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Bilateral ruptures of patellar tendon are a rare event and occur mainly in older patients suffering from systemic diseases like lupus erythematosus, chronic renal failure, rheumatoid arthritis or are taking longterm corticosteroids. Only few cases of spontaneous bilateral rupture of patellar tendon without underlying systemic disease are described in literature up to now. This report provides a patient with bilateral patellar tendon rupture, where in further check up and follow up only a mild diabetes mellitus treated by diet could be detected as systemic disease. In current opinion diabetes mellitus does not belong to the "typical" underlying systemic diseases for tendon ruptures. In literature research diabetes mellitus was only mentioned once together with a bilateral patellar tendon rupture.
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PMID:[Bilateral rupture of the patellar ligament in diabetes mellitus]. 1076 70

Although dental implants continue to provide consistent and predictable treatment options for most patients, some people with uncontrolled systemic disease may be denied implant treatment. Diabetes is one such disease. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, diabetes is a leading cause of blindness, kidney failure, and amputations of the lower extremities. These complications result from microvascular disturbances associated with diabetes. The effect of diabetes on the healing of titanium implants has not been well established. In this study of 32 rats, diabetes was induced in 16 animals by injection of streptozotocin (65 mg/kg); the remaining 16 animals served as controls. Titanium alloy implants were placed in the tibiae of all 32 rats using standard surgical techniques. Implants healed for 14 days. Blood samples were obtained for serum glucose, osteocalcin, and alkaline phosphatase analyses. Implants were retrieved and processed for histomorphometric analyses. Three quantities were measured using light microscopy, video capture, and computer analysis: percent osseointegration (i.e., linear bone interface), associated bone volume percent, and contact frequency. Diabetic animals demonstrated significantly less osseointegration than controls. However, bone volume percent in diabetic animals was about 4 times greater than controls. Biochemical analyses were mixed; diabetic animals demonstrated increased serum osteocalcin levels compared to controls but decreased alkaline phosphatase. Based on the results of this study, it was concluded that the bone response associated with titanium alloy implants in the tibiae of diabetic rats is uniquely different from controls.
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PMID:Bone response to titanium alloy implants placed in diabetic rats. 1087 99

Periodontitis has been traditionally regarded as a chronic inflammatory oral infection. However, recent studies indicate that this oral disease may have profound effects on systemic health. The search for cellular/molecular mechanisms linking periodontitis to changes in systemic health and systemic physiology has resulted in the evolution of a new area of lipid research establishing linkages between existing multidisciplinary biomedical literature, recent observations concerning the effects of serum lipids on immune cell phenotype/function, and a heightened interest in systemic responses to chronic localized infections. There appears to be more than a casual relationship between serum lipid levels and systemic health (particularly cardiovascular disease, diabetes, tissue repair capacity, and immune cell function), susceptibility to periodontitis, and serum levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. In terms of the potential relationship between periodontitis and systemic disease, it is possible that periodontitis-induced changes in immune cell function cause metabolic dysregulation of lipid metabolism through mechanisms involving proinflammatory cytokines. Sustained elevations of serum lipids and/or pro-inflammatory cytokines may have a serious negative impact on systemic health. The purpose of this paper is to present the background, supporting data, and hypotheses related to this concept. As active participants in this emerging and exciting area of investigation, we hope to stimulate interest and awareness among biomedical scientists and practitioners.
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PMID:Pathophysiological relationships between periodontitis and systemic disease: recent concepts involving serum lipids. 1097 56

Recently, it has been recognized that oral infection, especially periodontitis, may affect the course and pathogenesis of a number of systemic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, bacterial pneumonia, diabetes mellitus, and low birth weight. The purpose of this review is to evaluate the current status of oral infections, especially periodontitis, as a causal factor for systemic diseases. Three mechanisms or pathways linking oral infections to secondary systemic effects have been proposed: (i) metastatic spread of infection from the oral cavity as a result of transient bacteremia, (ii) metastatic injury from the effects of circulating oral microbial toxins, and (iii) metastatic inflammation caused by immunological injury induced by oral microorganisms. Periodontitis as a major oral infection may affect the host's susceptibility to systemic disease in three ways: by shared risk factors; subgingival biofilms acting as reservoirs of gram-negative bacteria; and the periodontium acting as a reservoir of inflammatory mediators. Proposed evidence and mechanisms of the above odontogenic systemic diseases are given.
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PMID:Systemic diseases caused by oral infection. 1102 56

