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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Incidence data from Denmark on the insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
in the age group 0--29 years have been collected in two different geographical areas (
West
and South Jutland plus Copenhagen and North Zealand). An incidence of 13.3 per 100,000 per year (range 12.5--13.6) was registered (N = 792). No difference was found between the two areas. The male incidence exceeded the female incidence by 25.4 per cent. The age distribution showed rising values until a peak in the early puberty with a decline until a rather constant level after puberty. From year to year a seasonal variation of onset was demonstrable with maximum in the winter and minimum in the summer for males only. Ascertainment was found to be between 87.7 and 98.6 per cent and the annual number of new insulin-dependent diabetics in Denmark in the age group 0--29 years can be calculated to 310-350.
...
PMID:Incidence of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (0--29 years at onset) in Denmark. 28 14
Two-hundred-and-forty-eight full-blood tribal Aborigines from the
West
Kimberley region of Western Australia were surveyed for the prevalence of coronary heart disease, and compared with the known prevalence in whites in the country town of Busselton, WA. The prevalence was found to be greater among the Aborigines, with 7% of men, and 11% of women being found to have "probable" coronary heart disease. Seven per cent of the population had electrocardiographic changes characteristic of frank ischaemia. The major risk factors contributing to this high prevalence were hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, and obesity. Thirty-seven per cent of the Aborigines were hypertensive, and 17% had
diabetes mellitus
.
...
PMID:Coronary heart disease in tribal Aborigines--the West Kimberley survey. 28 96
In all diabetic animal models studied to date, microangiopathic complications develop which can be prevented by tight control and reversed by either islet cell transplantation or transplanting the diabetic kidney into a nondiabetic environment. In humans the prevalence of these complications in secondary
diabetes mellitus
is similar to the prevalence in genetic
diabetes
. Furthermore, mesangial basement membrane thickness is normal at the onset of the disease and increases shortly thereafter. These two facts strongly suggest that the microangiopathic complications are not an independent genetic component but rather are secondary to the metabolic derangements of uncontrolled
diabetes
. Normal kidneys transplanted into diabetic recipients developed the vascular lesions of
diabetes
. Conversely, two diabetic kidneys inadvertently transplanted into nondiabetic recipients showed clearing of the vascular lesions.Most retrospective studies support the conclusion that control is associated with lessened complications. The three prospective studies published to date also support this hypothesis. Because glucose concentrations cannot be brought to normal levels by present methods, the critical question is whether a major emphasis on restoring metabolism to as nearly normal as possible will help ameliorate the microangiopathic complications in our patients. The accumulated evidence would strongly favor an affirmative answer. Two daily injections of intermediate-acting insulin supplemented with small amounts of short-acting insulin as needed is one method to approach this goal.
West
J Med 1978 Sep
PMID:The case for control in diabetes mellitus. 36 Jun 22
A population of 103 adult diabetic patients was interviewed at the Outpatient Clinic for diabetic patients of the University Hospital of the
West
Indies to examine the effects of severity of the illness and social variables, such as facilities at home, education attained, employment status, informal medication, and understanding of the illness in relation to its control. Patients were classified as severe if there were clinical evidence of vascular or neurologic complications of
diabetes
and as mild if there were no complications. Control of
diabetes
was regarded as good if the patients were free from or had less than 2+ glycosuria and as poor if they had had 2+ or more glycosuria during the six months before the study. We found that the quality of control was mainly determined by the severity of the disease. In the mild diabetic, proper diabetic control was not influenced by any social variable examined. In the severe diabetic the quality of control was associated with social amenities, educational status, employment status, and understanding of the disease.
Diabetes
Care
PMID:Some social factors related to control of diabetes mellitus in adult Jamaican patients. 51 Jan 38
Liquid crystal thermography can assist the clinician in evaluating inflammatory conditions or delineating viability of tissues by the differences in coloration that occur with the use of these unique substances. The technique has proved useful in studying hemophilia, tumors of the extremities, arthritis and vascular conditions, including the complications of
diabetes
.
