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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with diffusely increased uptake in both kidneys (often referred to as "host kidneys") on Tc-99m-MDP bone imaging were evaluated. Among 2056 patients reviewed, this finding was seen in 13 patients (0.63%): four with liver cirrhosis, two with
lung cancer
, one each with primary hepatoma, Hodgkin's disease, malignant lymphoma, thyroid cancer, leukemia, sideroblastic anemia and
diabetes mellitus
. Renal vascular disease and iron overload are considered to be the major causes of this finding.
...
PMID:Diffusely increased Tc-99m-MDP uptake in both kidneys. 645 33
Studies of the increased or decreased risk of specific physical diseases in patients with schizophrenia and affective disorder are reviewed. Existing data suggest further examination of the following relationships: (1) the presence in schizophrenics of increased incidence of gastrointestinal cancer and of cardiovascular and infectious diseases, and of decreased incidence of
lung cancer
and rheumatoid arthritis; and (2) the increased incidence of circulatory, respiratory, and atopic diseases, and of
diabetes mellitus
among patients with major affective disorder. A majority of the studies reviewed failed to meet methodologic standards necessary to provide conclusive evidence. An ongoing research project which generally meets these standards, the Oxford Record Linkage Study, is described.
...
PMID:Physical diseases in schizophrenia and affective disorder. 682 29
A multivariate analysis employing the multiple logistic function model has been performed for the prediction of coronary heart disease (CHD) deaths and of other causes of death as function of 14 coronary risk factors measured at entry examination in the pool of two Italian rural population samples, made of 1712 men aged 40-59 at entry and followed for 15 years. A limited number of factors--namely age, serum cholesterol, blood pressure, smoking habits, forced expiratory volume,
diabetes
--yielded significant coefficients variously associated each other in the different solutions. They were able to provide a satisfactory discrimination between cases and non cases, not only for CHD but also for other end-points including strokes, cancer and
lung cancer
in particular, chronic bronchitis, and all causes of death. A suggestive prediction of violent causes of death was possible thank to a significant coefficient attributable to blood pressure. Serum cholesterol was significantly contributory only in the prediction of CHD. The multipotentiality of some factors is stressed in view of the planning of community prevention programs directed towards several chronic conditions at the same time.
...
PMID:Coronary risk factors predicting coronary and other causes of death in fifteen years. 697 Apr 76
As health is concerned with all aspects of human life, in a developing country like India plans for improvement of health services to ensure maintenance of health of the population should be an integral part of the total and overall development program. Modern public health measures are facing a difficult situation because of population growth. In regard to population structure, 2 age groups have been a concern of the health services, namely those 0-15 years and those 65 and older. The child's group constituted 42-44% of the total population, now reduced to 38.2% in 1982 and is a heavy dependent group particularly if another contingent of 20.4% in the 15-24 age group and requiring education is added. With an increasing life expectancy, there is now more than a 6% accumulation of aged persons in need of support. The Indian Council of Medical Research has established a National Institute of Nutrition and a Food and Drug Technology Center at Hyderabad, both of which have been doing useful work on nutrition and food technology. Both the history of public health during the last 100 years and all recent studies and observations amply demonstrate the dominant role played by the environment in the development of physical health and well-being of individuals and the community. The majority of iillnesses in a rural setting arise from 3 situations--pollution of water, soil, and air. A serious consequence of uncontrolled use of insecticides has been the health problems arising out of their toxic effects on persons handling them and on the people consuming contaminated foodstuff. Another effect on the health services is the increasing conversion of the vector insects to resistant form. In the field of communicable diseases the problems are vast and varied in India. For tackling all diseases a need exists for training courses to produce field epidemiologists. Among the noncommunicable diseases there is a definite rising trend in cancer, coronary heart disease, hypertension,
diabetes
, mental disorders, peptic ulcer, allergic disorders, rheumatic conditions,
lung cancer
, and leukemia. Another cause of morbidity and mortality which are assuming serious proportions is accident and deaths due to violence. India has undertaken to expand maternal and child health services and to establish new services where none exist. Every state has established a Family Planning Training Institute and created clinics throughout. Knowledge about the mental health conditions in India is generally poor as few surveys have been carried out to collect the information. Following the 2nd 5-year plan, industries are being rapidly developed in the country both in public and private sectors. Most of the problems can be solved to a great extent by mobilizing all medical and health personnel and services into 1 integrated service, but it is not considered feasible at this time. A concerted effort to rethink and reorganize present health services is required.
