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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 76-year-old man with liver cirrhosis and
diabetes mellitus
was admitted to our hospital because of bacterial meningoencephalitis. He had eaten raw fish 2 days before onset. He also developed septic shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation,
adult respiratory distress syndrome
and panophthalmitis of the right eye. Vibrio vulnificus was isolated from the blood culture. Extensive therapy including antibiotics and nafamostat methylate, resulted in full recovery except for right blindness. The necrotizing fasciitis, which is common with Vibrio vulnificus infection, had not been complicated in this patient.
...
PMID:[A patient with Vibrio vulnificus meningoencephalitis]. 1571 95
The essential role of nitric oxide (NO) in normal physiology and its involvement in the pathophysiology of a variety of diseases render the compound an attractive therapeutic target. NO donor drugs are used in the treatment of hypotension and angina where abnormalities in the L-arginine-nitric oxide pathway have been implicated. Overproduction of NO has been associated with a number of disease states including septic shock, inflammatory diseases,
diabetes
, ischaemia-reperfusion injury,
adult respiratory distress syndrome
, neurodegenerative diseases and allograft rejection. NO is produced by a group of enzymes, the nitric oxide synthases. Selective inhibition of the inducible isoform is one approach to the treatment of diseases where there is an overproduction of NO; an alternative approach is to scavenge or remove excess NO. A number of NO scavenger molecules have demonstrated pharmacological activity in disease models, particularly models of septic shock. These include organic molecules such as PTIO (2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide), haemoglobin derivatives such as the pyridoxalated haemoglobin polyoxyethylene conjugate (PHP), low molecular weight iron compounds of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid and diethyldithiocarbamate and ruthenium polyaminocarboxylate complexes. The data suggest a potential role for NO scavengers in the treatment of NO mediated disease.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide scavengers as a therapeutic approach to nitric oxide mediated disease. 1599 46
Bronchopleural fistula (BPF) and bronchial stump insufficiency (BSI) after lobectomies and pneumonectomies are dreaded complications with incidences of up to 12 % and a mortality rate of up to 51 %. Apart from the basic illness causes include complications like aspiration-pneumonia and
ARDS
, formation of empyema as well as histories of sepsis. Corticoid treatments, old age,
diabetes mellitus
, previous irradiation as well as post-operative mechanical ventilation (barotrauma) are often counted among contributing causes. Suturing the bronchus and reinforcement by tissue are still the methods of choice, but they are often counter-indicated in high-risk patients. Endoscopic treatments with partial lung occlusions, e. g. by insertion of spongiosa, coils, and/or fibrin glue have been described. However, they require the respective area to be probable. With only one third the rate of success is quite unsatisfactory. The retro-graded instillation of inflammatory-selerotizing substances, like doxycycline, via a chest tube leads to a pleurodesis caused by adhesion of the remaining lung parenchyma to the thoracic wall and a reduction in size of the residual pleural space. In an 82-year old female patient a BPF of the second upper lobe bronchus was detected after a middle lobe resection for abscess and post-radiation ulcer following a mastectomy for carcinoma. The leakage was detected on bronchoscopy by retro-graded instillation via the chest tube of methylene-blue solution into the thoracic cavity. After administering the water-soluble contrast agent amidotrizoic acid in a similar manner a CT confirmed the diagnosis. As the bronchial segment concerned could not be entered selectively, preservation of the right lung lobe's residual ventilation by endoscopic-occlusion procedures was ruled out. Employing a strictly conservative therapy (spontaneous ventilation, retro-graded doxycycline instillations) complete healing with a fully ventilated lower lobe could be achieved over a period of 78 days. BPF as well as residual intro-thoracic cavities after lobectomies pose a serious problem. Using methylene blue for a retro-graded demonstration of BPF during bronchoscopy presents a feasible and cost-efficient diagnostic method. A strictly applied conservative therapy including short-time low-pressure artificial respiration as well as obliteration by fibrous tissue of the thoracic cavity using doxycycline is a feasible procedure for inoperable high-risk patients.
...
