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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Health care protection of children in Vojvodina is of particular importance regarding the negative natural birth rate. In spite of difficult economic situation, health care of children in Vojvodina is permanently carried out and would be significantly better in quality if the education of subspecialized personnel, space facilities, technological innovations, computerization and continuous education were available. Introduction of microanalytic laboratory techniques is essential for monitoring of prematures. Propagation of natural nutrition is an obligation of pediatricians. Respiratory diseases are still on the top of morbidity pyramid but tuberculosis is evidently in increase. An important health care problem is the expansion of allergic diseases. The progressive incidence of insulin-dependent
diabetes
is also evident. The spheres of juvenile gynecological endocrinology and andrology are still underdeveloped and that also applies to adolescent medicine. Toxicology remains an ongoing problem in pediatrics due to an increased number of accidental poisoning. Pediatricians-gastroenterologists are lacking while paediatric hepatology should be brought into more advanced state. Bone marrow and stem cells transplantation is in the responsibility of the Centre for haematology and oncology. Nephrology department lacks children's haemodialysis, ultrasound biopsy of kidneys, urodynamic analyses and new staff facilities. The increased number of survivals in case of children with with sequeles inevitably asks for better development of rehabilitation, prolonged treatment and teamwork. Intensive care and therapy department requires new staff and high technology capacities. Development of children's surgery department inevitably means the reconstruction of space facilities, modern equipment and new subspecializations. Preventive outpatient service is performed through systematic examinations. ultrasound diagnostics of hips, auditive screening and educational program activities related to
addiction
and veneral diseases. Genetic health of the population is supremely covered by the Center for Medical Genetics, with the tendenca for development of molecular genetics. It is necessary to develop rehabilitation service, prolonged treatment and teamwork. Diagnostic of convulsive conditions should be advanced with more refined diagnostic methods.
...
PMID:[Problems and perspectives in child health care]. 947 20
Before the notorious increase of congenital malformations among individuals belonging to rurality, which are faced to yield between watering by sprinklers with weed-killers and the alarming growth of cardiovascular and pre--and malignant diseases we decided to undertake a perusal among the agents regarded since ever as bias toward to those pathologies. Following that conception we found out a common tendency between malnutrition,
diabetes
, alcoholism, drug-
addiction
, weed-killers, and so on. The whole group generate energy reduction (ATP) starting from which appears a biochemical complex competent to give way to any cardiovascular pathology, autoimmune maladies or even congenital malformations.
...
PMID:[Esophageal achalasia and mongolism. Laryngeal papillomatosis and dermatomyositis. A common origin? Review]. 954 47
The parameters used at present by the Dialysis and Transplant Registries of various countries to evaluate dialyzed patients' comorbidity show great differences, mostly owing to the different epidemiological, social and racial characteristics of the studied populations. Moreover, the typology of the dialyzed patient is changing: the mean age is increasing, patients with high-risk conditions as vasculopathy and
diabetes
are widely accepted to the treatment. Thus the Piedmont Registry will be implemented as follows: new fields about comorbidity for clinical (blindness, cachexy and dementia), social (smoking, alcohol and drugs
addiction
) and diagnostic (type of
diabetes
, of neoplasm, of cardiovascular problem) parameters, and questions needing dichotomic response (vasculopathy yes or no) will be added. The exact time of appearance of any risk factor will be requested, and a field for "others" risk factors will be added as well, trying to deeply identify the dialytic population not affected by any comorbidity factor. Finally, a new improved control system of the collected data will be used: our registry needs to be implemented in the future by such evaluations, to go on giving useful informations about epidemiology of the dialyzed patients.
...
PMID:[Comorbidity factors in the dialysis registries and the experience of the Piedmontese Registry]. 957 61
Forty-five diabetic patients were studied to evaluate adaptation and coping strategies. The authors have also analysed personality traits mainly to study different behaviour in compliance conduct. The results revealed an important psychological dimension made up of difficulties in accepting insulin immediately, in fear of
addiction
and doubts about the therapy. On the basis of these results the sample was then divided into two subgroups, which were then tested and compared with the Adjective Check List. The subgroup that showed more fear, insecurity and initial resistance towards insulin therapy appeared to be more rigid and seemingly conforming. These people also revealed personality aspects compatible with the presence of passive-aggressive and avoidant traits.
Diabetes
Nutr Metab 2000 Feb
PMID:Personality variables and compliance with insulin therapy in Type 2 diabetic subjects. 1082 16
Caffeine, 1,3,7trimethylxanthine, is used by 80% of the adult population of the world in its various forms. Even the simple pleasure of consuming this socially acceptable drug has implications for the person with
diabetes mellitus
. Caffeine may increase an individual's sensitivity to hypoglycemia through the combined effects of reducing substrate delivery to the brain via constriction of the cerebral arteries, whilst simultaneously increasing brain glucose metabolism and augmenting catecholamine production. This article summarizes the evidence supporting the hypothesis that caffeine influences the perception of and physiological response to hypoglycemia. Under laboratory conditions, acute ingestion of caffeine markedly enhances the symptomatic and sympathoadrenal responses to hypoglycemia in both healthy volunteers and patients with type 1 diabetes. Recently a study of free-living people with type 1 diabetes showed that caffeine consumption increased the awareness of hypoglycemia. Caffeine has been associated with a number of negative effects and
addiction
. Most serious of these associations are ischemic heart disease and hypertension, the relationships have not been clearly established and the evidence to date is controversial. Thus we conclude that in modest doses, caffeine may be a useful adjuvant therapy for patients with hypoglycemia unawareness. For once here is a therapy which is inexpensive, safe, and remarkably popular with its consumers.
