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

As a systemic disease, diabetes mellitus also involves alterations of oral structures as an integral part of the body. A group of 47 diabetics, 34 females and 13 males, mean age 55 years, were included in the study. Mean blood glucose was 12.6 mol/l. Results of clinical studies of oral alterations showed oral symptoms, i.e. xerostomia, to predominate in study subjects, followed by glossopyrosis, stomatopyrosis, gingivitis with hyperkeratosis and exfoliations effecting the tongue and lips. Membranes and ulcerations were less frequent in the group of diabetics under study. Along with the occurrence of metabolic and hormonal disturbances, cardiovascular diseases occupy the first place, followed by locomotor, gastrointestinal, respiratory and renal disturbances.
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PMID:[Oral manifestations in diabetes]. 181 30

A laboratory approach to measuring neurologic impairment has been developed that is applicable to systemic disease as well as localized nerve injury. This approach compares individual parameters of the experimental rat hind footprint (walking track) with weight- and sex-matched control track parameters; classic mathematical indexing is not utilized. The normal track data obtained for the Sprague-Dawley rat showed a significant increase in print length (PL), toe spread (TS), and intermediate toe spread (ITS) with increasing rat weight. A significant difference between male and female rats above 400 gm also was noted. For a localized injury (sciatic nerve cut), this approach demonstrated that the contralateral hind footprint was a "compensated" rather than a normal track. This approach to track analysis also was capable of demonstrating progressive neurologic impairment for a sciatic nerve compression model and a systemic disease such as diabetes, as well as demonstrating reversal of these abnormal patterns when the "disease state" was treated.
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PMID:Functional assessment of neurologic impairment: track analysis in diabetic and compression neuropathies. 189 40

Three middle-aged and elderly patients presenting with their first attack of acute anterior uveitis (AAU) were found to have previously undiagnosed diabetes mellitus. A first attack of AAU is unusual in this age group and may indicate underlying systemic disease. Diabetes is an infrequent cause of uveitis but should be considered in the differential diagnosis. It is important to be aware of this uncommon presentation of the disease, thereby stating the value of performing routine urinalysis in AAU.
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PMID:An unusual presentation of diabetes mellitus. 192 20

The nosological classification of chronic liver disease (CLD) seems to be unsatisfactory when clinical problems are faced such as the liver cirrhosis-diabetes mellitus and the autoimmune diseases-primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) associations; the concept of PBC as a systemic disease; the multiorgan involvement of chronic active hepatitis. Accordingly, the Authors hypothesize that the present histopathological-based nosology of CLD will be modified as a result of a better understanding of the varied metabolic and immunologic derangements induced by CLD.
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PMID:[Need of updating hepatological nosology]. 202 77

Carefully designed, monitored rehabilitation regimens can benefit patients with significant cardiac disease, such as life-threatening arrhythmias or congestive heart failure, or who have concurrent systemic disease such as diabetes. Patients with heart failure can tolerate minimal workloads but, with conditioning, they can increase their duration of exercise. Heart transplant recipients, who are usually severely deconditioned at the time of surgery, are good candidates for a comprehensive rehabilitation program; some have progressed to competition-level athletic achievements. Rehabilitation is safe for patients with arrhythmias, given appropriate monitoring, and can contribute to enhanced quality of life. Objective measures are needed to distinguish between symptomatic and functional improvement.
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PMID:Rehabilitation strategies for the complex cardiac patient. 207 May 20

Central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) is a common retinal vasculopathy typically affecting adults in the fifth to seventh decade of life. Systemic disease, particularly hypertension, is often a contributing factor in this sight-threatening condition. CRVO in young adults, however, is an uncommon occurrence with relatively few reported cases in the ophthalmic literature. Two studies performed on young adults (less than 40 years of age) presenting with CRVO revealed that, in most cases, there was not a strong correlation with hypertension or other systemic diseases. In more severe cases, namely those with poor visual outcome from the ischemic type of CRVO, there was a strong correlation with cardiovascular disease and diabetes mellitus. Systemic inflammatory conditions represent a small contributing factor in patients presenting with CRVO. This paper reports on a 21-year-old female with non-ischemic CRVO who was serologically positive for syphilis.
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PMID:Central retinal vein occlusion in a young patient with seropositive syphilis. 208 33