West
J Med 1975 May
PMID:Orthopedic applications of liquid crystal thermography. 109 27
A retrospective anatomical and family study was made of 345 patients with oesophageal atresia who were born in the South
West
of England between 1942 and 1973. There were 186 males and 159 females. Twenty-one cases were stillborn. Eighty-five percent of the patients had a combination of oesophageal atresia with a tracheo-oesophageal fistula to the distal oesophageal segment, and 9 percent had atresia without a fistula. Fifty-five per cent of the patients had other congenital malformations and these tended to be multiple rather than single. Thirty-six per cent of singletons had unequivocal fetal growth retardation, and there is some evidence that nearly all cases have poor fetal growth. There appeared to be a maternal age effect, with an excess of mothers under 20 and over 35, and there was an unexplained excess of fathers employed in the Armed Forces. Ten per cent of the cases were illegitimate. There were 21 twins which is nearly three times the expected number; there were two pairs of twins concordant for oesophageal atresia, one being monozygotic and the other dizygotic. In one case there were two sibs with oesophageal atresia. Five out of 365 sibs had anencephaly. The blood group distributions of the patients and their mothers did not significantly differ from the expected distribution. Oesophageal atresia is aetiologically heterogenous. In this series there were at least five, and probably 10 cases of trisomy 18 and four cases of trisomy 21. Five mothers had overt
diabetes
, and there is some suggestion from other work that maternal
diabetes
or its treatment may be aetiologically important. Oesophageal atresia was part of a possibly recessively inherited malformation syndrome in two cases. A sibship with a case of rectal atresia, a case of Hirschprung's disease and a case of oesophageal atresia may represent the action of another recessive gene. It seems likely that oesophageal atresia is a rather non-specific consequence of several teratological processes.
...
PMID:Oesophageal atresia in the South West of England. 112 Oct 14
West
, R. J., Lloyd, J. K., and Turner, W. M. L. (1975). Archives of Disease in Childhood, 50, 703. Familial insulin-resistant
diabetes
, multiple somatic anomalies, and pineal hyperplasia. A syndrome comprising unusual facies, dry skin, acanthosis nigricans, thickened nails, hirsutism, dental precocity and dysplasia, abdominal protuberance, and phallic enlargement is described in 2 sibs. Both have developed diabetic ketoacidosis with insulin resistance. The elder child, a girl, had recurrent septic episodes and died at the age of 7-8 years. At necropsy the pineal gland was hyperplastic, weighing 900 mg. Investigation of the younger sib over a 4-year period has shown decreasing glucose tolerance, and he was frankly diabetic with ketoacidosis by the age of 6-8 years. Serum insulin concentrations have always been grossly raised. Though the mechanism for insulin resistance has not been definitely established, a functional abnormality of the hypothalamus or pituitary is postulated to explain the many endocrine features of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Familial insulin-resistant diabetes, multiple somatic anomalies, and pineal hyperplasia. 119 Aug 20
Therapy of
diabetes mellitus
with oral hypoglycaemic agents is reviewed in 445 patients, excluding 18 patients who failed, primarily, to respond to these drugs. The findings are discussed with particular reference to the latent period between the onset of therapy and the observed response. It is probable that the more potent, newer oral hypoglycaemic drugs may help to remove this latent period or reduce its duration.
West
Afr J Pharmacol Drug Res 1975 Dec
PMID:Oral hypoglycaemic agents in the management of diabetes mellitus in Nigerians. 123 18
Insulin therapy was reviewed in 172 Nigerian diabetic patients. Insulin zinc suspension (IZS--lente) was the preparation most commonly used and therapy was free of side effects. Only a small number of the patients (students) had the problem of unrestricted physical activity and possibly irregular eating habits which might adversely influence insulin therapy. Although in the majority of cases, the age of onset of
diabetes mellitus
was under 21 years, insulin dependence covered a broad age spectrum. It was not possible to predict the severity of the
diabetes
from the age of onset. There was about equal chance that therapy might be changed from insulin to oral hypoglycaemic drugs or vice-versa.
West
Afr J Pharmacol Drug Res 1975 Dec
PMID:Insulin in the management of diabetes mellitus in Nigerians. 123 25
A nine-year review of 103 cases of shoulder dystocia identified obesity,
diabetes mellitus
and post-datism as important predisposing risk factors. There was a positive correlation with birthweight. Abnormal labour patterns were invariably absent and perinatal outcome was disastrous. The best strategy is to anticipate and avoid this obstetrical emergency.
West
Indian Med J 1992 Dec
PMID:Shoulder dystocia: an obstetrical nightmare. 129 Feb 37
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