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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a case of
chronic pancreatitis
of the head of the pancreas complicated with insulin-requiring
diabetes mellitus
, in a 44-year-old woman with hypoplasia of the dorsal pancreas. Preoperative ultrasonography, computerized tomography and angiography revealed a calcifying retroperitoneal mass, which on explorative laparotomy proved to be a severe
chronic pancreatitis
of the head of the pancreas with a finding of abnormal visibility of the confluens venosum and absence of both the corpus and the tail of the pancreas. The postoperative course following pylorus-preserving duodenopancreatectomy was uneventful.
...
PMID:[Chronic pancreatitis of the head of the pancreas in hyperplasia of the body and tail of the pancreas]. 135 61
Chronic pancreatitis
is defined by a persistent destruction of the pancreatic parenchyma replaced by fibrosis. The lesions generally start in the exocrine gland, islets being attacked later in the fibrosis. The two most frequent forms are: 1. Chronic calcifying pancreatitis which is a pancreatic lithiasis responsible for more than 95% of
chronic pancreatitis
. In its most frequent form, calculi are built up of more than 98% calcium salts together with fibres of a degraded residue of lithostathine, a secretory protein. This disease is related (i) in most countries to alcohol, protein, fat and tobacco and (ii) in certain tropical countries to malnutrition (low-fat, low-protein diet) for some generations. A causative role for cassava and kwashiorkor is improbable. The mechanism of calcium precipitation is partly explained by the calcium-saturation of pancreatic juice and the decreased biosynthesis of lithostathine S, the secretory protein preventing crystallization. As a rule,
diabetes
(and steatorrhoea) appear after a clinical evolution characterized by recurrent attacks of upper abdominal pain, generally lasting some days with transiently increased concentrations of pancreatic enzymes in serum. When
diabetes
appears, pain frequently disappears. Complications are mostly observed in the first 10 years of clinical evolution. 2. Obstructive pancreatitis is due to an obstacle (tumours, scars) in the pancreatic duct. It is rarely a cause of
diabetes
.
Diabetes
due to
chronic pancreatitis
is characterized by the low incidence of ketosis and the high incidence of insulin-induced hypoglycaemia. Patients are generally thin. Serum insulin levels, either basal or stimulated, are decreased. Glucagon is less affected. Angiopathies and retinopathies are less frequent than in non-insulin-dependent
diabetes
. Neural complications are fairly frequent. The diagnosis is generally easy because
diabetes
appears at a late stage of the disease. The treatment generally requires insulin.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis and diabetes. 144 67
Exocrine and endocrine function of the pancreas was assessed in the early postoperative period (< or = 2 months) and subsequently (mean, 25 months; range, 3 to 120) in 103 patients (69 men, 34 women; mean age, 42.4 +/- 11.6 years) undergoing operation for
chronic pancreatitis
. Alcohol was the main causative agent (69%) and pain the most frequent indication (87%) for operation. Drainage procedures (n = 23) did not alter pancreatic function either initially or on long-term follow-up. In the early postoperative period, distal pancreatectomy (n = 42) often impaired endocrine function without affecting exocrine function; seven patients (17%) became diabetic, and results of oral glucose tolerance test showed deterioration in 23 of 28 patients (82%, p < 0.05). On subsequent follow-up, 11 patients developed exocrine failure (p < 0.01) and 10 patients endocrine (p < 0.01) failure. Proximal pancreatectomy (n = 38) precipitated clinical exocrine failure in 14 patients (37%, p < 0.01), yet pancreolauryl tests in 18 patients showed little objective change in exocrine status (0.50 > p > 0.10). Endocrine function was initially spared after proximal pancreatectomy, but six additional patients (16%, p < 0.05) required treatment for
diabetes
at a mean of 19 months (range, 3 to 34). Deterioration in pancreatic function is thus not an invariable immediate consequence of pancreatic drainage procedures or partial pancreatectomy for
chronic pancreatitis
. Progression of disease must account, in part, for failure of both exocrine and endocrine function on long-term follow-up. Drainage operations appear to delay this progressive decline in pancreatic function.
...
PMID:Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine function after operations for chronic pancreatitis. 146 19
A 'screening' test is needed to identify patients with
chronic pancreatitis
among diabetics in tropical field surveys. We have examined the potential diagnostic yield of the BT-PABA/PAS test of exocrine pancreatic function in this setting. The recoveries of both PABA and PAS in eight healthy controls from Madras, south India, were lower than in controls from Manchester, north west England (mean +/- S.D., 51 +/- 11 vs. 79 +/- 7%, P < 0.001 for PABA; 52 +/- 11% vs. 81 +/- 7%, P < 0.001 for PAS) but the % PABA/PAS excretion index (PEI) was similar (0.96 +/- 0.14 vs. 0.96 +/- 0.06). Using a cut-off value of 0.75 for the PEI in a study group including eight patients with
chronic pancreatitis
and 26 with primary forms of
diabetes
, test sensitivity was 75%, specificity 92%, positive predictive value 75%, negative predictive value 92% and efficiency 88%.
...
