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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This article deals with two new cases of perforating generalized granuloma annulare characterized, from a clinical and biological standpoint, by a long course of evolution for one case and the presence of
diabetes
and
dyslipidemia
for the other case. Histologic study confirms the possible coexistence of typical granuloma annulare lesions with epidermic corbelar aspects pinching necrotic material which could lead to complete epidermic perforation. Based on the study of previous cases in the literature, the process of transepidermic elimination and the actual pathophysiologic concepts of granuloma annulare are reviewed. From the therapeutic standpoint, if the first case did not appear to profit from the administration of an alkylating agent, the second case seems to be presently improved through gluco-lipid re-equilibrium associated with lipocaic heparin.
...
PMID:[Perforating generalized granuloma annulare. A two case study (author's transl)]. 616 91
The influence of age and other risk factors (history of hypertension and
diabetes
, cigarette smoking,
dyslipidemia
) on cerebral atherosclerosis was studied in 462 patients with RIA who had cerebral angiography. The degree of atherosclerosis was quantified using extracranial and intracranial cerebrovascular scores (ECS, ICS) based on the number and severity of the lesion in 11 extracranial and 21 intracranial arterial segments. Thirty-six percent of the patients under age 45 had a normal angiogram compared with 17% of the patients over 45. In the subgroup of patients with abnormal angiogram the mean ECS and ICS vascular scores were not significantly different in the two age groups. Cigarette smoking was the only risk factor to show a strong association with the extracranial score, and it was independent of the effect of age and other risk factors.
...
PMID:Italian multicenter study on reversible cerebral ischemic attacks: III--Influence of age and risk factors on cerebrovascular atherosclerosis. 670 47
The case of a 26 year old woman who had been taking tranexamic acid to prevent uterine bleeding due to an IUD and who died from thrombosis of the left internal carotid artery is reported. The patient's father had died at age 54 of myocardial infarction. Otherwise the family history was entirely negative for thromboembolic disease. The patient was a mild smoker. She had been previously healthy and in particular, she was not affected with hypertension,
diabetes
, or
dyslipidemia
. She had carried to term 2 uncomplicated pregnancies. 40 days prior to hospital admission her gynecologist had inserted an IUD. The insertion of the IUD was followed by persistent uterine bleeding, and for this reason she began treatment with tranexamic acid (1.5 g/daily). Uterine bleeding persisted despite this treatment, and the IUD was removed. Because of persistence of a mild uterine bleeding, tranexamic acid was continued. 2 hours before admission the patient suddenly presented a left sided hemiparesis with disarthria and vomiting. On admission she was stuporous. The left side of her face drooped and the strength of the left arm and leg was markedly decreased. Both arm and leg reflexes were symmetrical. Her blood pressure was 110/70. An electroencephalogram on arrival confirmed a right sided cerebral lesion. Subsequently the patient's condition deteriorated rapidly. She developed a full left hemiplegia and became deeply comatose. A CAT scan performed 4 hours after admission showed no abnormalities. A CAT scan performed 3 days after admission showed a large cerebral infarction involving nearly the whole right cerebral hemisphere. The patient's condition remained essentially unchanged until she died 6 days after admission. Permission for autopsy was refused. Antifibrinolytic drugs competitively inhibit plasminogen activators and noncompetitively plasmin. Thromboembolic complications after the administration of antifibrinolytic drugs have long been recognized. The use of IUDs is often associated with troublesome uterine bleeding and particularly excessive menstrual bleeding. To avoid these complaints, antifibrinolytic drugs are increasingly used.
...