PMID:[Post-lobectomy bronchopleural fistula -- a challenge for postoperative intensive care]. 1663 61
The plasma kallikrein-kinin system (KKS) participates in the pathogenesis of inflammatory reactions involved in cellular injury, coagulation, fibrinolysis, kinin formation, complement activation, cytokine secretion and release of proteases. It has been shown that KKS activation in the systemic inflammatory response syndrome results in decrease of its component plasma proteins. Similar changes have been documented in
diabetes
, sepsis, children with vasculitis, allograft rejection, disseminated intravascular coagulation, patients with recurrent pregnancy losses, hereditary angioedema,
adult respiratory distress syndrome
and coronary artery disease. Direct involvement of the KKS in the pathogenesis of experimental acute arthritis and acute and chronic enterocolitis has been documented by previous studies from our laboratory using experimental animal models. It has been found that in HK deficient Lewis rats, experimental IBD was much less severe. We showed a genetic difference in kininogen structure between resistant Buffalo and susceptible Lewis rats, which results in accelerated cleavage of HK and it is responsible for the susceptibility to the inflammatory process in the Lewis rats. It has been demostrated that therapy with a specific plasma kallikrein inhibitor (P8720) modulated the experimental enterocolitis, arthritis and systemic inflammation. Furthermore, it has been shown that a bradykinin 2 receptor (B2R) antagonist attenuates the inflammatory changes in the same animal model. We have showed that a monoclonal antibody targeting HK decreases angiogenesis and arrests tumor growth in a syngeneic animal model. In summary, these results indicate that the plasma KKS plays a central role in the pathogenesis of chronic intestinal inflammation, arthritis and angiogenesis.
...
PMID:[High molecular weight kininogen in inflammation and angiogenesis: a review of its properties and therapeutic applications]. 1670 6
Listeria monocytogenes usually causes meningitis or bacteremia, often in immunocompromised adults, pregnant women, or infants. We report a case of septic arthritis caused by L. monocytogenes in a patient with seronegative rheumatoid arthritis (RA) whose hip replacement was infected. She subsequently died, probably secondary to an
adult respiratory distress syndrome
, a rare complication of listerial infection. We also reviewed all 18 previously reported cases of septic arthritis caused by L. monocytogenes. The frequency of underlying RA,
diabetes
, neoplastic disease, and immunosuppressive therapy is prominent, as is the concurrent presence of a previous knee or hip replacement. Thus, the simultaneous presence of immune suppression and certain medical disorders or their treatment and a prosthetic joint should alert the clinician to the possibility that L. monocytogenes is the offending microbial agent. In contrast, in immunocompetent persons the usual Gram-positive cocci such as staphylococci, streptococci, or even pneumococci predominate. Although the outcome of appropriate treatment with penicillin or ampicillin alone (or with an aminoglycoside or trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole in penicillin-allergic individuals) is usually favorable, complicating medical disorders can lead to death. Cephalosporins are rarely effective antimicrobial agents in patients with listeriosis.
...
PMID:Is Listeria monocytogenes an important pathogen for prosthetic joints? 1703 86
Bacterial infections with local inflammation or hematogenous spreading may occur after joint punctures and intra- or periarticular injections. The risk of severe infections increases in patients with diseases accompanied by low immunity, e.g., gout, alcoholism, rheumatoid arthritis, and
diabetes mellitus
. Cases of septic omarthritis after intra-articular injection with fatal outcome after delayed onset of therapy are known. In our clinic we treated a female patient who previously received an injection in the shoulder region in a different facility. On admission she was suffering from an abscess of the surrounding soft tissues, systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), and
adult respiratory distress syndrome
(
ARDS
). Because the clinical picture was recognized early, we were able to prevent severe progression with organ failure. Another female patient developed a postinjection bacterial acromioclavicular arthritis followed by septic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and eventually multiple organ failure (MOF). With inconspicuous clinical findings in the initial shoulder examination the bacterial arthritis was detected as the cause of sepsis only after intensive investigations.
...
