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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Venous leg ulcer is the most frequent cause of trophic lesions of the limbs in patients with chronic
venous insufficiency
. Appropriate management of cutaneous vascular lesions is based on systemic, vascular and local assessment. The Authors used a protease-modulating matrix in 126 patients suffering from venous leg ulcers with wound granulation: 81 (64.2%) patients with primary chronic reflux disorder and varicose veins and 45 (35.8%) post-thrombotic; in addition 30 patients (23.8%) had peripheral arteriopaty and 41 (32.5%) peripheral arteriopaty and
diabetes
. One hundred sixteen patients showed complete healing, 2 were refractory to every treatment and 8, with arteriopathy and
diabetes
, are on the mend. According to the literature we achieved reduction of the healing time and increased healing rate. All patients were treated in outpatient settings. In conclusion the Authors suggest protease-modulating matrix is a really effective treatment of venous leg ulcers with wound granulation. Their treatment is also feasible in outpatient treatment with a reduction in health spending and reduced absence from work.
...
PMID:[New trends in the treatment of venous leg ulcer. Personal experience]. 2013 50
The aim of this study was to evaluate the epidemiological data and the main comorbidities of patients with erysipelas admitted to a tertiary hospital. All patients admitted due to erysipelas during the period from 1999 to 2008 were included in a prospective and cross-sectional study. The Fisher exact test and logistic regression were used for statistical analysis. A total of 428 individuals were hospitalized with 41 rehospitalizations; 51.17% of the patients were women, the mean age was 58.6 years. The main comorbidities were hypertension (51.6%),
diabetes mellitus
(41.6%), chronic
venous insufficiency
(36.2%), other cardiovascular diseases (33.2%) including angina, peripheral arterial insufficiency, acute myocardial infarction, and strokes, obesity (12.1%), chronic renal failure (6.8%), neoplasms (4.9%), cirrhosis (4.9%), chronic lymphedema (4.2%), and leg ulcers (2.6%). Erysipelas is a seasonal disease that affects adults and the elderly people, has a repetitive nature, and is associated with comorbidities.
...
PMID:Epidemiological data and comorbidities of 428 patients hospitalized with erysipelas. 2014 45
Patients with trophic ulcers of lower extremities are relatively frequently diagnosed with
diabetes mellitus
with venous aetiology being the cause of these defects in up to 70% of patients. Chronic venous insufficiency most frequently results from primary
venous insufficiency
(mostly lower limb varices) or occurs secondarily as a result of deep vein thrombosis. Lower limb varices are common in human population; they affect 20-25% of women and 10-15% of men, and the incidence increases with age. With respect to radicality of treatment approaches, surgical management is unequivocally considered as the most effective. Apart from the traditional open surgery, clinical practice of the recent years has seen the advance of mini-invasive endovascular methods to treat varices of the main (stem) veins--radiofrequency and laser thermocoagulation. The main principle behind radiofrequency ablation is thermocoagulation of insufficient saphenous vein by bipolar radiofrequency current; endovenous laser uses, for the same purpose, energy of a beam of light. Both methods inactivate the insufficient veins while leaving them in the patient body. Thermal damage of the pathological venous wall leads to contraction and obliteration of the vein and, gradually, to its full resorption. Apart from minimizing recurrence, the technique is also valuable with respect to its cosmetic effect and gentleness of the procedure, allowing fast return to full activity. Studies comparing endovascular interventions with the traditional surgeries confirmed that radiofrequency or laser techniques are safe and well tolerated with the outcomes fully comparable to open surgery in its modern form.
...
PMID:[Veins and diabetes]. 2046 6
Skin microcirculation plays an important role in several diseases including chronic
venous insufficiency
and
diabetes
. Magnetic resonance (MR) has the potential to provide quantitative information and a better penetration depth compared with other non-invasive methods such as laser Doppler flowmetry or optical coherence tomography. The continuous progress in hardware resulting in higher sensitivity must be coupled with advances in data acquisition schemes. In this article, we first introduce a physical model for quantifying skin microcirculation using diffusion-weighted MR (DWMR) based on an effective dispersion model for skin leading to a q-space model of the DWMR complex signal, and then design the corresponding robust optimal experiments. The resulting robust optimal DWMR protocols improve the worst-case quality of parameter estimates using nonlinear least squares optimization by exploiting available a priori knowledge of model parameters. Hence, our approach optimizes the gradient strengths and directions used in DWMR experiments to robustly minimize the size of the parameter estimation error with respect to model parameter uncertainty. Numerical evaluations are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach as compared to conventional DWMR protocols.
