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

The biological lipid levels and hyperglycaemia measured in patients of varying ages with retinal detachment have shown that:--in 59.7% there is a hyperlipaemia or hyperlipoproteinaemia. This is more usually a hyperpre-beta-lipoproteinaemia (37.1%);--in 32% a disturbance of lipid metabolism was associated with a disturbance of glucose metabolism: diabetes or a pre-diabetic state;--49% of patients affected with hyperlipidaemia present with a clinical vascular condition;--42% of all the patients present with a clinical vascular condition. The numbers are considerable and they show the frequency of atherogenic factors in retinal detachment.
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PMID:[The frequency of alterations of the lipid and hydrocarbon levels in retinal detachment]. 14 60

This paper presents a digest of 50 retinal research projects reported in one British and two American journals from July 1976 through June 1977. The articles reviewed report recent developments pertaining to effects of excessive light on retinal tissue in newborn rats, pathogenesis of cotton-wool spots, control of the blood-retinal barrier in diabetes, infections, macular diseases, variations in retinal pigment epithelium, and retinal detachment.
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PMID:A selected review of current retinal research and study. 38 6

The relationship between the 'diabetic state' and massive periretinal proliferation (MPP) in idiopathic retinal detachment was examined. In 18 (3.5%) of 508 cases of idiopathic retinal detachment, MPP occurred before or after retinal detachment surgery. In 24 cases of retinal detachment, a diabetic or suspected diabetic state was found. 11 of the 24 were receiving treatment for diabetes and never developed MPP, while 5 of the 13 patients who were not being treated had MPP. This suggests that MPP in retinal detachment may easily be induced by the diabetic state and prevented by treatment for diabetes. Additional causes of MPP in retinal detachment were giant tears, massive vitreous hemorrhages at operation and frequent recurrence.
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PMID:Massive periretinal proliferation in retinal detachment in relation to diabetes mellitus. 54 50

In 66 patients with a rubeosis iridis due to diabetes mellitus (25), old central retinal vein occlusion (22), long-standing secondary angle-closure glaucoma (6), total old retinal detachment (3) and chronic uveitis (10), iris angiography was performed. Typical angiographical findings were found in some of the cases. One can differentiate the different modes of formation of the new vessels; angiographically, rubeosis iridis is never a congestion of preexisting vessels but rather an active vascular proliferation which is always permeable to fluorescein.
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PMID:[Irisangiography of rubeosis iridis]. 63 61

We measured immunoreactive insulin concentrations in ocular fluids and serum of 19 patients. In rhegmatogenous retinal detachment patients without diabetes mellitus, the serum insulin level was 7 +/- 2 (SE) microunits/ml and the subretinal fluid insulin levels were mostly undetectable. By contrast, in rhegmatogenous retinal detachment patients with diabetes mellitus, serum insulin was 35 +/- 5 microunits/ml and the subretinal fluid always contained low but detectable amojnts of insulin. The data may suggest a small leak of insulin into the subretinal fluid of rhegmatogenous retinal detachment patients with diabetic retinopathy. In vitrectomy patients with diabetes mellitus there was no insulin in the vitreous in eight out of nine cases.
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PMID:The insulin concentration in human ocular fluids. 65 18

Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) is uncommon in patients younger than the age of 20 and has been rarely reported. Since 1969, 14 adolescents with severe PDR have been seen, the youngest of whom was 16 years old and the oldest, 19 years old. The shortest duration of diabetes mellitus prior to diagnosis of PDR was eight years. Ten patients had a positive family history of diabetes. Thirteen patients had suboptimal metabolic control. Ten patients had some degree of azotemia, seven were hypertensive, and six had proteinuria. Ophthalmic findings included advanced neovascular and fibrous proliferation on initial classification, and rapid progression to blindness-which was most frequently secondary to traction retinal detachment. In a small retrospective study, pituitary ablation may have offered greater preservation of vision than that observed in untreated patients.
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PMID:Severe adolescent-onset proliferative diabetic retinopathy: the effect of pituitary ablation. 67 70

Diabetic retinopathy was found to be present in 12 out of a group of 67 diabetic patients supervised by us during 92 pregnancies, and 3 further pregnant diabetics were referred to us because of retinopathy. The mean duration of diabetes was 13 years (range 3--25 years). Nine patients had minimal retinopathy, 2 had background retinopathy, and the remaining 4 proliferative retinopathy. The cases with minimal retinopathy showed no progression during pregnancy. In 1 patient with background retinopathy there was deterioration. Of the 4 patients with proliferative retinopathy 1 showed regression during the pregnancy, 2 showed advance and were treated with photocoagulation (these 2 patients now have normal vision), while the patient with extensive retinitis proliferans, with retinal detachment in both eyes and previous photocoagulation remained unchanged. The prognosis during pregnancy for patients with diabetic retinopathy is reasonable and has been improved by the advent of photocoagulation.
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PMID:Diabetic retinopathy and pregnancy. 70 Feb 70