PMID:Tranexamic acid, intrauterine contraceptive devices and fatal cerebral arterial thrombosis. Case report. 710 62
56 cerebral ischemia patients up to the age of 40 were investigated using a strict clinical and instrumental protocol in order to elicit the relative importance of the various iatrogenic factors involved. In addition to atherosclerosis risk factors (smoking, hypertension, ischemic heart disease,
diabetes
,
dyslipidemia
) other possible causes of cerebral ischemia were sought (arteritis, migraine, head injury, oral contraceptives, coagulation disorders, cardiogenic embolism, etc.). 50% of the patients examined had at least two atherosclerosis risk factors and 55% had other causes singly or in association with atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Cerebral ischemia in young adults. 733 59
We studied outcome of management of metabolic cardiovascular risk factors in 155 randomly chosen Hispanic hypertensive patients (mean age, 63 +/- 1 years; 79% female) screened for
dyslipidemia
. Hypertriglyceridemia (n = 12) or high risk-adjusted low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) (n = 89) was found in 65%. Triglycerides did not change (6.16 +/- 0.58 to 7.44 +/- 2.34 mmol/L; P = NS) over 2.2 +/- 0.5 years. Only 58 patients with high LDL-C were treated, and 8 had no follow-up lipid tests. In the other 50, LDL-C decreased by 10 +/- 3% (P < .001) over 2.8 +/- 0.2 years but attained goal in only 12. In a subset of 24 patients with extended follow-up (3.8 +/- 0.2 years), there was an initial marked decline in LDL-C, followed by a rebound to baseline levels. In 29 of 54 patients with normal LDL-C, lipid testing was markedly overused compared with recommendations. Obesity (n = 94, 61%) did not improve in those with repeated data (+0.6 +/- 0.8 kg; P = NS; n = 40) over 2.7 +/- 0.3 years. Forty-four of 63 patients with type II
diabetes
had repeated measurement of glycosylated hemoglobin, with no change (10.5 +/- 0.5% to 11.2 +/- 0.5%; P = NS) over 2.2 +/- 0.3 years. Ten-year risk of coronary events (Framingham cohort parametric regression) calculated for 61 patients with known untreated blood pressures (169 +/- 3/98 +/- 1 mm Hg) was 21.0 +/- 1.7%, with a skewed distribution reaching high values (66%) and attributable in large part (72%) to modifiable risk factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Suboptimal outcome of management of metabolic cardiovascular risk factors in Hispanic patients with essential hypertension. 749 72
Hypertension is associated with insulin resistance and
dyslipidemia
in a syndrome named X. Epidemiologic evidence also supports a link between hyperinsulinemia and blood pressure (BP), independent of obesity and non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
. To assess the possible role of insulin receptors in this syndrome, we studied insulin binding by erythrocyte ghosts in patients with moderate essential hypertension with or without fasting or postglucose hyperinsulinemia. We measured plasma glucose and insulin before and at 30, 60, and 120 min after administration of 75 g glucose in 62 hypertensive patients and 20 matched normotensive controls. Both groups had comparable age (mean 45 years) and waist/hip ratios (mean 0.88). Patients undergoing antihypertensive treatment did not receive antihypertensive medication for 3 weeks. Patients with fasting or postglucose hyperglycemia were excluded from the study. Insulin binding to erythrocyte ghosts was significantly decreased (p < 0.001) to almost half the values of controls (6.5% specific binding) in both patients with hyperinsulinemic (3.2% specific binding) and those with normoinsulinemic (3.9% specific binding) hypertension. Scatchard analysis demonstrated that this was due to a lesser number of insulin receptors. These data indicate that patients with essential hypertension can show decreased erythrocyte insulin receptors without detectable hyperinsulinemia.
...
PMID:Diminished insulin receptors on erythrocyte ghosts in nonobese patients with essential hypertension independent of hyperinsulinemia. 752 93
The long-term effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (captopril and enalapril), calcium-entry blockers (diltiazem and nicardipine), and good glycemic control on plasma lipids and lipoproteins were studied in streptozotocin diabetic rats. Diabetic rats had increased plasma cholesterol, tryiglycerides, very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and decreased levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol than in normal rats. Compared to other antihypertensives, nicardipine seems to have a less beneficial effect on lipids and lipoproteins. However, it is only the good glycemic control that normalized these plasma lipids and lipoproteins in diabetic rats. This suggests that good glycemic control prevents
dyslipidemia
in diabetic rats. The observed beneficial effects of antihypertensives were unrelated to either food or water intake.
J
Diabetes
Complications
PMID:Long-term effects of antihypertensive treatment and good glycemic control on plasma lipids in diabetic rats. 754 80
The epidemic of coronary artery disease (CAD), the main cause of deaths in 'western' countries, could have been avoided through appropriate lifestyles of eating and activities. The dramatic decline in CAD in some countries is more difficult to attribute to changes that is the rapid rise in eastern European countries (high dietary saturated fat plus smoking). While CAD rates in Asian/Pacific countries are relatively low, subgroups, mainly through affluence, show high rates. Inappropriate eating patterns are superimposed on genetic factors (commonly
diabetes
in Asia) and on other lifestyle factors (smoking). Eventually the combination of
dyslipidemia
('high triglyceride-low high density lipoprotein' in Asia Pacific rim), plus smoking plus hypertension (part salt related) may trigger a CAD epidemic. The challenge is better public health management including balancing the nature of the food supply with the nutritional needs for preventing CAD through national food and nutrition policies. Critical are the sources of fats (often key economic commodities), the amount of salt, preventing obesity especially of the central type, and provision of plant foods with a better understood mix of fatty acids, antioxidants and specific starches and nonstarch polysaccharides. The anti-atherogenic effects of specific antioxidants and of n-3 fatty acids in fish probably explain the lower than expected CAD rates in several countries. Although many of the risk factors are common, important regional differences demand national strategies, while providing wider perspectives on the multifactorial nature of the disease and the value of certain traditional diets.