...
PMID:Present health status and some suggestions for the future action. 718 59
The mortality pattern of taxi drivers in Rome as possibly exposed mainly to gasoline engine exhausts was evaluated by means of a historical cohort study. A total of 2,311 male subjects registered as taxi drivers between 1950 and 1975 was followed from 1965 through 1988. The overall mortality was lower than expected on the basis of regional (Latium) reference rates (692 deaths, standardized mortality ratio [SMR] = 0.89, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.82-0.96), whereas the number of recorded deaths for malignant neoplasms was about the expected (205 deaths, SMR = 0.99, 95% CI 0.86-1.13). Mortality from circulatory and respiratory diseases was lower than expected.
Diabetes
was significantly increased (42 deaths, SMR = 1.73, 95% CI = 1.25-2.34). An increased SMR appeared for respiratory cancer (SMR = 1.23, 95% CI = 0.98-1.50), mainly due to
lung cancer
(observed [O] = 76, SMR = 1.23, 95% CI = 0.97-1.54); two pleural cancers were also recorded. The excess of
lung cancer
deaths was present only among those enrolled in the most recent period (1965-1975) (45 deaths, SMR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.02-1.87), especially among those of younger age (< 65 years) (SMR = 1.86); there was no relation between
lung cancer
mortality and latency since first enrollment in the cooperatives or duration of membership. There are difficulties in interpreting the excess of
lung cancer
on the basis of occupational exposures; however, the increased risk observed among workers employed in more recent calendar periods may be due to heavier exposure in the last decades; further follow-up of the cohort may elucidate whether there is an increasing
lung cancer
risk among taxi drivers.
...
PMID:Mortality among taxi drivers in Rome: a cohort study. 751 24
Previous studies of mortality among white males employed in a Charleston, South Carolina asbestos textile plant using chrysotile demonstrated significant excess mortality due to asbestos-related disease and a steep exposure-response relationship for
lung cancer
. This cohort was further studied by adding 15 years of follow-up and including mortality among white female and black male workers. Nested case-control analyses were undertaken to further explore possible differences in
lung cancer
risk by textile operation as well as possible confounding by mineral oil exposures. Preliminary data for white males have been previously published. White males experienced statistically significant excess mortality due to
lung cancer
(standardized mortality ratio [SMR] = 2.30; confidence interval [CI] = 1.88-2.79), all causes (SMR = 1.48; CI = 1.38-158), all cancers (SMR = 1.50; CI = 1.29-1.72),
diabetes mellitus
(SMR = 2.05; CI = 1.18-3.33), heart disease (SMR = 1.41; CI = 1.26-1.58), cerebrovascular disease (SMR = 1.50; CI = 1.08-2.02), pneumoconiosis and other respiratory diseases (SMR = 4.10; CI = 3.10-5.31), and accidents (SMR = 1.49; CI = 1.15-1.91). Among white females, statistically significant excesses occurred for
lung cancer
(SMR = 2.75; CI = 2.06-3.61), all causes (SMR = 1.21; CI = 1.11-1.32), pneumoconiosis and other respiratory diseases (SMR = 2.40; CI = 1.53-3.60), and other respiratory cancers (SMR = 14.98; CI = 4.08-38.7). Among the total cohort of black males, the only statistically significant excess observed was for pneumoconiosis (SMR = 2.19; CI = 1.23-3.62). Based on historical exposure measurements at the plant, there was a positive exposure-response relationship for both
lung cancer
and pneumoconiosis. Data for the entire cohort demonstrate an increase in the
lung cancer
relative risk of 2-3% for each fiber/cc-year of cumulative chrysotile exposure. This relationship was more consistent for the white male workers. The excess risk for
lung cancer
among white males and females appeared to occur at cumulative exposures lower than those for black males. Possible reasons for the lesser
lung cancer
risk among black males include less smoking and differences in airborne fiber characteristics experienced by black males as a result of plant job placement patterns. The case-control analysis found employment in preparation and carding operations (where most of the black males worked) to be associated with a slightly reduced
lung cancer
risk, although not statistically significant, whereas spinning and twisting employment was associated with a statistically significant increased
lung cancer
risk compared to other plant operations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Follow-up study of chrysotile asbestos textile workers: cohort mortality and case-control analyses. 781 May 43
This paper describes an assessment of expert medical and epidemiological opinion about the role of lifestyle in health, carried out by means of a questionnaire survey of senior members of academic departments of public health, epidemiology and social medicine in Western European universities. Estimates were made of the influence of eight lifestyle factors--smoking, alcohol consumption, exercise, stress, body weight, dietary fat, fibre and salt--on the aetiology or course of five disorders: heart disease, high blood pressure,
