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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 39-year old woman presented with hallucinatory paranoid state, particularly with erotomania, around September, 1988 (at the age of 39), and was hospitalized in a mental hospital for 9 days from May 1, 1989, to receive major tranquilizer therapy. At admission, the leukocyte count was 10,400/mm3 showing a mild leukocytosis, and there was temporary adynamia in the upper extremities. Thereafter, mild leukocytosis persisted intermittently. On May 12, 1989, the patient visited the Department of Neuropsychiatry, Kansai Medical University, and clinical examinations revealed mental symptoms including insomnia and erotomania, delusion of reference and auditory hallucination without persecutory taint. She showed clear consciousness and well understanding. Characteristically, her expression and behavior were smooth and emotional communication was available. There were neither alterations in her basic mood, nor flaccid association of idea. No abnormalities were seen in the hair and skin, and buffalo hump was not observed. Blood examination revealed a leukocyte count of 10,700/mm3, suggesting a mild leukocytosis. According to the patient, the menses have been regular. Although major tranquilizer therapy has been maintained, she gradually developed emotional instability, and tended to show
fatigue
and regressive changes in her personality. She was hospitalized in a mental hospital from October 25, 1989 to July 24, 1991. Since 1990, when she was in the hospital, she gradually developed obesity, hypertension, acne, and
diabetes mellitus
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of Cushing's disease: hallucinatory paranoid state preceding physical symptoms]. 793 10
One of the longest-running controversies in medicine concerns the aims of
diabetes
treatment. The question debated for 80 years has been whether the clinician should just relieve symptoms, or try to achieve the much more difficult objective of near-physiological normality as measured by an absence of glycosuria and/or normal blood sugar levels. At the beginning of World War One, most clinicians and physiologists thought the severity of
diabetes
was inversely proportional to the number of functioning islets of Langerhans. Hyperglycaemia, it was hypothesized, stressed the surviving islets and led to a downward spiral of increasing glandular
fatigue
and hyperglycaemia. The aim of undernutrition was to rest the damaged tissue in the hope of promoting a return of functional efficiency and possibly regeneration. Most experts stressed that rest of the islets could only be achieved by abolishing glycosuria and restoring normal blood sugar levels. The first clinical use of insulin in 1922 led to astonishing improvements in the health and strength of patients with
diabetes
and the concept of pancreatic rest seemed to be confirmed when some regained such carbohydrate tolerance that after weeks or months they could reduce the dose of insulin without developing glycosuria. Initially there were expectations that insulin would allow the islets of Langerhans to recover completely, so that
diabetes
was cured. Most physicians insisted that the best chance of preserving what pancreatic function remained was biochemical normality. It was also contended that patients who had normal blood sugar levels were more healthy than those without and had fewer 'complications'. The complications in question were mainly infective, since specific diabetic tissue damage was not recognized until the late 1930s. The toll of microvascular complications (retinopathy and nephropathy) in those whose lives had been saved by insulin did not become apparent until the late 1930s and early 1940s, when it generated an often acrimonious debate about whether they were due to the metabolic disorder or an associated phenomenon. Liberalization of diet in patients taking insulin began in 1926 and by 1930 it was clear that patients who were prescribed 200 g of carbohydrate per day felt better and more energetic than those on the old regimens of 50 g or less per day. Even these more liberal diets were measured but, in the early 1930s some paediatricians, feeling that a strict measured diet was psychologically damaging, experimented with 'free' or unmeasured diets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The quest for normoglycaemia: a historical perspective. 795 85
The association between adherence to medical recommendations and health outcomes (physical, role, and social functioning, energy/
fatigue
, pain, emotional well-being, general health perceptions, diastolic blood pressure, and glycohemoglobin) was examined in a 4-year longitudinal, observational study of 2125 adult patients with chronic medical conditions (hypertension,
diabetes
, recent myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure) and/or depression. Change score models were evaluated, controlling for disease and comorbidity. Patient adherence was associated minimally with improvement in health outcomes in this study. Only 11 of 132 comparisons showed statistically significant positive effects of adherence on health outcomes. We conclude that the relationship between adherence and health outcomes is much more complex than has often been assumed.
...
