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277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five years of experience gained with the CryoCare Extremity Stabilization System (CESS) were evaluated in this study. Twenty-one patients underwent freezing amputation. Five patients died before undergoing surgical amputation. Symptomatic relief, control of odor, decreased demand on nursing staff, and appreciation of the family make this approach valuable even when long-term survival is not anticipated. Ten patients who underwent freezing amputation subsequently underwent surgical amputation and were discharged. Six patients underwent freezing and surgical amputation but died prior to discharge. The patients selected for the freezer application were deemed to be prohibitive operative risks because they were experiencing systemic toxicity from their ischemic limb and underlying diseases. Six patients demonstrated myoglobinuria prior to freezing which cleared with CESS. The physiologic amputation allowed stabilization of medical problems including cardiac arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, sepsis, renal failure, diabetes, and respiratory failure. Freezing of an ischemic extremity allows delay in amputation enabling physicians to achieve maximal medical stabilization. It permits symptomatic relief in patients whose long-term survival is not anticipated. Physiologic freezing amputation should be included in the repertoire of all surgeons.
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PMID:Experience with physiologic amputation using the CryoCare Extremity Stabilization System (CESS). 152 52

We reported five cases of listeriosis (sepsis and meningitis) in the elderly in our hospital during the last 4 years, where no cases of listeriosis had been found. These 5 cases had diabetes mellitus, lung cancer, chronic respiratory failure, gastric ulcer and aplastic anemia respectively as their underlying diseases. At the onset of listeriosis, 3 cases received corticosteroid and 3 cases received H2-blocker. 2 patients were cured and 3 patients died. Three autopsy cases had meningitis or meningoencephalitis and 2 cases of these autopsy cases had granulomatous changes in these spleens. In serotypes of Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), 4 cases were 4b and 1 cases was 1b. All 5 strains were resistant to 3rd generation cephems. Wide uses of 3rd generation cephems and H2-blocker may be one of the reasons for the recent increase of listeriosis. Ingestion of contaminated food is the pathogenetic mechanism for initiating L. monocytogenes infections. And following the change of eating habits and the increase of imported foods, food-born listeriosis may increase. We suppose the increase of L. monocytogenes infections and must give attention to L. monocytogenes infections.
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PMID:[Five cases of listeriosis in the elderly]. 198 Oct 72

The three main dimensions of quality of life (physical function, social activities, and psychological status) were evaluated by a questionnaire in 41 COPD patients with severe respiratory failure treated by long-term oxygen. The results were compared with those obtained in patients suffering from COPD without chronic respiratory failure and in patients suffering from severe diabetes and/or atherosclerosis. A relevant impairment of the indexes of quality of life was found in the group of subjects with chronic respiratory failure. The extent of the impairment was significantly higher in these subjects than in the two other groups of patients.
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PMID:Quality of life of COPD patients treated by long-term oxygen. 211 93

The clinical manifestations of septicemic melioidosis and other bacterial septicemia were studied at Srinagarind Hospital, Khon Kaen University. Forty-three cases of septicemic melioidosis and 68 non-melioidosis septicemia cases were analysed. By univariate analysis, the following clinical features are associated with septicemic melioidosis: male patients; age below 45 years; underlying diabetes mellitus or renal failure; pulmonary infection, impending respiratory failure and multiorgan involvement, while abdominal pain and urinary tract infection were more common in non-melioidosis septicemia. By using discriminant analysis and logistic regression, 3 features (diabetes mellitus, multiorgan involvement, and no abdominal pain or pulmonary infection) could discriminate the two groups with the accuracy of more than 85 per cent.
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PMID:Discriminant analysis among septicemic melioidosis and other bacterial septicemia. 228 Feb

A patient who developed extreme fluctuations in serum glucose concentrations while receiving total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is described, and etiologies of hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia, as well as a rational approach to preventing and managing these disorders in patients receiving TPN, are presented. A 40-year-old white man with a 29-year history of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus was hospitalized after he had an episode of rejection related to a cadaveric kidney transplant. During the hospitalization, his right leg was amputated because of cellulitis, and he developed septicemia with respiratory failure. A renal biopsy revealed cytomegalovirus inclusion disease, the kidney was removed, and intermittent hemodialysis was begun. Control of the patient's serum glucose concentration included four routes of insulin administration: a continuous titratable insulin infusion, subcutaneous sliding-scale insulin, insulin incorporated into the TPN solution, and intravenous bolus insulin. Further, glucose management was being coordinated by three teams: intensive care, nutrition support, and the renal service, with physicians from each service prescribing insulin therapy. The patient also received prednisone daily. The sporadic approach to this patient's glucose control, complicated by the extensive disease profile of the patient, resulted in precipitous fluctuations in his serum glucose concentrations. Patients receiving parenteral nutrition are subject to widely varying serum glucose concentrations related not only to the nutrition support provided but also to various underlying metabolic and physiologic complications commonly present. Common etiologies of, and ways to prevent and manage, hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia are reviewed. Clinicians should be aware of the risk of hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia in patients receiving TPN and monitor patients appropriately for alterations in glucose homeostasis.
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PMID:Management of glucose abnormalities in patients receiving total parenteral nutrition. 249 13

