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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Measurements of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) were made using nuclear angiography in 9 newly-diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetic patients at diagnosis and after a period of stable control. Similar measurements were made in a control group of 10 insulin-dependent patients whose control was stable. While mean LVEF did not change significantly in either group, 5 of the newly-diagnosed patients had a significant change in LVEF (both positive and negative). None of the stable diabetic patients had any significant change in LVEF. Analysis of variance of the changes in LVEF in both groups showed a significant difference (p less than 0.002). Abnormal left ventricular function in diabetic patients may be transient, reversible and related to change in diabetic control and need not indicate structural
myocardial disease
such as
cardiomyopathy
.
Diabetes
Res 1986 Mar
PMID:Variability of left ventricular function at diagnosis and after treatment in insulin-dependent diabetes. 351 48
We evaluated the cardiac response to dynamic exercise in a group of otherwise healthy insulin-dependent older children and adolescents and in a nondiabetic control group by postexercise echocardiography. Both groups had similar left ventricular function at rest. After exercise we found abnormalities in the indicators of systolic function, fractional shortening (0.37 vs. 0.43) and rate-corrected velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (2.80 vs. 3.35 circumferences/s). In addition, we found an association of flattened interventricular septal motion with finger contractures in the diabetic subjects. Echocardiographic abnormalities in asymptomatic young diabetic adolescents can be elucidated by postexercise echocardiography. Postexercise echocardiography is a noninvasive procedure that can easily be done in the adolescent population and is useful for evaluating subclinical
cardiomyopathy
.
Diabetes
Care
PMID:Abnormal cardiac function after exercise in insulin-dependent diabetic children and adolescents. 359 98
Idiopathic hemochromatosis is normally associated with hepatic cirrhosis,
myocardial disease
and
diabetes mellitus
. A characteristic arthropathy occurs in approximately 40% of patients with hemochromatosis. The onset may precede other detectable clinical manifestations of the disease. In these cases a early diagnosis and treatment may improve the prognosis. A review of the recent literature is presented. A typical hemochromatosis arthropathy is described in one patient. The significance of a frequent associated chondrocalcinosis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Arthropathy in idiopathic hemochromatosis]. 361 92
A case of hemochromatosis--a disease in which iron is deposited in parenchymatous organs in the form of hemosiderin leading to fibrosis and functional impairment of these organs--is reported. The classical triad of symptoms seen in hemochromatosis (cirrhosis of the liver,
diabetes mellitus
, and skin pigmentation) are often supplemented by
cardiomyopathy
. In this case, postmortem examination revealed pigmentary cirrhosis of the liver and pancreas and hemosiderin deposits in the myocardium and other organs. The leading cause of death was concluded to be hemochromatosis of the heart.
...
PMID:[Case of generalized hemochromatosis]. 366 49
We studied the effect of spontaneous long-term (9-10 months)
diabetes
on the heart of Chinese hamsters (CHAD strain) to elucidate the relationship between
diabetes mellitus
and
cardiomyopathy
. The diabetic hamsters, aged approximately 11 months, showed body weight loss, hyperglycemia (mean fasting plasma glucose 402 mg/dl), hypoinsulinemia, hyperlipidemia and ketonemia. The diabetic hamsters showed reduced activities of cytoplasmic glycolytic key enzymes; hexokinase, pyruvate kinase and phosphofructokinase, increases in cardiac glycogen and glucose-6-phosphate contents and a 40% decrease in cardiac ATP content, indicating decreased energy production. An accumulation of myocardial triglyceride and cholesterol was found in the diabetic hamsters. In addition, the cardiac norepinephrine content was increased in the diabetic hamsters, suggesting the presence of autonomic nervous disorder. Increased heart weight and thickening of the septum and both ventricular walls were found in the diabetic hamsters. Light-microscopic analysis revealed that 42.9% of the diabetic hamsters had myocardial degeneration without any vascular lesion of extramural large and intramural small vessels, whereas the non-diabetic controls had no myocardial or vascular lesions. These data suggest that the diabetic Chinese hamsters had
cardiomyopathy
, which is possibly caused by extravascular factors such as metabolic or autonomic nervous disorder although conclusive evidence is lacking.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract
PMID:Metabolic and morphological changes of the heart in Chinese hamsters (CHAD strain) with spontaneous long-term diabetes. 366 31
We report the morphology of diabetic myocardium obtained by endomyocardial biopsy in 16 diabetics. The material was divided into three groups. The first comprised six patients with unexplained cardiomegaly and obscure congestive cardiac failure. The second group, also of six patients, had no cardiac signs and symptoms but exhibited abnormal systolic time intervals. The third group, of 4 patients, was without any cardiac symptoms or signs and had normal systolic time intervals. The vascular and extravascular changes observed were more pronounced in the symptomatic group, intermediate in the asymptomatic patients with abnormal intervals and least in those without symptoms and normal intervals. This provides supporting evidence for the existence of a specific primary
myocardial disease
in
diabetes
with good functional structural correlation.