lung cancer
, breast cancer and
diabetes
. One hundred and fifty responses were received from scientists and clinicians from 16 countries. Respondents had an average of 17.8 years experience in their discipline (range 5-40 years). The only links to be endorsed as definite by over 90% of respondents were those between smoking and both heart disease and
lung cancer
. However, more than 70% considered alcohol consumption, exercise, stress body weight and dietary fat to be definite or probable influences on heart disease. Smoking, alcohol, exercise, stress, body weight and salt intake were endorsed as relevant to high blood pressure by more than 70%. Opinions differed widely about the influence of lifestyle on breast cancer and
diabetes
. Experts from the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland were less positive than respondents from other countries about the influence of stress, dietary fat, fibre and salt on disease. The results indicate that comparatively few lifestyle factors were believed to be unequivocally related to any of the five disorders. Experts from the UK and Ireland were generally les likely to endorse lifestyle-disease links than those from other European countries.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:What the experts think: a European survey of expert opinion about the influence of lifestyle on health. 781 98
The plasma Lp(a) concentrations were evaluated in several groups of patients. Groups with liver cirrhosis (n = 20), type-1
diabetes mellitus
(n = 148), type-2
diabetes mellitus
(n = 65), hypertension (n = 51),
lung cancer
(n = 48) and deep venous thrombosis (n = 31) were compared with a group of healthy volunteers (n = 69). Significantly higher median values were found in the hypertension (142 mgl-1 vs. 43 mgl-1, p < 0.001) and
lung cancer
groups (241 mgl-1 vs. 43 mgl-1; p < 0.0001). Significantly lower values were recorded in the group with liver cirrhosis (11 mgl-1 vs. 43 mgl-1; p = 0.02). But in this last group there were significant differences between patients in the Child-Turcotte severity stages A to C.
...
PMID:The behaviour of lipoprotein(a) in patients with various diseases. 786 33
Beginning in 1988, a question added to the Washington State death certificate asked whether the decedent had smoked during the last 15 years of life. We analyzed death certificate data to evaluate the effectiveness of this question in identifying groups with high smoking rates and occupations with high rates of respiratory disease death among nonsmokers. We obtained statistical death certificate data from the Washington State Department of Health for resident deaths occurring between 1988 and 1991. Analyses included information on age, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, underlying cause of death, high school graduation, smoking during the last 15 years of life, and occupation. Based on logistic regression analysis, we found that male sex, youth, divorced status, or death from
lung cancer
, chronic obstructive lung disease, or ischemic heart disease predicted a higher risk of smoking during the last 15 years of life. Hispanic ethnicity, single or widowed status, high school graduation, or death from breast cancer,
diabetes
, motor vehicle accidents, other accidents, or homicide predicted a lower risk of smoking. In farming occupations, there was an excess number of chronic obstructive lung disease deaths among nonsmokers. Findings from this study suggest that patterns of smoking during the last 15 years of life among decedents can provide useful public health surveillance information. The collection of risk factor information, such as smoking, should be recommended for the U.S. standard death certificate. Questions on smoking should be both simple and answerable by informants who may not have known the decedent for a lifetime. Additional studies on the accuracy of smoking history from the death certificate should be conducted.
...
PMID:History of smoking from the Washington State death certificate. 788 May 52
One hundred seventy-eight subjects attributed a variety of causes to six illnesses/diseases: AIDS, the common cold,
diabetes
, hypertension,
lung cancer
, and headaches. Factor analysis of these causal attributions yielded four factors which were more complex than those in the existing literature. Each of the six illnesses was seen as caused by different factors. Ethnic and gender differences in causal attributions also were assessed. Although there were no differences between minorities and whites in the perceived causes of the six illnesses, a number of gender differences did emerge. Women were more likely than men to view illness as caused by Sin and Sex and as a form of punishment. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for ethnic and gender differences in health behavior, health service utilization, and somatic symptoms, and suggestions for future research are offered.
...
PMID:Culture and gender diversity in commonsense beliefs about the causes of six illnesses. 796 61
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