PMID:The BT-PABA/PAS test in tropical diabetes. 147 73
Thirty-five patients with
chronic pancreatitis
(CP) treated over a 15-year-period were studied. There were 29 men and 6 women with a mean age of 47 years (range 21-67). Twenty-seven (77%) were chronic alcoholics, two (6%) had gallstones, one had stenosis of the Ampulla of Vater and in five (14%) no obvious cause was found. Thirty patients (86%) presented with abdominal pain. Chronic diarrhoea was present in 8 (23%), and steatorrhoea was documented in 6 of these. Fifteen (43%) had pancreatic calcifications. Five developed pseudocysts and 16 (46%) developed
diabetes mellitus
. Twelve patients required surgery. Three continue to have severe recurrent relapses of pain but the majority (91%) have had a relatively stable course with medical management.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis in Jamaica. 152 34
The frequency of
diabetes
is much higher in tropical calcific pancreatitis (TCP) as compared with alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
. We report 97 patients with tropical calcific pancreatitis and compare the profile of 21 patients without
diabetes
(called TCP for the purpose of this report) with that of 76 patients with
diabetes
, called fibrocalculous pancreatic
diabetes
(FCPD) according to the World Health Organization (WHO) study group classification of
diabetes
. TCP patients were a decade younger and had marginally higher body mass indices (BMIs) as compared with the FCPD group. Of the TCP patients, 13 had abnormal glucose tolerance tests (GTT) and the others had normal GTT. Immunoreactive insulin (IRI) responses to glucose load in the TCP group did not differ significantly from that of the control group. This study shows the existence of early stages of glucose intolerance in TCP.
...
PMID:Clinical and biochemical studies in the prediabetic phase of tropical calcific pancreatitis. 155 37
In a comparative study of tropical
chronic pancreatitis
(TCP) and alcoholic
chronic pancreatitis
(ACP) occurring in the same population, we analyzed the clinical profile of 50 patients of ACP seen over the past 3 years at our centers and compared this with the profile of our TCP patients. A majority (75%) of patients in both groups belonged to Tamil Nadu and 90% had never consumed cassava. Whereas TCP occurred in young subjects of both sexes, ACP patients were all males and presented at an older age. The frequency of pain,
diabetes
, and pancreatic calcification was similar in the two groups. Patients in both groups were lean, but signs of severe malnutrition were rare. Prediabetic patients had normal body mass index. There were striking differences in radiological appearance of pancreatic calculi in TCP and ACP. Malignancy of the pancreas was present in three patients with TCP. Benign bile duct stenosis was seen in three patients with ACP but not in TCP. Compared to ACP seen in the West, our ACP patients had a shorter duration of symptoms in spite of having advanced disease. TCP and ACP have distinct clinical profiles and it is possible that some environmental factors may hasten the progress of ACP in the tropics.
...
PMID:Comparative study of the clinical profiles of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis and tropical chronic pancreatitis in Tamil Nadu, south India. 155 46
Glomerular hyperfiltration, a risk factor for diabetic nephropathy, has been reported in type I insulin-dependent diabetics, but it is not clear if it occurs in other types of
diabetes
. To ascertain the prevalence of glomerular hyperfiltration in various types of
diabetes
, we measured glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in 158 diabetics (91 type I, 36 type II without insulin treatment, 20 type II with insulin treatment, and 11 subjects with
diabetes
secondary to
chronic pancreatitis
), and classified them as hyper-, normo-, or hypofiltration according to values measured in 36 age-match controls. After elimination of subjects with overt renal disease or hypertension, glomerular hyperfiltration was detected in 35% of the type I diabetics, 32% of the type II diabetics without insulin treatment, one subject with
chronic pancreatitis
, and one type II diabetics with insulin treatment. Glomerular hyperfiltration was associated with high blood glucose in type I, insulin-dependent diabetics, and with a high apolipoprotein B/A1 ratio in type II, non-insulin-dependent diabetics without insulin treatment. In all subjects with glomerular hyperfiltration, GFR values and urinary albumin excretion were positively related (r = 0.33; n = 34; p = 0.05). Glomerular hyperfiltration is detectable among all types of diabetics.
J
Diabetes
Complications
PMID:Glomerular hyperfiltration in type I, type II, and secondary diabetes. 156 54
In a 4-year review of 509 patients with
chronic pancreatitis
, the incidence of clinically manifest fixed common bile duct (CBD) stenosis was 9% (45 patients). In 76% this was alcohol related, and pancreatic calcification was present in 51%. All patients presented with unrelenting jaundice and five (11%) had cholangitis. The mean serum bilirubin (165 +/- 108, normal 0-17 mumol/l), alkaline phosphatase (1790 +/- 1143, normal 73-207 U/l) and gamma glutamyl transferase (798 +/- 660, normal 7-64 U/l) were markedly raised.
Diabetes
occurred in 8 (18%). A biliary drainage operation was performed in 43 patients and 11 had concomitant pancreaticojejunostomy. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ECRP) provided valuable information preoperatively in outlining both biliary and pancreatic disease in selecting patients for dual ductal drainage. Minor complications not related to biliary anastomosis occurred in 14%. Four patients died (9%), two from pseudocyst-related haemorrhage. Jaundice was successfully relieved in all and did not recur during follow-up. No secondary biliary cirrhosis was encountered, but varying degrees of portal fibrosis were present in 75% of liver biopsies. The commonest biliary pathogen was E. coli. It is recommended that a biliary bypass operation be performed when the diagnosis is radiologically confirmed and no improvement occurs within 1 month.
...
PMID:Chronic pancreatitis with biliary obstruction. 156 30
The present study describes various strategies of coping with illness as observed in pancreatectomy patients, a group of patients which has not been investigated before in this field of research. Questionnaire data obtained from a sample of n = 134 were analyzed with regard to sociodemographic (age, sex) and medical characteristics (indication for surgery:
chronic pancreatitis
vs. pancreatic carcinoma; outcome after surgery:
diabetes
, hypoglycemia, pain). The relationships between ways of coping and several adaptation criteria were investigated. The question is put up to discussion, if it is possible to clearly separate emotion as a way of coping and emotion as an outcome of coping.
...
PMID:Coping and adaptation in pancreatectomized patients: a somatopsychic perspective. 158 94
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