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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Atrial fibrillation (AF) predisposes to stroke, particularly in patients with rheumatic heart disease, congestive heart failure, arterial hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
or uncontrolled
thyrotoxicosis
. In those with rheumatic heart disease it is usual to give warfarin to reduce the incidence of stroke, although there has been no randomised controlled trial on which to base this approach. Whether patients with non-rheumatic AF should be anticoagulated was unclear when we tackled this subject five years ago. This article reviews the evidence from recent randomised controlled trials and considers whether anticoagulation with warfarin, or antiplatelet therapy with aspirin, should now be routine for patients with non-rheumatic AF.
...
PMID:Warfarin or aspirin for non-rheumatic atrial fibrillation? 763 36
Two hundred and ninety one patients admitted with atrial fibrillation through the emergency room of a regional hospital in the year 1993 were reviewed to evaluate the presenting features and in-hospital treatment of patients with symptomatic atrial fibrillation. The incidence of atrial fibrillation increased with age (mean age was 73 +/- 12 years) and the ratio of female to male was 1.8:1. The commonest presenting features were palpitation (42.3%), dyspnoea (38.1%) and heart failure (16.4%). The most frequently associated cardiac conditions were hypertension (28.9%), atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (24.7%) and rheumatic heart disease (17.5%). Pulmonary diseases (18.6%),
diabetes mellitus
(12.7%) and
thyrotoxicosis
(6.2%) were the principal associated non-cardiac conditions. Thromboembolic complications were found in 15 patients at presentation (5.2%). Cardiac enzyme assessment was investigated in two thirds of the patients (68.1%), while thyroid function test (59.5%) and echocardiography (29.6%) were less commonly investigated. Digoxin was still the most popular drug used for ventricular rate control, and cardioversion was performed in only 6.9% of patients. Antithrombotic therapy was used in 5.8% of patients only although it was clinically indicated in more than half of the patients (52%). Contraindications of anticoagulation were found in 23 patients (7.9%), including a history of gastrointestinal or cerebrovascular bleeding, active bleeding, chronic renal failure and poor drug compliance. The mean hospital stay was 5 +/- 4 days, compared to a mean stay of 2.7 days for other medical patients. Fourteen patients (4.8%) died during hospitalisation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Presentation and management of patients admitted with atrial fibrillation: a review of 291 cases in a regional hospital. 778 42
The content of basal immunoreactive atrial natriuretic hormone (ANH) in the venous blood plasma was studied in patients with various types of endocrine hypertension (Conn's syndrome, pheochromocytoma, neuroendocrine form of hypothalamic syndrome,
diabetes mellitus
) and diffuse toxic goiter. Increase of the ANH level was revealed in patients with primary aldosteronism,
diabetes mellitus
and hypertension, as well as with decompensated
thyrotoxicosis
and pronounced cardiac changes. In patients with neuroendocrine pattern of the hypothalamic syndrome the ANH level remained unchanged, in those with pheochromocytoma it decreased.
...
PMID:[Atrial natriuretic factor in endocrine pathology]. 804 13
To evaluate the incidence of autoimmune disorders and organ-specific autoantibodies in Korean vitiligo patients, antibodies to nuclear, mitochondrial, smooth muscle, gastric parietal cell, thyroglobulin, and microsomal antigens were screened in 226 vitiligo patients and 120 controls. Of the 226 vitiligo patients, three (1.3%) had
thyrotoxicosis
and two (0.8%) had
diabetes mellitus
. The vitiligo patients had an increased incidence of antinuclear (12.4%), antimicrosomal (7.1%), and antismooth muscle antibodies (25.7%). The increased incidence of antismooth muscle antibody was correlated with early onset (less than 15 years), a positive family history of vitiligo, and long duration of vitiligo. These results support an autoimmune origin of vitiligo and suggest that the high incidence of antismooth muscle antibody is a distinctive feature of laboratory findings in Korean vitiligo patients.
...
