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

Orthostatic hypotension due to autonomic failure may occur secondary to systemic disease states (notably diabetes) or as a disease entity in its own right with a variable degree of neurological involvement that has resulted in a confused classification. The diagnosis, classification and treatment of these latter forms of orthostatic hypotension is reviewed. The pathology is in the central and efferent autonomic pathway, resulting in a disordered baro-receptor reflex, postural hypotension, abnormal responses to tilting and the Valsalva manoeuvre, an inappropriately fixed heart rate and other autonomic features. Anaesthesia may be associated with profound hypotension and some of the signs of anaesthesia may be absent. The response to cardiac depressant drugs and reduction of circulating blood volume may be exaggerated due to absence of compensatory mechanisms. The response to vasoactive agents is unpredictable. The importance of preoperative evaluation, monitoring during operation and the careful selection of anaesthetic agents and techniques is discussed.
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PMID:Anaesthetic considerations in idiopathic orthostatic hypotension and the Shy-Drager syndrome. 50 50

Seven patients had sickle cell trait (hemoglobin AS) and vasoproliferative retinopathy. The retinal abnormalities in these seven patients were indistinguishable from those seen in patients with clinically significant sickling hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell-hemoglobin C disease, hemoglobin S-thalassemia disease, and sickle cell anemia). All seven patients also had some evidence of associated systemic disease such as diabetes, syphilis, tuberculosis, or sarcoidosis. In the presence of an associated systemic disease, marked retinopathy can occur in the ordinarily benign condition of sickle cell trait.
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PMID:Proliferative retinopathy in sickle cell trait. Report of seven cases. 84 50

A 71-year-old woman complained of "smoky" vision, which was found to be caused by a hyphema with blood dripping from a vascular tuft located in the 12 o'clock meridian of the iris. Fluorescein angiography delineated vascular tufts and argon laser photocoagulation eradicated one of the tufts that bled. Histopathologic studies of iris obtained at the time of cataract extraction showed an aggregate of small vessels at the pupillary margin. Most patients with vascular tufts of the pupillary margin have no systemic disease but they are also observed in diabetes mellitus and myotonic dystrophy.
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PMID:Vascular tufts of pupillary margin of iris. 86 91

From 1969-1974 1000 unselected enucleated globes have been examined histopathologically. 277 derive from the University Eye Hospital in Hamburg, 723 from various Eye Hospitals in northern and southern Germany. They originate from 589 men and 408 women, three times the sex was unknown. 86 globes had to be removed from children less than 15 years old. 6 groups of etiologies have been distinguished: trauma (308), histologically confirmed neoplastic disease (281), ocular manifestations of systemic diseases (diabetes mellitus, occlusions of central retinal vessels presumably following generalized vascular disease etc.: 128), "operative ocular disease" (164), primary inflammatory disease (71), miscellaneous (malformations, high myopia, pseudo-glioma and pseudo-melanoma: 48). The etiology "operative ocular disease" consists of 67 primary glaucomas (57 adults, 10 buphthalmus), 41 idiopathic cataracts (7 of these congenital) and 3 primary corneal dystrophies, as well as 53 cases of primary retinal detachment. Among the 281 neoplastic diseases, there are 238 primary intraocular malignant melanomas of the uvea, 18 retinoblastomas, 4 primary reticulumcellsarcomas of the retina, 2 choroidal nevi, 10 intraocular metastases and 9 orbital tumors. 16 enucleations among the 1000 enucleations have been performed for pseudo-gliomas (5 x Coats disease, 5 x persistent primary hyperplastic vitreous, 2 x retrolental fibroplasia, others 4 x). The manifestations of systemic disease are consisting of 68 central retinal vein-occlusions, 30 complications of diabetes mellitus and 10 central retinal artery occlusions as well as 20 other generalized diseases. A primary inflammatory disease led to enucleation 50 times due to an intraocular process, 5 times due to scleritis and 18 times as a consequence of keratitis (including 13 times herpes simplex). As the final clinical cause for enucleation the following categories have been elaborated: secondary glaucomas (416), clinical diagnosis of "tumor" (275), atrophy and phthisis bulbi (118), inflammation (112), acute trauma to 4 weeks after the accident (72), others (7). In conclusion the central role of rubeosis iridis leading to secondary angle closure glaucoma is emphasized. This process presents a challenge to ophthalmologic research. Finally the significance of early surgery for primary angle closure glaucomas and for complete restoration of the anterior chamber after trauma and any intraocular procedure is stressed.
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PMID:[Etiology and final clinical cause for 1000 enucleations. (A clinico-pathologic study) (author's transl)]. 95 59

A report on the neurological results of an investigation carried out on 38 patients with pigmentary degeneration of the retina. The ophthalmological investigation did not indicate a systemic disease. The neurological findings, however, revealed a systemic disorder in many cases.-The constitutions of 20 patients (52.5%) were marked by pathological stigmata. The EEG was abnormal in more than 50% of the cases. The EMG showed a prolonged nerve conduction time for 2 of a total of 4 deaf patients. The EMG also revealed a patient with both pigmentary degeneration of the retina and a mold form of myasthenia gravis. The biochemical results indicated hyperlipoproteinemia in 6 cases (15.8%), diabetes mellitus in 2 cases and a pathological increase of uric acid in the serum in 8 cases. These results suggest that pigmentary degeneration of the retina is not a homogenous disease. It must be seen as a "phenomenologically identical, polygenetic type of reaction" (Janzen). A comprehensive analysis of the individual case can therefore lead to implications which are of direct therapeutic significance.
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PMID:[Pigmentary degeneration of the retina: neurological and biochemical findings (author's transl)]. 114 89