...
PMID:Robust optimal design of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance experiments for skin microcirculation. 2072 99
Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is caused by haematogenous spread from a distant primary infection in 70% of deep infections. It can potentially be avoided by prompt recognition and treatment of the primary infection focus in susceptible patients. Streptococci are commonly implicated in such secondary infections. Group A, B, C and G streptococci can cause invasive, potentially life-threatening infection. Risk factors include
diabetes
, immunodeficiency and
venous insufficiency
Any patient with a joint replacement should be counselled to seek early attention for any soft tissue or dental infection. A course of antibiotics should be considered in any wound in which there has been significant contamination. Patients at risk of infection through impaired physical defences such as chronic
venous insufficiency
should be treated appropriately and consideration should be given to prophylactic treatment of varicose veins if there are early signs of chronic
venous insufficiency
. Mild, uncomplicated cellulitis can be treated with oral antibiotics, simple penicillin agents such as amoxicillin or flucloxacillin should be administered. Patients should be referred to hospital for consideration of parenteral antibiotics if they are exhibiting signs of systemic sepsis such as tachycardia, pyrexia or hypotension. PJI should be suspected if a patient with a joint replacement develops pain in that joint after a soft tissue, respiratory tract or dental infection. In cases of suspected PJI prompt orthopaedic advice should be sought and antibiotics withheld.
...
PMID:Be vigilant for secondary periprosthetic joint infection. 2114 Dec 50
An 85-year-old woman with a history of insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension, and chronic
venous insufficiency
with underlying venous stasis who sustained a fall in her house presented to the emergency room with a displaced distal diaphyseal tibial fracture and a stable total knee arthroplasty. At her third day of admission, an intramedullary nail was inserted in a retrograde fashion through the calcaneus and talus into her tibial shaft to stabilize the fracture; there were no postoperative complications. Three years after surgery, the patient remains pain-free, the fracture had united, and her functional status is the same as it was before the fracture. There are different options for solving these types of fractures. Nonoperative, external fixation, conventional or locking plates and antegrade and retrograde intramedullary nailing could be used; however, they should be weighed against the particular issues of the patient involved. We think that a retrograde nailing technique through the calcaneotalotibial axis could be an alternative method for these types of fractures in a fragile patient with important comorbidities with few complications and good functional outcome.
...
PMID:Distal tibial fracture below a total knee arthroplasty: retrograde intramedullary nailing as an alternative method of treatment: a case report. 2157 55
Coverage of defects of the distal third portion of the leg and foot remains a challenge for surgeons. The difficulty results from the limited mobility and availability of the overlying skin, the weight-bearing requirements, and the relatively poor circulation of the skin. From January 2008 to December 2009, 10 patients had defects of the foot and ankle covered using the 2-stage expanded reverse sural flap. Of these 10 patients, 6 had at least 1 risk factor for compromised wound healing, such as
diabetes mellitus
, peripheral arterial disease,
venous insufficiency
, tobacco smoking, or age older than 40 years. Flap necrosis was observed in only 1 patient (10%). Venous congestion was noted in 2 patients (20%) by the third postoperative day, 1 of whom responded to postural elevation of the extremity and 1 to medicinal leech therapy. Although it is a 2-stage procedure that requires wound dressing during the expansion, we strongly suggest the use of the expanded reverse sural flap for defects too large to be primarily closed, especially in patients older than 40 years with risk factors such as
diabetes mellitus
, peripheral arterial disease, or
venous insufficiency
.
...