PMID:Increased incidence of antismooth muscle antibody in Korean vitiligo patients. 830 Sep 36
Endocrine autoimmune disorders are mediated by T cell-dependent responses to organ-specific antigens, but the mechanisms initiating the process remain unknown. Lymphocytes which use the gamma delta heterodimer as T cell receptor (TCR) for antigen constitute a distinct subset of T cells whose function remains elusive. In order to investigate their possible involvement in endocrine autoimmunity we have determined the proportion of gamma delta T cells in the peripheral blood of 23 patients with type 1 (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
(type-1 DM) and 30 patients with autoimmune
thyrotoxicosis
(Graves' disease). T lymphocyte TCR expression was assessed by fluorescence-activated flow cytometry on peripheral blood mononuclear cells using MoAbs UCHT1 (CD3), TCR delta 1 (gamma delta TCR), WT31 and beta F1 (alpha beta TCR) and both the percentage of T cells expressing gamma delta and the ratio gamma delta/alpha beta were calculated. In the diabetic patients gamma delta cells were not significantly different from the control group (7.7 +/- 54% versus 8.0 +/- 5.5% of T cells, P NS). There was no relation between the proportion of gamma delta lymphocytes and the presence of islet cell antibodies (ICA) in the sera. The Graves' patients showed a tendency towards a higher proportion of gamma delta T lymphocytes than the controls (gamma delta/alpha beta ratios: 0.095 +/- 0.047 versus 0.063 +/- 0.022, P = 0.03). In 14 Graves' patients the number of gamma delta were measured in paired samples of peripheral and intrathyroidal lymphocytes, demonstrating an expansion of gamma delta within the thyroid glands (0.21 +/- 0.3 versus 0.095 +/- 0.047, P = 0.032). Immunohistochemical studies showed that gamma delta cells were scattered among the predominant alpha beta lymphocytes infiltrating the thyroid gland and that they account for 10% of intraepithelial lymphocytes. No relation was found between the increase of gamma delta lymphocytes and any clinical features.
...
PMID:Gamma delta lymphocytes in endocrine autoimmunity: evidence of expansion in Graves' disease but not in type 1 diabetes. 848 15
Atrial fibrillation is a frequent arrhythmia which has a high prevalence after 65 years of age, thus the typical patient's age is about 75. There are two atrial fibrillation predictors: traditional factors of cardiovascular risk (age, male sex, high blood pressure,
diabetes
), and structural heart disorders (heart failure, valvular heart disease). All preventive measures to reduce atrial fibrillation incidence, must be directed towards these factors. Additionally, left atrial size, ejection fraction and ventricular hypertrophy are echocardiographic predictors. Atrial fibrillation doubles the mortality rate and is related to an annual stroke rate of 4.5%. The stroke risk factors are: age, hypertension,
diabetes
, previous stroke, congestive heart failure, coronary heart disease, mitral stenosis, prosthetic heart valves and
thyrotoxicosis
. Left atrial size and ventricular disfunction are echocardiographic stroke risk factors. Each patient's risk can be stratified on the basis of these factors. All of this information is essential to handle the arrhythmia appropriately; this arrhythmia may be more important than has been thought. Atrial flutter is not very frequent and so it is less studied; however it is an arrhythmia with a similar clinical context to atrial fibrillation, although, probably, with a smaller embolic risk.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology, risk factors, and pathogeny of atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter]. 875 90
We report here a rare case of 47 XXY/46 XY mosaic Klinefelter's syndrome associated with multiple endocrine disorders. A 35-year-old male admitted for the evaluation of renal dysfunction and recurrent bone fractures was diagnosed as having Klinefelter's syndrome by endocrinological examinations and sex chromosome analysis. He has suffered from
diabetes mellitus
for more than ten years. The serum FSH and LH levels were high together with low free testosterone and estradiol levels. There was a discrepancy between basal serum GH and somatomedin-C levels. On admission, thyroid function revealed
thyrotoxicosis
with low radioactive iodine uptake and negative thyroid autoantibodies. During hospitalization, serum FT3 and FT4 levels were gradually decreased and serum TSH levels became elevated, leading to the diagnosis of subacute thyroiditis. Serum ACTH levels showed high basal levels with delayed, exaggerated responses to insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Rapid ACTH test (1-24ACTH 0.25 mg) showed low cortisol responses and many of the adrenocortical steroids in plasma and urine were low or low normal. Furthermore, bone mineral density (BMD) by DEXA showed marked osteoporosis. Possible mechanisms underlying these varied endocrine disorders remain to be elucidated.
...
PMID:47 XXY/46 XY mosaic Klinefelter's syndrome presenting with multiple endocrine abnormalities. 879 55
Diabetic patients have increased chances of developing autoimmune thyroid disease. Thyroid autoantibodies (Th-AAb) are more frequent in IDDM children than in the general population, ranging between 7 and 40%. As markers of thyroid autoimmunity, we assessed Th-AAb (MsA and TgA) cross-sectionally in 212 children and adolescents (93 girls and 119 boys) aged 1.2-21 years with IDDM from 0-18 years, and longitudinally in 90/212 (43 girls and 47 boys) at diagnosis and during a 3-10 year follow-up. In the cross-sectional study Th-AAb were found in 22/93 girls (23.7%) and 13/119 boys (10.9%). In the longitudinal study Th-AAb were observed at diagnosis in 6 patients, and during the follow-up in 9 girls. In 11/15 Th-AAb positive patients anti-nuclear antibodies were also present. Hormonal assessment revealed hypothyroidism in 3 girls (afterwards on replacement therapy), thyroid ultrasonography showed abnormal patterns in 5 girls, fine needle aspiration biopsy confirmed Hashimoto's thyroiditis in 9 (8 girls and 1 boy), with a higher frequency than that reported among healthy subjects (1-2%).
