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

In the near term human fetus disturbed behavioural state organization has been found in cases of intra-uterine growth retardation or maternal type-1-diabetes. The present case report describes abnormal fetal behavioural state organization found in combination with maternal alcohol abuse during pregnancy. The abnormalities included frequent interruptions of the periods of concordant association of 2F-parameters, reflected by a high proportion of no-coincidence, and spontaneous awakenings (State 4F), always following stable periods of State 1F. The latter phenomenon was not found thus far by us or others, neither in normal nor in complicated pregnancies. After birth normal state organization was found. It is suggested that the abnormalities in fetal behaviour might have been due to maternal alcohol abuse, whereas a possible withdrawal effect might have occurred in utero.
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PMID:Abnormal fetal behavioural state regulation in a case of high maternal alcohol intake during pregnancy. 380 76

233 patients with erysipelas, admitted to the Department of Infectious Diseases, Danderyd Hospital, during a 2-year period were analysed for epidemiological, bacteriological and complicating features. Erysipelas was defined clinically as a febrile skin infection with a sudden onset of a red indurated expanding plaque with a distinct border. Common predisposing factors were alcohol abuse, diabetes mellitus and venous insufficiency, and complications were more common among such patients. No seasonal variation was found. 5% of patients with blood culture had streptococcemia (7/149). Erysipelas emerging from an infected ulcer was seen in 52% (122/233) and in 46% of these streptococci were isolated (57/122), 67% of which were of type A (38/57). Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from 59% of ulcerative cases (72/122) and in 3 of them staphylococci were found in the blood.
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PMID:Epidemiological, bacteriological and complicating features of erysipelas. 381 46

The practical implications of the new Marseilles classification (1984) of pancreatitis are discussed and the present-day diagnostic methods critically reviewed. The new classification distinguishes between two typical long-term profiles, i.e. acute (reversible) and chronic (progressive) pancreatitis. Modern diagnostic tests such as sonography, CT, ERCP and the secretin-CCK test do not provide a "gold standard" for early chronic pancreatitis. Thus, long-term studies of function and morphology are needed to differentiate chronic pancreatitis (progressive dysfunction, calcification, ERP changes) from acute (reversible) pancreatitis. The etiology is a helpful prognostic guide since gallstone pancreatitis virtually never becomes chronic. However, alcoholic "acute" pancreatitis may not always progress to chronic pancreatitis. Drug or surgical treatment of pain is symptomatic and empirical, since the pathomechanisms of pain are poorly understood. A prerequisite for optimum therapy is exact staging of the disease into: uncomplicated early stages with short, self-limiting episodes of pancreatitis: conservative therapy, persistent pain, mainly due to pseudocysts (diagnosis by morphological tests): surgical therapy, advanced painless forms of chronic pancreatitis associated with diabetes and/or steatorrhea: diet and substitution therapy. After successful surgical drainage persistent pain subsides, but postoperative episodic recurrences of pancreatitis are common in the early stages of the disease and in association with continued alcohol intake. However, spontaneous pain relief occurs in all cases in the late stages of the disease and with progressive pancreatic dysfunction (despite continued alcohol abuse).
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PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of chronic alcoholic pancreatitis. A critical review of the status]. 390 86

According to the Authors the discussion of the relationships between alcohol and diabetes should be a main step within a "personalized" program for the education of the diabetic patient, especially in region where alcohol consumption is very high and deeply rooted in tradition, habits and social life. Therefore the Authors propose a teaching program based on 6 points, touching the most important aspects. That must be known in order to avoid, at least partially, the short period complications, connected with the relationship between diabetes mellitus and alcohol abuse.
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PMID:[Implications of excessive use of alcoholic beverages in the treatment of diabetes mellitus. Importance of a personalized instruction program for the prevention of short-term complications]. 400 May 37

Carbohydrate and lipid metabolism were studied in 10 patients who had undergone total pancreatectomy. The results were compared with Type I diabetic patients and normal subjects, all of whom were matched for age, sex and weight. At the same level of glycemic control, the daily need for insulin was significantly lower in the patients with pancreatogenic diabetes than in those with Type I diabetes. Concentrations of serum total VLDL and HDL triglyceride were higher in the pancreatectomized patients than in the diabetic or normal controls, whereas concentrations of serum total and LDL cholesterol were significantly lower. The composition of the VLDL, LDL and HDL particles was abnormal in the totally pancreatectomized patients as all three lipoprotein fractions were enriched in triglyceride. HDL2 cholesterol was similar in the totally pancreatectomized patients to that in the other two groups but HDL3 cholesterol was lower. Postheparin plasma lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase activities were normal. It is concluded that in totally pancreatectomized patients the changes in the lipoprotein profile on reflect more the action of various confounding factors, i.e. malabsorption, continuance of alcohol abuse and dietary changes than the impact of the diabetes itself.
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PMID:Glycemic control and serum lipoproteins after total pancreatectomy. 405 43