Diabetes
Technol Ther 1999
PMID:The best defense against hypoglycemia is to recognize it: is caffeine useful? 1147 92
This review illustrates, through a series of case histories, how oral medicine insights aid the diagnosis and management of patients with excessive tooth wear. The cases reviewed are drawn from the records of 500 southeast Queensland patients referred to the author over a 12 year period. Patients most at risk of dental erosion have work and sports dehydration, caffeine
addiction
, gastro-oesophageal reflux, asthma,
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension or other systemic diseases or syndromes that predispose to xerostomia. Saliva protects the teeth from the extrinsic and intrinsic acids which cause dental erosion. Erosion, exacerbated by attrition and abrasion, is the main cause of tooth wear. These cases illustrate that teeth, oral mucosa, salivary glands, skin and eyes should be examined for evidence of salivary hypofunction and attendant medical conditions. Based on comprehensive oral medicine, dietary analyses and advice, it would seem patients need self-management plans to deal with incipient chronic tooth wear. The alternative is the expensive treatment of pain, occlusal damage and pulp death required to repair the effects of acute severe tooth wear.
...
PMID:The oral medicine of tooth wear. 1183 70
Chronic pancreatitis has an incidence of 3-8 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants and year. Alcohol is the most common cause. It is, however, not an independent risk factor but rather a co-factor. Smoking and genetic predisposition are increasingly regarded as causative factors. The diagnosis is today based mainly on history and findings at imaging tests. Pain treatment starts with NSAID-medication with or without paracetamol. Oral pancreatic enzyme therapy for pain should be tested early in the course. Endoscopic stent insertion into the main pancreatic duct can be used in selected cases. Operation is not recommended until other less invasive methods have been tested but should ideally be performed before
addiction
to opiates occurs. Oral enzyme supplementation is effective in the majority of cases with malnutrition. Most patients with chronic pancreatitis and
diabetes
need insulin treatment. Interdisciplinary specialist treatment teams should be established and take responsibility for diagnosis, assessment and interventional procedures (e.g. endoscopy, surgery). Due to the low incidence of the disease 3-4 such teams/centres seem appropriate in our country to allow a critical patient load.
...
PMID:[Guidelines for management of patients with chronic pancreatitis. Report from a consensus conference]. 1295 11
Locomotor activity in Drosophila, as in other organisms, is an important trait since it is at the basis of almost all behaviours. Indeed, the locomotor centre is implicated in all complex behaviours consisting of a change in the position of the animal with respect to its environment. Despite its importance, locomotor activity itself has received sparse attention for the following two reasons: first, until recently, the study of locomotor activity has lacked a well automated and standardised paradigm which is necessary for a detailed description. Second, locomotor activity is complicated by many factors (genetic, feeding, temperature), and as such is rather difficult to study. With recent technological developments, locomotor activity is now more accessible to automated paradigms. These have permitted us to reveal that locomotor activity is a very complex and rich behaviour that follows strict rules, harbours an organised (fractal-like) structure, and consequently might adhere to highly organised neurophysiological processes. Undoubtedly, locomotor activity has now reached a scientific maturity that allows it to be studied with the panoply of neuroethological approaches, in particular genetic, to unravel its mechanisms and neural circuitry. Consequently, we propose that locomotor activity can now represent a relevant biomarker to study various model diseases such as
addiction
, Parkinson, Alzheimer, Huntington, and
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Locomotor activity: a complex behavioural trait to unravel. 1455 49
Millions of Medicare-age Americans are drug dependent, not because of
addiction
but because of common chronic health problems such as
diabetes
, heart failure, high blood pressure, and arthritis. Seniors are up in arms because drug company control of distribution and pricing of pharmaceuticals is eating away hard-earned nest eggs. Who cares? Where's the justice?
...
PMID:Your money or your life: a new variation on the Heinz Dilemma. 1498 8
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of opium on biochemical parameters in addicts with non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM). Twenty-three males and 26 females between 35 and 65 years of age, with NIDDM, addicted to opium, were selected as the case group. Twenty-three males and 26 females with NIDDM and no opium
addiction
served as controls. Fasting glucose, glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), total cholesterol, high density lipoproteins-cholesterol (HDL-c), triglycerides (TGs), sodium (Na(+)), potassium (K(+)), calcium (Ca(2+)), iron (Fe(2+)), total iron binding capacity (TIBC), serum total protein, albumin, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), uric acid and urea were measured in the serum of the two groups. Serum protein electrophoresis was also carried out. Compared to the control group, in addicted males with NIDDM, HbA1c, K(+) and Fe(2+) were higher, and serum total protein, ALT and HDL-c were lower. No significant difference was observed between other factors. Albumin was lower in addicts, but no significant difference was observed between the albumin/globulin ratios. In addicted females with NIDDM, serum total protein, TIBC, ALT and AST were lower compared to non-addicts. Cholesterol tends to be lower in diabetic addicted males, HbA1c in addicted females and uric acid in addicted males was higher compared to non-addicted diabetics. Their differences, however, were not significant. According to our results, smoking opium increases serum glucose and decreases HDL-c, and thus adds to metabolic disorders in NIDDM patients. It also increases potassium and Fe(2) in males and decreases TIBC in females, and could therefore potentially interfere with water and iron metabolism.
...
PMID:Effects of opium addiction on some serum factors in addicts with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 1520 39
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