...
PMID:Controlling coronary risk through nutrition. 758
Cigarette smoking has been associated with increased upper body fat deposition, as estimated by the waist to hip ratio, which has been shown to be associated with glucose intolerance and
dyslipidemia
in nonsmoking subjects. Whether smoking is at the origin of central adiposity and its related metabolic disturbances is unclear. Moreover, it is controversial whether smoking influences fuel metabolism. Therefore, young healthy male volunteers smoking more than 10 cigarettes/day for more than 5 yr (n = 14) were compared with nonsmokers (n = 13) matched for age, sex, body mass index, alcohol consumption, physical activity, as well as family history for hypertension,
diabetes
, obesity, and coronary heart disease. After an overnight fast, blood was drawn for chemistry, body composition was assessed by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry, and fuel metabolism was determined by indirect calorimetry. Nicotine uptake was estimated by 24-h urinary excretion of cotinine. Lean and fat body mass as well as their respective segmental distribution (i.e. arms, trunk, legs, and head), total bone mineral content, resting energy expenditure, and fat, carbohydrate, and protein oxidation were similar between smokers and nonsmokers. In contrast, 24-h urinary cotinine excretion (72.0 +/- 11.4 vs. 0.8 +/- 0.2 mumol/L.24 h; P < 0.001), plasma glucose (4.62 +/- 0.09 vs. 4.25 +/- 0.1 mmol/L; P < 0.01), total cholesterol (4.87 +/- 0.15 vs. 4.27 +/- 0.16 mmol/L; P < 0.02), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (3.05 +/- 0.19 vs. 2.43 +/- 0.16 mmol/L; P < 0.02), and apolipoprotein B concentrations (1.09 +/- 0.11 vs. 0.83 +/- 0.03 mmol/L; P < 0.03) were all higher in smokers than in nonsmokers. In smokers, 24-h urinary cotinine excretion positively correlated with the waist to hip ratio (r = 0.58; P = 0.03) and negatively with hip circumference (r = 0.87; P < 0.001). Moreover, 24-h cotinine excretion positively correlated with fat oxidation (r = 0.57; P = 0.03), but was independent of the other metabolic parameters studied. These results suggest that the
dyslipidemia
and glucose intolerance observed in smokers are not related to either central obesity or the amount of nicotine inhaled, but, rather, are due to some other component in cigarette smoke. In contrast, in smokers, fat oxidation increases with increasing nicotine uptake, a fact that might account for the often observed weight gain after cessation of smoking, thus suggesting different mechanisms of action of tobacco consumption on cholesterol and glucose metabolism on one side and fat oxidation on the other.
...
PMID:Impact of chronic cigarette smoking on body composition and fuel metabolism. 760 76
Several risk factors for the development of microalbuminuria such as: blood glucose unbalance, high blood pressure,
dyslipidemia
, genetic susceptibility have been described and discussed. The object of this study was to ascertain the importance of these factors. To this end albuminuria was measured using MICRAL-test in two groups of subjects: 100 diabetics (43 type I (insulin-dependent) and 57 type II (non insulin-dependent), and 54 controls. According to
diabetes
duration, the cases were divided into four sub-groups (less than 5 years; 5-9 yrs; 10-19 yrs; over 20 yrs). The mean values of albuminuria were assessed in the two groups (diabetics and controls) and also for each subgroup of
diabetes
duration. It was found that in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM), the duration of the disease is an important determinant of albuminuria, a significant increase in its values being observed after 10 yrs of
diabetes
evolution. The importance of
diabetes
duration, glucose unbalance and high blood pressure (BP) as possible determinants of microalbuminuria was assessed by comparing the micro- and normoalbuminuric diabetics. Our results are similar to those reported by many other authors, showing that these are important risk factors for microalbuminuria, especially in IDDM.
...
PMID:Determinants of microalbuminuria in diabetics. 761 2
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