...
PMID:Specific heart muscle disease in diabetes mellitus--a functional structural correlation. 367 9
Small vessel disease has been described in various cardiac conditions including
diabetes mellitus
, amyloidosis, and connective tissue disease. Less well understood is the incidence and morphological features of small vessel disease in patients with
myocardial disease
of unknown etiology. This study examines the incidence, clinical presentation, and pathological changes of small vessel disease in patients with normal epicardial coronary arteries undergoing endomyocardial biopsy. Biopsy specimens in 110 consecutive patients were analyzed by light and electron microscopy. Small vessel abnormalities were present in 16 patients (14.6 percent) of whom five patients had associated hypertension and 11 patients had idiopathic small vessel disease. There were six males and 10 females with a mean age of 53 (26 to 76) years. Clinical presentations were arrhythmias, heart failure, or chest pain. The left ventricular ejection fraction was reduced (less than 50 percent) in 12 of these 16 patients. The morphological features of small vessel disease included marked thickening of the arterial wall owing to subendothelial deposits of heterogeneous electron dense materials consisting of microfibrils, collagen and elastic fibers, cellular debris, and other amorphous substances. Subendothelial deposits comprised a mean 60 percent (40 to 76 percent) of the arterial wall thickness.
...
PMID:Morphological changes in small vessels on endomyocardial biopsy. 371 82
Eleven type-I (insulin-dependent) diabetic patients with abnormal changes in left ventricular function in response to cold stress (CS) were investigated to try and determine the cause of these abnormal responses. Resting M-mode echocardiography demonstrated that all 11 patients had normal left ventricular dimensions and wall motion, thereby excluding overt
cardiomyopathy
. Thallium-201 scintigraphy was used to assess myocardial perfusion during CS and eight patients were found to have perfusion defects during stress which persisted in four. It is possible that CS unmasks evidence of myocardial ischemia but it is also possible that the abnormal responses to CS reflect altered vasomotor reactivity in the diabetic patient, producing coronary spasm. Left ventricular function may be influenced by many factors in
diabetes
and an abnormal CS test may not necessarily indicate structural disease. Such tests, however, may help in the further understanding of the pathophysiology of heart disease in
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Assessment of myocardial perfusion during cold stress using thallium-201 scintigraphy in diabetic patients with abnormal changes in left ventricular function during cold stress. 378 4
Diabetes mellitus
is associated with a specific
cardiomyopathy
. This is evident from the clinical-pathological work and the epidemiologic data from the Framingham study. Noninvasive studies of diabetics have shown alterations in systolic and diastolic function that may ultimately lead to clinical heart failure. The relationship of these cardiac changes to the type of
diabetes
, its duration, and its severity is not settled. However, a correlation between changes in heart function and other complications of
diabetes
has been demonstrated. Insufficient prospective data is available from noninvasive studies to establish the frequency of progression from subclinical cardiac dysfunction to overt congestive failure. The pathogenesis of this disorder is still uncertain. Pathological studies have shown changes in the intramural arteries, arterioles, and capillaries but their functional significance is uncertain. Experimental studies have shown interstitial changes leading to an apparently less compliant left ventricle in the diabetic dog and monkey. In the diabetic rat reversible changes were found in myocardial function, related to changes in contractile proteins and intracellular calcium metabolism. In both species, the response to anoxia or ischemia was altered in the presence of
diabetes
. However, irreversible depression of the contractile element was not found in most animal studies of isolated
diabetes
. In contrast, the combination of hypertension and
diabetes
leads to substantial cardiac damage and circulatory congestion, both in clinical and experimental investigations. Clearly much more work must be carried out to understand the pathogenesis, treatment, and ultimately the prevention of diabetic cardiomyopathy.
...
PMID:Diabetic cardiomyopathy. 388 Sep 19
Twelve patients with pheochromocytoma have shown unusual clinical and laboratory presentation. These include three patients with cardiac manifestations (sick sinus syndrome, obstructive
cardiomyopathy
and ischemic ECG changes). Two patients with gastrointestinal problems (acute abdomen due to ischemic bowel and constipation). One child with sudden blindness and one, non diabetic patient with polyuria. Laboratory findings included four patients with
diabetes mellitus
, four patients with hypercalcemia two of them with concomitant hyperreninemia and one patient with hypokalemia. Awareness of the illness leads to the discovery of unusual cases and even a most severely sick patient can make a complete recovery.
...
PMID:Uncommon presentation of pheochromocytoma: case studies. 390 36
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