The existence of specific, age-related changes in gastrointestinal motility with clinical significance is controversial. Beside the more infrequent primary motility disorders, secondary motility disturbances associated with collagen vascular diseases, endocrinopathies, and neuromuscular diseases are prominent in the older and often multimorbid patients. Especially in geriatric patients, motility associated symptoms are undesired side-effects of drug therapy. The pathophysiology, clinical syndromes, and therapeutic principles of motility disorders in the elderly are discussed. The major symptoms of esophageal dysfunction are dysphagia, chest pain, heartburn, and regurgitation. Oropharyngeal dysphagia, mostly caused by cerebrovascular accidents and other neurologic disorders, leads to disturbances in food intake, and is often complicated by broncho-pulmonary infections arising from recurrent aspiration of food or saliva. Gastrointestinal reflux disease and spastic motility disorders of the esophagus are regarded as possible causes of angina-like chest pain after exclusion of cardiac diseases. Motility disturbances of the stomach and small bowel are often related to systemic disease (i.e., diabetes mellitus, chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction) of drug side-effects. Mental and physical decline, reduced fluid intake, and constipating drugs are the most relevant factors for idiopathic constipation in the elderly. Fecal incontinence means a great psychological strain for older patients and leads to social isolation.
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PMID:[Gastrointestinal motility in the elderly]. 144 9

The 1991 literature on septic arthritis included a concise review of adult septic arthritis, examples of pseudoseptic arthritis, and two interesting animal studies. One animal study examined the induction of acute synovitis by the intra-articular injection of bacterial endotoxin and the cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and interleukin-1 beta; and the other studied the effects of early and delayed synovectomy in the management of septic arthritis. The predispositions to septic arthritis can be divided into local joint abnormalities, systemic factors, or both. Examples of the local joint abnormalities include osteoarthritis of the hip and apatite-associated arthropathy. Septic arthritis in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis, in a patient with diabetes mellitus and hip arthropathy associated with hemochromatosis, or in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and hemophilic arthropathy are examples of how systemic predisposition is coupled with local joint pathology to increase the vulnerability of the host to joint infection. Other examples of systemic disease that predispose to septic arthritis are systemic lupus erythematosus, hypogammaglobulinemia, and human immunodeficiency virus infection, as well as intravenous drug abuse. Unusual microorganisms causing septic arthritis in the adult include Achromobacter xylosoxidans, Moraxella catarrhalis, meningococci, and diphtheroids. Uncommon pathogenesis is represented by a case of intra-articular inoculation of Mycobacterium gastri into the small joint of the hand and a case of mixed bacterial infection of the hip resulting from an extension of a contiguous pelvic infection associated with trauma. Two cases of immune complex glomerulonephritis illustrate the extra-articular complications of septic arthritis: one due to group G streptococcus and the other due to pneumococcus. Finally, septic bursitis is reviewed from the community practice perspective.
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PMID:Bacterial arthritis. 150 74

Interleukin (IL) 1 is an important mediator of local and systemic disease. Blocking IL-1 using the IL-1 receptor antagonist has reduced the severity of disease in animal models of septic shock, diabetes, graft-vs-host disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and the spontaneous proliferation of leukemia cells. Blocking IL-1 and reduction in the synthesis of IL-1 are important strategies for reducing the progression of inflammatory disease and autoimmune diseases. Nature, however, maintains control over the synthesis of IL-1 by dissociating transcription for translation. In this paper, the basis for the dissociation of IL-1 beta synthesis of mRNA from synthesis of the IL-1 beta protein is reviewed.
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PMID:Dissociation of transcription from translation of human IL-1 beta: induction of steady state mRNA by adherence or recombinant C5a in the absence of translation. 153 18

Functional bladder neck obstruction is supposed to be nonexistent or a very rare clinical disorder. In the past two and a half years, detailed synchronous, video pressure flow EMG studies were done in all the female patients who had evidence of obstructed voiding, poor flow and acute or chronic retention. The subjects of this study are nine females who had high sustained detrusor pressure, high opening pressure, low uroflow and silent sphincter during pressure-flow EMG study. A simultaneous urovideo recording showed either a closed bladder neck, inadequate funneling, intermittent or improper opening during voiding (when Pdet was high and sustained). These patients did not have any anatomical urethral obstruction, neurogenic disorder or systemic disease (like diabetes) affecting voiding. This stringent criteria of functional bladder neck obstruction was observed in nine patients. Five patients had acute or chronic retention and three patients had varying degree of renal failure. Initially all patients were managed by clean intermittent self catheterisation (CIC). Alpha blockers were empirically tried in six patients and had shown variable results. Bladder neck incision (BNI) was performed in two patients with rewarding success.
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PMID:Functional bladder neck obstruction in females--a revisit. 168 2

Central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) is uncommon in those younger than 50. We present a 42-year-old man who complained of sudden loss of vision in the left eye. Fundus examination showed typical findings of CRAO. Extensive medical work up showed no evidence of diabetes or of cardiovascular, hematologic or collagen disease. However, a malignant tumor of the right testis was found, with metastases in the lung, retroperitoneal lymph nodes and brain. The right testis was resected and chemotherapy and brain irradiation resulted in remission during a follow-up of 2.5 years. The differential diagnosis of CRAO in younger patients is difficult. We believe that metastases from the primary tumor were the cause of CRAO in our patient. The possibility of malignancy with metastatic spread causing CRAO should be considered, particularly in relatively young patients with no other evidence of systemic disease.
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PMID:[Central retinal artery occlusion in a young man]. 175 81


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