We reviewed the clinicopathological features in 12 patients (7 males and 5 females; mean age 54 yr) with pulmonary cryptococcosis. Eleven of the patients were asymptomatic and the disease was detected by chest radiograph abnormalities. The underlying systemic disease had been diagnosed as diabetes mellitus in two. Chest CT scans showed a solitary nodule in 9 of the 12 patients, multiple nodules in 2, and infiltration in 1. The nodular diameter was less than 2 cm in 10 of the 12. All nodules were located in the subpleural region. On the chest CT, cavitary nodules, scattered nodules, or both, and spiculated nodules were difficult to distinguish from pulmonary tuberculosis and primary lung cancer, respectively. According to McDonnell's pathological classification of pulmonary cryptococcosis, the resected 8 lungs revealed peripheral pulmonary granuloma in 5 and granulomatous pneumonia in 3. It is important to perform a pathological examination for the diagnosis of pulmonary cryptococcosis to avoid misdiagnosis as lung cancer or pulmonary tuberculosis.
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PMID:[A clinicopathological study of pulmonary cryptococcosis--chest CT and pathologic correlation]. 1110 3

Sialosis (sialadenosis) is a term used to describe a disorder that involves both secretory and parenchymal changes of the major salivary glands, most commonly the parotid. Seen often in a dental office, it is recognized as an indolent, bilateral, non-inflammatory, non-neoplastic, soft, symmetrical, painless and persistent enlargement of the parotid glands. Four major entities have commonly been associated with this disorder. They are alcoholism, endocrinopathy (particularly diabetes mellitus), maLnutrition and idiopathic. We are reporting a case of alcoholic sialosis with its clinical and diagnostic aspects. It is important for the dental practitioner to recognize sialosis, because it often indicates the existence of an unsuspected systemic disease.
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PMID:Alcoholic sialosis. 1113 99

Periodontal diseases are oral disorders characterized by inflammation of the supporting tissues of the teeth. Usually, periodontitis is a progressively destructive loss of bone and periodontal ligament (loss of the attachment apparatus of the teeth). Periodontitis has documented risk factors, including but not limited to specific plaque bacteria, smoking, and diabetes mellitus. Initially, the link between systemic disease and periodontal diseases was thought to be unidirectional. Currently, there is increasing evidence that the relationship between these entities may be bidirectional. Recent case-control and cross-sectional studies indicate that periodontitis may confer a 7-fold increase in risk for preterm low birth weight infants and a 2-fold increase in risk for cardiovascular disease. These early reports indicate the potential association between systemic and oral health. Additionally, these studies support the central hypothesis that periodontal disease involves both a local and a systemic host inflammatory response. This knowledge of disease interrelationships may prove vital in intervention strategies to reduce patient risks and prevent systemic disease outcomes. Based on the current evidence of the periodontal-systemic disease connection, the purpose of this report is to help establish the groundwork for closer communication between physicians and periodontists in the military health care setting.
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PMID:Periodontal disease and its association with systemic disease. 1119 6

The relationships between periodontitis and systemic disease and conditions, environmental factors, and behavioral influences are evolving rapidly. Success in preventing and treating periodontal diseases may well rest to a large extent on our understanding of the relevant influences which may exacerbate and perpetuate the disease process. As researchers work to clarify these relationships, we as practitioners must continue to alter our treatment in the best interests of the patient's overall health. The impact of recent findings on the development and progression of periodontitis relevant to diabetes mellitus, HIV, genetic susceptibility, smoking, stress, and osteoporosis is reviewed.
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PMID:Periodontitis--the risks for its development. 1119 18

The purpose of this study was to evaluate which factors might influence health care attitudes such as anxiety about dental care by older adults in Israel. The study population consisted of 103 non-institutionalized patients (46 men and 57 women) over the age of 65 who attended a dental clinic that provided services for older adults during a one-year period. Socio-demographic information and information about the subjects' general health and their level of concern about health problems were obtained from self-reported questionnaires, while the dental anxiety level was found by means of a dental anxiety scale (DAS). Ninety-nine percent of the patients suffered from a major systemic disease such as diabetes, hypertension, atherosclerosis, respiratory disease, and rheumatic disease. Both unmarried and first-time patients expressed high anxiety scores. Patients with 12 or fewer years of formal schooling demonstrated significantly higher dental anxiety. Among patients who regularly attended a synagogue or a social club, concern about oral health was significantly higher than for the rest (p < 0.02). No association was found between having dentures and gender, or between having dentures and level of education. The reason for visiting the clinic (inability to eat, pain, or esthetics) was not associated with any other health concern or with dental anxiety levels. This study determined that patients who were unmarried, less educated, or attending the facility for the first time were more likely to experience dental anxiety. These patients merit special consideration.
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PMID:Non-institutionalized elderly dental patients in Israel: socio-demographics, health concerns, and dental anxiety. 1120 80

We report our results in 96 patients with amyloidosis who received 105 cadaveric renal allografts. The graft survival of amyloidosis patients has improved with time and with improved immunosuppression. The graft survival of amyloidosis patients is comparable to the results in another systemic disease, i. e., diabetes, and only slightly inferior to those in primary renal disease, even though amyloidosis patients tolerate complications poorly and the patients are at high risk of dying during the first 3 months.
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PMID:Improved outcome of renal transplantation in amyloidosis. 1127 Dec 30


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