In summary, there are a number of important respiratory manifestations of endocrine diseases. Hypothyroidism may be associated with respiratory failure that can be caused by a reduction in central respiratory drive, upper airway obstruction, and associated restrictive pulmonary function from pleural effusions or an intrinsic decrease in lung volumes. Hyperthyroidism can present with dyspnea as a major clinical manifestation because of the increase in central respiratory drive associated with thyrotoxicosis. Cardiac dysfunction associated with hyperthyroidism may lead to pulmonary edema in some patients. Hypoparathyroidism may occur acutely, especially after thyroid surgery and be associated with hypocalcemia and acute tetany, laryngeal stridor, and muscle weakness. Ovarian tumors, both benign and malignant, may present with unilateral or bilateral effusions. Finally, patients with diabetes mellitus are at increased risk of developing a variety of pulmonary disorders. Acute and chronic pulmonary infections are the most common respiratory abnormalities in patients with diabetes, although cardiogenic and noncardiogenic pulmonary edema can also be a complication of their disease.
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PMID:Pulmonary manifestations of endocrine and metabolic disorders. 268 69

This report describes the case of a 70-year-old female suffering from diabetes mellitus and dilatative cardiomyopathy with congestive heart failure. It is likely that alveolar-capillary membrane damage occurred apart from cardiac involvement. Diffuse interstitial pulmonary fibrosis subsequently occurred with consequent acute progressive respiratory failure and death. The cause of the damage to the alveolar-capillary membranes is still unknown and we thought that long-term administration of captopril might have contributed to the damage itself, since like all ACE-inhibitors, captopril is able to bring about tissular storage of both bradykinin and prostaglandins and therefore alter the pulmonary reactivity to phlogistic stimuli.
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PMID:[Acute progressive respiratory insufficiency caused by diffuse interstitial pulmonary disease in a diabetic patient with dilated myocardiopathy]. 270 34

A total of 136 patients with trans- and 200 with non-transmural myocardial infarction (MI) were examined over time for chlorine-soluble mucoprotein (MP), serum hexoses (SH), their fraction-hexoses of glycosaminoglycans (H-GAG), and hexoses of glycoproteins (H-GP), serum, plasma and urine hydroxyproline (SHP, PHP, UHP). The computation of regressions made it possible to prove multidirectional changes in chlorine-soluble MP, SH, H-GAG, SHP, PHP, and in UHP. Approximation of the curves enabled MI patients to be distributed into subgroups marked by rapid and moderate repair tempo. The factors that prolong MI repair according to the X-square test are as follows: age over 60 years, heart aneurysms, recurrent MI, chronic grade 2A heart failure, diabetes mellitus, chronic bronchitis combined with lung emphysema and stage 2 respiratory failure. That whether MI is transmural or non-transmural is not per se the sole factor determining MI repair.
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PMID:[Clinical regularities of myocardial infarction repair]. 276 91

A 84-year-old man was admitted with palpitation, edema of legs and anemia during a long course of diabetes mellitus, prostatic hypertrophy and prostatic cancer. He revealed purpura on the hands and massive microhematuria. He had received antibiotic therapy for a urinary tract infection for a period of time, but he had no history of hemorrhagic tendency or blood transfusion. Coagulation studies showed the prolongation of whole blood clotting time and PT (prothrombin time). Activity of factor V was 14% of that normal control plasma. The titer of factor V inhibitor was 4.9 Bethesda units/ml. The inhibitor of the patient was supposed to belong to IgA and IgG judging from inhibitor neutralization test. PT was improved after discontinuance of administration of antibiotics and administration of azathioprine. Moreover, even after administration of prednisolone with antibiotics, PT and activity of factor V recovered to normal range. He died from respiratory failure. Autopsy revealed double cancer of prostate and descending colon. The appearance of factor V inhibitor was likely caused by antibiotics, double cancer, and age-related immune disorders.
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PMID:[Factor V inhibitor with double cancer]. 276 72

A non insulin-dependent Zairian patient developed ketoacidosis and then overwhelming strongyloidiasis following ACTH treatment. Severe cardiovascular and respiratory failure, associated with severe acute hypoprotidemia, preceded death, which occurred within three days. Pathologic examination revealed a massive parasitic infiltration of the gastro-enteric mucosa, mesenteric lymph nodes, and the pulmonary tissue and vessels. We suggest that ACTH treatment and keto-acidosis induced immune deficiency and triggered the acute parasitic episode, in a patient originating from an endemic area. Badly controlled diabetes should be known as a risk factor of hyperinfection by Strongyloides stercoralis in latent carriers.
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PMID:Overwhelming strongyloidiasis in a diabetic patient following ACTH treatment and keto-acidosis. 284 5


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