Three women with chronic pancreatitis who were observed for 4-29 years showed spontaneous improvement in exocrine function as assessed by symptoms and by reduction in fecal excretion of fat. One patient had a reduction in the severity of diabetes mellitus, while another showed a progressive increase in the maximum bicarbonate concentration in duodenal juice after the intravenous injection of secretin. Improvement in pancreatic function followed cessation of alcohol in two patients in whom chronic pancreatitis was associated with alcohol abuse.
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PMID:Spontaneous improvement in pancreatic function in chronic pancreatitis. 406 63

Alterations in lipid metabolism have been reported under treatment of various skin disorders with oral retinoids. In 36 patients, mostly psoriatics, under administration of aromatic retinoid (Ro 10-9359) in various dosages serum triglycerides and cholesterol were estimated; in 25 out of 36 patients lipid analysis of the lipoproteins and apoproteins A (HDL) and B (LDL) has been performed. To reveal possible similarities of lipid changes under the two main retinoids we determined the same parameter in 10 patients with conglobate acne treated orally with 13-cis-retinoic acid (isotretinoin/Ro 4-3780 1mg/kg b.w.). Under both drugs serum triglyceride and cholesterol levels were significantly increased. In contrast to the results under the aromatic derivate the HDL- and LDL-cholesterol fractions were changed under isotretinoin. The apoprotein A (HDL) was found significantly increased under aromatic retinoid. Elevated serum lipids mostly occurred in patients having risk factors such as preexisting lipid abnormalities, obesity, diabetes mellitus, heavy smoking, alcohol abuse and hyperlipemia-inducing drugs. Patients to be treated with these drugs should be carefully followed up in order to minimize the risk for atheromatosis.
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PMID:[Changes in serum lipid fractions as a side effect of oral retinoids]. 621 75

A series of 108 prospectively collected human pancreata were evaluated histologically for the presence of acinar cell and ductal lesions. Foci of dysplastic acinar cells were present in 44% of the series. Some of the focal acinar cell abnormalities were similar to atypical acinar cell nodules which have been described in carcinogen-treated experimental animals. The incidence of nodules was higher among patients with a history of heavy cigarette smoking than among nonsmokers, and among patients with a history of alcohol abuse than among abstainers. The presence of dysplastic acinar cell nodules in a pancreas seemed unrelated to the presence of cancer in other sites, or diabetes. Ductal epithelial abnormalities were more frequent than focal acinar cell dysplasia.
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PMID:Focal acinar cell dysplasia in human pancreas. 624 10

An analysis of the limited available data confirms that the health status of Australia's Aborigines remains much worse than that of non-Aboriginal Australians. Despite significant improvements over the past decade Aboriginal fetal and infant mortality is still approximately three times that of non-Aborigines. Aboriginal life expectancy remains at least twenty years less than that of the total Australian population. Levels of Aboriginal hospitalisation have declined markedly, but remain well in excess of overall levels, particularly for infants and children. For Aborigines, the reduced overall impact of the communicable diseases has been balanced by a worsening of the "lifestyle" diseases, particularly hypertension, coronary heart disease and diabetes mellitus. Alcohol abuse plays an important role in these diseases, and in the level of accidents and violence amongst Aborigines. The current patterns require a reassessment of Aboriginal health priorities, with more attention being directed at the health problems of Aboriginal adults. Special Aboriginal health programs need to be expanded, and integrated with broad wide-ranging programs aimed at alleviating Aboriginal social inequality.
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PMID:Aboriginal health--current status. 639 81

Ten patients with fatty liver, distinct from the well known diffuse alcoholic variety, comprise this report. All patients had an initial ultrasound examination followed by 99mTc-sulfur colloid liver and computed tomography (CT) body scans. Six patients had focal fatty infiltration producing a space-occupying mass within the liver. Four had ultrasound evidence of diffuse fat occurring in association with focal masses. These masses were all echo poor relative to the adjacent fat, and were subsequently found to represent nodules of normal uninvolved liver in two patients, and metastatic neoplasm and multiple liver cysts in single patients respectively. The clinical picture associated with fatty liver is variable and may include, in addition to alcohol abuse, obesity, malnutrition, exogenous glucocorticoids, diabetes mellitus, and other less well defined factors. Dramatic improvement in fatty liver occurred in two patients following appropriate therapy. The spectrum of changes produced by fatty infiltration of the liver on ultrasonic, radionuclide, and CT scans is extremely varied depending on the amount of fat deposition, its focal or generalized nature, and the presence of associated liver disease.
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PMID:Fatty infiltration of the liver--an imaging challenge. 716


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