet available for calcium antagonists. In microalbuminuric diabetic patients with hypertension, conventional antihypertensive agents, ACE inhibitors and calcium antagonists have been shown to decrease urinary albumin excretion. In the diabetic patient with normal blood pressure and microalbuminuria, there is much less information. It appears likely that ACE inhibitors reduce or retard the rate of increase in albuminuria in these patients. The effect on ultimately delaying or preventing
renal failure
remains unknown although the preliminary evidence is encouraging. Data on calcium antagonists remain inconclusive with some reports suggesting an increase in proteinuria with the dihydropyridine calcium antagonists. However, a recent longer term study suggested that nifedipine may prevent the rise in albuminuria which is generally observed in the untreated normotensive microalbuminuric subject.
...
PMID:The management of diabetic proteinuria. Which antihypertensive agent? 150 44
Diabetic renal disease is more common in patients of Asian ethnic origin than White Caucasians in the United Kingdom. This study determines whether a disparity in the incidence of end-stage
renal failure
secondary to
diabetes mellitus
exists between these ethnic groups. The incidence of treated end-stage
renal failure
was estimated using the person-time at risk incidence rate for patients receiving renal replacement therapy secondary to
diabetes mellitus
in the county of Leicestershire from 1979 to 1988. The incidence rate of end-stage
renal failure
expressed for the estimated population of patients with
diabetes mellitus
in patients of Asian ethnic origin was 486.6 (95% CI, 185.1 to 788.1) cases per million person-years per year, compared to 35.6 (17 to 54.2) in White Caucasians. All patients of Asian ethnic origin developing end-stage
renal failure
had non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
. The high incidence of end-stage
renal failure
secondary to
diabetes mellitus
in patients of Asian ethnic origin in the UK imparts significant public health implications for resource planning and allocation, and the need to initiate strategies to ameliorate renal disease in this ethnic group.
...
PMID:Increased incidence of end-stage renal failure secondary to diabetes mellitus in Asian ethnic groups in the United Kingdom. 151 71
Five years of experience gained with the CryoCare Extremity Stabilization System (CESS) were evaluated in this study. Twenty-one patients underwent freezing amputation. Five patients died before undergoing surgical amputation. Symptomatic relief, control of odor, decreased demand on nursing staff, and appreciation of the family make this approach valuable even when long-term survival is not anticipated. Ten patients who underwent freezing amputation subsequently underwent surgical amputation and were discharged. Six patients underwent freezing and surgical amputation but died prior to discharge. The patients selected for the freezer application were deemed to be prohibitive operative risks because they were experiencing systemic toxicity from their ischemic limb and underlying diseases. Six patients demonstrated myoglobinuria prior to freezing which cleared with CESS. The physiologic amputation allowed stabilization of medical problems including cardiac arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, sepsis,
renal failure
,
diabetes
, and respiratory failure. Freezing of an ischemic extremity allows delay in amputation enabling physicians to achieve maximal medical stabilization. It permits symptomatic relief in patients whose long-term survival is not anticipated. Physiologic freezing amputation should be included in the repertoire of all surgeons.
...
PMID:Experience with physiologic amputation using the CryoCare Extremity Stabilization System (CESS). 152 52
Cardiovaskular and pulmonary diseases, terminal
renal failure
, hepatitis B and C as well as the acquired immune deficiency syndrome, hemorrhagic diatheses,
diabetes mellitus
and hyperthyreosis are the major systemic diseases related to the practice of dentistry and require a modified treatment plan. Dental treatment during pregnancy may involve a risk for the woman and the fetus. The article outlines the most important aspects of interdisciplinary care for medial high-risk patients in the dental practice, refers to further readings and emphasizes the necessity of active continued education in the field of general medicine and specific emergency care.
...
PMID:[Medical high-risk patient in the dental practice]. 153 10
A mother and two of her daughters had deafness and cortical reflex myoclonus; the mother also had mild truncal ataxia. Muscle and skin biopsy specimens revealed abundant ragged-red fibres and abnormal mitochondria. The son of one of the daughters had sensorineural deafness. Three other grandchildren were asymptomatic. The two daughters also had
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension and cardiomyopathy. Another daughter died of
renal failure
. The mother lost her hearing in her 70s, one daughter in her 30s, and the other daughter and the grandson in their 20s. The mother has had transient episodes (24-48 hours) of temporal disorientation, severe action myoclonus, and ataxia for about eight years. This is the first reported family with inherited deafness, myoclonus, and ataxia with mitochondrial pathology.
...
PMID:Abnormal muscle and skin mitochondria in family with myoclonus, ataxia, and deafness (May and White syndrome). 153 18
For patients with severe
diabetes
complicated by
renal failure
, simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation offers some hope. The National Dialysis and Kidney Transplantation Study reports that transplant patients have a higher quality of life, higher employment, and higher perceived health beliefs than patients on dialysis. With this thought in mind, simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation can be seen as an appropriate and attractive alternative. That is, simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation is a viable option for the patient with type I diabetes mellitus and ESRD.
...
PMID:Management of the patient receiving simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation. 156 8
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