Sickle cell retinopathy, in all of its manifestations, represents the effects of arteriolar and capillary occlusions. Increased viscosity of circulating whole blood plus the microembolic action of individual sickled erythrocytes contribute to vasoocclusion. Decreased oxygenation and increased acidosis develop and lead to further sickling -- and further vaso-occlusion. The cycle of erythrostasis that characterizes sickling throughout the body is also applicable to the retina. The transparent media of the eye permit direct visualization of vaso-occlusions which occur preferentially in and about the macula and in the far periphery of the retina. Many of the occlusive episodes are transient. There dynamic events are simultaneously occurring elsewhere in the body but can only be visualized in the eye. The net effect in the retina is a remodeling of its vasculature, as some vessels close and others reopen. After the onset of arteriolar closure in the retina, affected blood vessels embark on a spontaneous, naturally evolving course of events leading to arteriolarvenular anastomoses, neovascular proliferations, vitreous hemorrhages, and retinal detachment. The advanced stages of proliferative sickle retinopathy are most commonly observed in SC disease and in Sthal, possibly because these two forms of sickling have significantly higher than normal whole blood viscosity. Retinal vaso-occlusions can also lead to blow-out hemorrhages which may evolve into salmon patches, iridescent spots, schisis cavities, and black sunbursts. In some respects sickle retinopathy is unique, but many of its manifestations are similar to those of retinopathies found in diabetes mellitus, AC hemoglobinopathy, Takayasu pulseless disease, sarcoidosis, chronic myelogenous leukemia, branch retinal vein occlusion, retrolental fibroplasia, and Eales disease.
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PMID:Retinal vaso-occlusion in sickling hemoglobinopathies. 78 1

From 1969-1974 1000 unselected enucleated globes have been examined histopathologically. 277 derive from the University Eye Hospital in Hamburg, 723 from various Eye Hospitals in northern and southern Germany. They originate from 589 men and 408 women, three times the sex was unknown. 86 globes had to be removed from children less than 15 years old. 6 groups of etiologies have been distinguished: trauma (308), histologically confirmed neoplastic disease (281), ocular manifestations of systemic diseases (diabetes mellitus, occlusions of central retinal vessels presumably following generalized vascular disease etc.: 128), "operative ocular disease" (164), primary inflammatory disease (71), miscellaneous (malformations, high myopia, pseudo-glioma and pseudo-melanoma: 48). The etiology "operative ocular disease" consists of 67 primary glaucomas (57 adults, 10 buphthalmus), 41 idiopathic cataracts (7 of these congenital) and 3 primary corneal dystrophies, as well as 53 cases of primary retinal detachment. Among the 281 neoplastic diseases, there are 238 primary intraocular malignant melanomas of the uvea, 18 retinoblastomas, 4 primary reticulumcellsarcomas of the retina, 2 choroidal nevi, 10 intraocular metastases and 9 orbital tumors. 16 enucleations among the 1000 enucleations have been performed for pseudo-gliomas (5 x Coats disease, 5 x persistent primary hyperplastic vitreous, 2 x retrolental fibroplasia, others 4 x). The manifestations of systemic disease are consisting of 68 central retinal vein-occlusions, 30 complications of diabetes mellitus and 10 central retinal artery occlusions as well as 20 other generalized diseases. A primary inflammatory disease led to enucleation 50 times due to an intraocular process, 5 times due to scleritis and 18 times as a consequence of keratitis (including 13 times herpes simplex). As the final clinical cause for enucleation the following categories have been elaborated: secondary glaucomas (416), clinical diagnosis of "tumor" (275), atrophy and phthisis bulbi (118), inflammation (112), acute trauma to 4 weeks after the accident (72), others (7). In conclusion the central role of rubeosis iridis leading to secondary angle closure glaucoma is emphasized. This process presents a challenge to ophthalmologic research. Finally the significance of early surgery for primary angle closure glaucomas and for complete restoration of the anterior chamber after trauma and any intraocular procedure is stressed.
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PMID:[Etiology and final clinical cause for 1000 enucleations. (A clinico-pathologic study) (author's transl)]. 95 59

Eighteen eyes in seventeen patients with diabetic retinopathy were operated on using the vitreous infusion-suction cutter. All had severe loss of vision due to retinal detachment or vitreous hemorrhage, or both. Thirteen eyes had a significant improvement in vision. The surgical management and postoperative problems are described. The results suggest that this technique is useful in selected cases of blindness caused by diabetes.
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PMID:Results after vitrectomy in diabetes. 107 30


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