There have been only a few investigations that have considered renal disease or any disturbance of renal function in the calculation of risk in cardiac surgery. Risks of cardiac surgery have to be considered for renal disease without direct connection to heart disease (e.g., infections of the kidney and of the urinary tract, primary and secondary glomerulonephritis, parenchymal renal disease, and impaired renal function of unknown origin), as well as in renal disease with concomitant influence on heart and kidney (e.g., infective endocarditis, arterial hypertension, systemic disease of heart and kidney such as with diabetes mellitus, disturbance of kidney function or electrolyte balance due to heart failure). In most cases, the problem is solved by therapeutic intervention and postponement of cardiac surgery. A limited or negative operative indication is found with untreatable infection of the kidney or urinary tract, with untreatable nephrotic syndrome, in advanced renal disease with heart transplantation, as well as in case of severe arterial hypertension with possible organ complications, and in advanced diabetes mellitus with ESRD and multiorgan involvement. After cardiac surgery, acute renal failure represents a critically important complication. Primary therapeutic procedures must include prophylaxis of hemodynamic unstable situations, as well as prophylaxis of infectious complications. Cardiac surgery in dialysis patients and post-transplant patients is basically possible and only has a slightly increased risk compared to patients with normal renal function. Seventy-seven dialysis patients were operated (49 aorto-coronary bypass operations, 19 single-valve and multiple-valve replacements, five patients with valve replacement and aorto-coronary bypass, and four other cardiac surgical operations). Only in valve replacement, was mortality significantly higher than in renal healthy persons, the main causes of death being cerebrovascular complications and septicemia.
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PMID:[Extracardiac risk factors in heart surgery--the kidney]. 208 10

Kidney biopsy (KB) is controversial in the elderly because it is generally felt that the risks exceed the potential therapeutic benefits. In this review of our personal experience and the literature reports, we discuss the risks of this diagnostic procedure and its use in the four main circumstances of patient referral. On the one hand, KB does not seem to be more hazardous in the elderly, provided that it is not performed in patients in poor condition or with atrophic kidneys or suspected vascular lesions. On the other hand, KB is clearly useful in a number of elderly patients either to assess the diagnosis of a systemic disease involving the kidney or to select the appropriate treatment. 1. In patients with non nephrotic proteinuria, KB should be performed if the proteinuria is associated with extra-renal signs suggestive of systemic disease or with deterioration of renal function. 2. Nephrotic syndrome without evidence of amyloidosis and diabetes, should lead to KB to identify patients with minimal change disease (MCD) requiring steroid treatment. Indeed, MCD can rarely be suspected on clinical grounds as the resulting nephrotic syndrome is rarely "pure" at this age. 3. In acute renal failure, KB seems to be essential and urgent in patients with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis and in those with renal failure of dubious origin to select the most appropriate treatment according to the etiology and the type of renal lesions (sclerotic or "active"). 4. KB is useless and hazardous in chronic renal failure, except in case of unexplained rapid worsening of renal function in patients with previously moderate renal failure.
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PMID:[For or against renal biopsy after 65 years]. 209 Sep 64

We present 3 cases of Sialoadenosis of the parotid glands, one male and two females, who presented associated systemic pathology (liver cirrhosis and diabetes mellitus), detected following clinically suspect syaloadenosis (the patients were unaware of their systemic disease). In all three cases definitive diagnosis was established by needle aspiration of the gland. Which revealed great acinar dilatation. Finally, differential diagnosis was established between sialoadenosis and those conditions with clinical presentations similar to those described for sialoadenosis.
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PMID:[Sialoadenosis of the parotid glands: diagnostic considerations]. 209 59

Thyrotrophin (TSH) secretion was studied in 63 patients with Cushing's syndrome (53 patients with pituitary dependent Cushing's disease, eight with adrenocortical tumours, and two with the ectopic ACTH syndrome). Prior to treatment, TSH response to 200 micrograms of TRH intravenously was significantly decreased compared to controls; TSH response was 'flat' (increment less than 2 mU/l) in 34 patients (54%). Patients with a flat response to TRH had significantly higher morning and midnight cortisol levels than patients with a TSH response of 2 mU/l and more; this was not due to differences in serum thyroid hormone levels. Basal TSH, TSH increment after TRH, and stimulated TSH value, but not serum triiodothyronine, were correlated with cortisol measurements (0800 h serum cortisol, midnight cortisol, and urinary free corticoid excretion). After exclusion of 40 patients with additional disease (severe systemic disease, diabetes mellitus, or goitre), cortisol-TSH correlations were even more pronounced (r = -0.73 for midnight cortisol and stimulated TSH levels), while in the patients with additional complications, these correlations were slight or absent. Successful treatment in 20 patients was associated with a rise in thyroid hormone levels and the TSH response to TRH. These results indicate that (1) the corticoid excess but not serum T3 is the principal factor regulating TSH secretion in Cushing's syndrome, (2) a totally flat response to TRH is rare, and (3) TSH suppression and lower than normal serum thyroid hormone levels are reversible after treatment. Since factors like severe systemic disease, diabetes mellitus and goitre also affect TSH secretion, they tend to obscure the statistically significant correlations between cortisol excess and TSH secretion.
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PMID:TSH secretion in Cushing's syndrome: relation to glucocorticoid excess, diabetes, goitre, and the 'sick euthyroid syndrome'. 212 25


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