PMID:[SIRS and ARDS as a result of drug injection in the shoulder region]. 1804 2
The oxidation of lipids containing polyunsaturated omega-3 or omega-6 acyl groups, such as docosahexenoic, eicosapentenoic, linolenic, arachidonic, or linoleic groups, and of the corresponding fatty acids, generates among other compounds alpha,beta -unsaturated aldehydes supporting different functional groups containing oxygen, which can be named oxygenated alpha,beta -unsaturated aldehydes (OalphabetaUAs). These compounds can be produced in cells and tissues of living organisms or in foods during processing or storage, and from these latter can be absorbed through the diet. In the last few years, OalphabetaUAs are receiving a great deal of attention because they are being considered as possible causal agents of numerous diseases, such as chronic inflammation, neurodegenerative diseases,
adult respiratory distress syndrome
, atherogenesis,
diabetes
, and different types of cancer. This review deals with the nature of the different kinds of OalphabetaUAs detected until now, their reactivity and consequent biological activity; the several pathways proposed for their formation; the current knowledge about the influence of both oxidative conditions and lipids nature in the rate of formation and yield of each kind of OalphabetaUAs in edible oils; the methods described until now to determine the presence in foods of some of these compounds, such as 4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal, 4-hydroxy-trans-2-octenal, 4-hydroxy-trans-2-hexenal and 4-oxo-trans-2-hexenal; and finally, the levels found of some of them in several foods.
...
PMID:Toxic oxygenated alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes and their study in foods: a review. 1827 68
Endothelial hyperpermeability is a significant problem in vascular inflammation associated with trauma, ischaemia-reperfusion injury, sepsis,
adult respiratory distress syndrome
,
diabetes
, thrombosis and cancer. An important mechanism underlying this process is increased paracellular leakage of plasma fluid and protein. Inflammatory stimuli such as histamine, thrombin, vascular endothelial growth factor and activated neutrophils can cause dissociation of cell-cell junctions between endothelial cells as well as cytoskeleton contraction, leading to a widened intercellular space that facilitates transendothelial flux. Such structural changes initiate with agonist-receptor binding, followed by activation of intracellular signalling molecules including calcium, protein kinase C, tyrosine kinases, myosin light chain kinase, and small Rho-GTPases; these kinases and GTPases then phosphorylate or alter the conformation of different subcellular components that control cell-cell adhesion, resulting in paracellular hypermeability. Targeting key signalling molecules that mediate endothelial-junction-cytoskeleton dissociation demonstrates a therapeutic potential to improve vascular barrier function during inflammatory injury.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms of endothelial hyperpermeability: implications in inflammation. 1956
A 57-year-old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of general fatigue and appetite loss. The initial chest radiograph showed infiltration in the left upper lung field. Cefozopran was administered. Concomitant diabetic ketoacidosis was treated with hydration and rapid-acting insulin. However he was intubated and ventilated because of deteriorated respiratory condition and ketoacidosis on the 3rd hospital day. Urinary legionella antigen was detected the same day, therefore ciprofloxacin and imipenem were initiated. On the 4th hospital day, he developed acute renal failure and was treated with continuous hemodiafiltration. In addition, he developed
adult respiratory distress syndrome
on the 6th hospital day, therefore siveletat sodium was given. The patient gradually began to improve and was extubated on the 17th hospital day. After that he was transferred to the metabolic ward on the 24th hospital day for control of his
diabetes mellitus
. Despite the severe complications in his clinical course, including diabetic ketoacidosis, acute renal failure and
ARDS
, detection of Legionella pneumophila by a urinary antigen test, Gimenez stain and sputum culture made prompt and proper administration of antibiotics possible, finally yielding a desirable outcome.
...
PMID:[A case of Legionella pneumonia with diabetic ketoacidosis rescued despite the development of acute renal failure and ARDS]. 1960 25
Despite extensive research into the pathogenesis of acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/
ARDS
), mortality remains high at approximately 40%. Current treatment is primarily supportive, with lung-protective ventilation and a fluid conservative strategy. Pharmacologic therapies that reduce the severity of lung injury in experimental studies have not yet been translated into effective clinical treatment options. Therefore, innovative therapies are needed. Recent studies have suggested that bone-marrow-derived multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) may have therapeutic applications in multiple clinical disorders including myocardial infarction,
diabetes
, sepsis, hepatic and acute renal failure. Recently, MSC have been studied in several in vivo models of lung disease. This review focuses on first describing the existing experimental literature that has tested the use of MSC in models of ALI/
ARDS
, and then the potential mechanisms underlying their therapeutic use with an emphasis on secreted paracrine soluble factors. The review concludes with a discussion of future research directions required for potential clinical trials.
...
PMID:Potential application of mesenchymal stem cells in acute lung injury. 1969 41
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