Thyrotoxicosis
also occurs with increased frequency in diabetic children than in the general population. We observed Graves' disease in only 1/212 IDDM patients, a 13 year-old boy in whom
thyrotoxicosis
developed 4 years after
diabetes
was diagnosed. The high prevalence of thyroid autoimmunity in our patients, particularly in females, suggests that diabetic children and adolescents should be screened for thyroid autoimmunity even if asymptomatic for hypo- or hyperthyroidism. Patients with IDDM and autoimmune thyroid disease should be evaluated for autoantibodies against other organs, such as adrenal glands and gastric mucosa. It is known that patients affected by type 1 (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM) may have autoantibodies against different organs, such as thyroid, adrenal glands, gastric mucosa, parathyroid, with or without evident dysfunction of the target organ /1-8/. Among organ-specific disorders, autoimmune thyroid disease (ATD) is frequently associated with IDDM and the presence of thyroid autoantibodies (Th-AAb) has been considered a risk factor for the development of hypo- or hyperthyroidism /9/.
...
PMID:IDDM and autoimmune thyroid disease in the pediatric age group. 888 58
The high-affinity binding of the sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) for testosterone and to a lesser extent for estradiol influences the circulating levels of these sex steroid hormones, their biodisposal to target cells as well as their mutual balance. Although the regulation of SHBG is still not completely understood, in vitro studies performed with human hepatocarcinoma (Hep G2) cells have shown that estrogens and thyroxine stimulate SHBG secretion, by increasing the steady state of its mRNA concentrations. These observations are in good agreement with studies showing that SHBG levels increase during oral administration of estrogens as well as in patients with
thyrotoxicosis
. Interestingly, SHBG levels are normal in syndromes such as the abnormal transport of thyroid hormones and/or the syndrome of thyroid hormone resistance, which can be confused with
thyrotoxicosis
. By contrast, the effects of androgens are controversial. In many patients with hirsutism, SHBG concentrations are low and correlate negatively with both body mass index and fasting insulin levels. Because of the inhibitory effect of both insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 on SHBG secretion by Hep G2 cells in vitro, it has been proposed that SHBG levels could be a marker of insulin resistance and/or hyperinsulinism in humans. Furthermore, an increased risk for either noninsulin-dependent
diabetes
and/or the overall mortality are associated with decreased SHBG levels in postmenopausal women. Finally, in men, SHBG levels are positively correlated with the concentration of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Therefore, the measurement of SHBG in clinical practice can be a useful diagnostic tool for: (1) correctly interpretating testosterone and estradiol serum concentrations; (2) investigating androgen-estrogen balance in gonadal and sexual dysfunctions; (3) assessing the peripheral effect of the hormones which regulate SHBG productions, and (4) evaluating insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk.
...
PMID:Clinical utility of sex hormone-binding globulin measurement. 896 74
TSH receptor plays a pivotal role in the regulation of thyroid function and is intimately involved in the pathogenesis of common thyroid disorders. A lack of specificity and absence of down regulation upon stimulation renders the human TSH receptor susceptible to exogenous overstimulation, which forms the basis of hyperthyroidism in TSHoma, Graves' disease and gestational
thyrotoxicosis
. Further, TSH receptor activation in the absence of exogenous stimulators due to the expression of endogenously active mutant receptors has recently been described, and may in part account for hyperthyroidism in autonomously functioning thyroid nodules. Signal bifurcating by coupling of TSH receptor to different G proteins may be a likely mechanism to explain the multitude of distinct effects caused by TSH receptor activation including mainly hormone production and growth promotion. Also, TSH receptor appears to mediate immunological stimulation, its activation by TSH R Ab inducing expression of adhesion molecules and HLA class II antigens on thyrocytes. Increasing evidence suggests that TSH receptor is not restricted to thyroid and may be expressed in extrathyroidal tissues with a potential role in the pathogenesis of Graves' orbitopathy.
Exp Clin Endocrinol
Diabetes
1996
PMID:Stimulation of thyroidal and extrathyroidal thyrotropin receptors. 898 Oct 10
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