PMID:Use of expanded reverse sural artery flap in lower extremity reconstruction. 2172 25
Epiboly represents the process by which keratinocytes migrate to envelop a surface. The authors have been investigating a living bilayered skin construct (BSC) that is used in the treatment of lower extremity wounds due to
venous insufficiency
and
diabetes
. The construct demonstrates epiboly after injury and incubation in vitro, and this model may be useful for studying epidermal migration and the process of skin maturation. Punch biopsies of the construct in vitro were cultured and immunostained for specific keratins at baseline and at 24 to 72 hours. For comparison, skin biopsy specimens from human chronic venous ulcers and acute healing wounds were similarly processed. The authors found that K1 and K10 were fully expressed in the epidermis of the fully epibolized surface on BSC. K1 was also present in the migrating edge of specimens, whereas K10 was not detectable. K16 and K6 were evident in normal skin and the epibolized area of the construct; K6 expression was very prominent in the migrating edge. Importantly, K17 was distinctly limited to the epibolized surface and the migrating edge, and its expression was very similar to that observed in healing human wounds. In conclusion, differential expression of keratins in this epiboly model closely reflects in vivo studies and supports keratin specificity in the processes of migration and differentiation of new epidermis. Therefore, these findings provide further and important validity for the study of epithelialization and the hope of developing prognostic markers for venous ulcer healing.
...
PMID:Differential keratin expression during epiboly in a wound model of bioengineered skin and in human chronic wounds. 2185 73
Hyaluronic acid (HA) is a polysaccharide common to most species and is found in many sites in the human body, including the skin and soft tissue. A systematic review of the literature and meta-analysis was performed to identify randomized controlled trials, evaluating the use of HA derivatives in healing burns, epithelial surgical, and chronic wounds. Nine studies were identified, which met the search criteria and clinical endpoints of complete healing and percent wound size reduction when using HA vs. either an active or passive comparator. It was found in the vast majority of randomized controlled trials (eight of nine) that HA derivatives significantly improved the healing of wounds vs. traditional therapies or placebo (either via complete healing or a significant reduction in wound size) occurring from burns,
venous insufficiency
,
diabetes
, neuropathic insufficiency, and surgical removal of the epithelial layer (for tattoo removal). In the other remaining trial, one formulation of HA was compared with another, with the higher concentration showing improved application characteristics. Further, it was found in a meta-analysis in subsets of patients with diabetic foot ulcers (neuropathic) that HA derivatives healed these types of wounds significantly faster than standard of care. These studies in aggregate show that HA derivatives accelerate the healing process in burns, epithelial surgical wounds, and chronic wounds.
...
PMID:Hyaluronic acid derivatives and their healing effect on burns, epithelial surgical wounds, and chronic wounds: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. 2256 27
The medical term onychomycosis should be understood as chronic infection of the nails caused by a fungus. The most common causative agents are the dermatophytes and Candida species. The less common are certain types of moulds (nondermatophyte moulds or NDMs). In approximately 60-80 % of the cases, onychomycosis is due to dermatophytes. Among dermatophytes, the most often isolated causative pathogen is Trichophyton (T.) rubrum. Other common species are T. interdigitale (formerly T. mentagrophytes), Epidermophyton floccosum, and T. tonsurans. The most significant yeasts causing onychomycosis are Candida albicans and Candida parapsilosis. Predisposing factors for onychomycosis include mainly diseases such as
diabetes mellitus
, peripheral vascular arterial disease, chronic
venous insufficiency
, polyneuropathies of diverse etiologies, and immunosuppression, e.g., myeloproliferative diseases (such as lymphoma and paraproteinemia), HIV/AIDS, etc. Other factors facilitating the fungal infection are frequent trauma in professional sportsmen, often accompanied by excessive perspiration. The diagnostic methods that are often applied in different dermatologic departments and ambulatory units are also different. This precludes the creation of a unified diagnostic algorithm that could be used everywhere as a possible standard. In most of the cases, the method of choice depends on the specialist's individual experience. The therapeutic approach depends mostly on the fungal organism identified by the dermatologist or mycologist. This review hereby includes the conventional as well as the newest and most reliable and modern methods used for the identification of the pathogens causing onychomycosis. Moreover, detailed information is suggested, about the choice of therapeutic scheme in case whether dermatophytes, moulds, or yeasts have been identified as causative agents. A thorough discussion of the schemes and duration of the antifungal therapy in certain groups of patients have been included.
...
PMID:Onychomycosis: modern diagnostic and treatment approaches. 2305 63
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