PMID:The impact of patient adherence on health outcomes for patients with chronic disease in the Medical Outcomes Study. 796 57
Patients with noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) are often obese and frequently complain of
tiredness
. These features are also characteristically seen in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Therefore, it was the aim of this study to assess the prevalence of OSA among a group of obese NIDDM patients who have some clinical features of OSA. The effect of reversal of OSA by nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment on insulin responsiveness was also investigated. From a population of 179 NIDDM patients with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 35 kg/m2, we performed ambulatory sleep monitoring on 31 (15 males and 16 females) who admitted to either heavy snoring or excessive sleepiness. Results were reviewed by a sleep physician blinded to the clinical status of the patients, and 22 (70%) were found to have moderate or severe OSA, with mean oxygen desaturation indexes of 10.3 +/- 5.3 and 30.7 +/- 13.2 episodes/h, respectively. A subgroup of 10 patients (seven males and three females) with a mean BMI of 42.7 +/- 4.3 kg/m2 was treated with nightly CPAP for 4 months. These subjects all had significant OSA, with frequent obstructive apneas (mean, 47 +/- 31.6 episodes/h) and oxygen desaturation (mean minimum O2 saturation, 74 +/- 9.5%), as determined by polysomnography. One patient was excluded from analysis because of infrequent use of CPAP. Insulin responsiveness in terms of glucose disposal measured by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamps improved from 11.4 +/- 6.2 to 15.1 +/- 4.6 mumol/kg.min (P < 0.05) during CPAP treatment. These results indicate that OSA occurs commonly in obese NIDDM patients with excessive sleepiness or heavy snoring. Treatment of their OSA may improve insulin responsiveness.
...
PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea in obese noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients: effect of continuous positive airway pressure treatment on insulin responsiveness. 798 75
Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of 166 adults who had previously undergone surgical treatment for intractable epilepsy was compared with that of outpatients with hypertension,
diabetes
, heart disease, and/or depressive symptoms. Eight self-reported HRQOL domains were evaluated and compared by the RAND 36-Item Health Survey 1.0: emotional well-being, social function, role limitations due to emotional problems, energy/
fatigue
, pain, role limitations due to physical problems, physical function, and general health perceptions. A pictorial item on overall QOL was also administered, for a total of 9 HRQOL domains. With adjustment made for age, gender, education, and comorbid conditions, 55 completely seizure-free patients scored higher (i.e., better health) than patients with hypertension in 6 of 9 domains, higher than diabetic patients in 8 of 9, higher than those with heart disease in all 9, and higher than those with depressive symptoms in all 9 (all p < 0.05). Sixty-seven patients still having seizures with impaired consciousness scored worse than hypertensive patients in 5 domains, worse than diabetic patients in 3, and worse than heart disease patients in 2; for all 3 conditions, these domains included emotional well-being and overall QOL (p < 0.05). These 67 patients, however, scored better than patients with depressive symptoms in all 9 domains, better than those with heart disease in 2, and better than those with
diabetes
in 1 (all p < 0.05). Forty-four other patients had only simple partial seizures (SPS); their scores were comparable to those of diabetic and heart disease patients on mental and social health scales but were higher ("better") than those of these patients on physical health scales. HRQOL among patients who have undergone "curative" epilepsy surgery is better than that of patients who have hypertension,
diabetes
, heart disease, or depressive symptoms. Patients who have continued seizures with altered consciousness are worse off in terms of emotional well-being and overall QOL than all other patients, except for those with depressive symptoms.
...
PMID:Quality of life of epilepsy surgery patients as compared with outpatients with hypertension, diabetes, heart disease, and/or depressive symptoms. 802 6
A patient with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(type 1 diabetes) was admitted to hospital after complaining of general
fatigue
and weight loss. To control hyperglycaemia, the patient was given a conventional form of insulin subcutaneously twice daily. Although this conventional insulin replacement therapy effectively controlled the symptoms, it did not improve the metabolic state and eventually the patient was re-admitted due to a worsening of his condition. The patient was then given a new preparation of both short- and intermediate-acting forms of insulin, administered twice daily using a new, 'dial-a-dose' pen delivery system. Comparative studies of blood insulin dynamics revealed that this new method of delivery resulted in a circadian blood glucose pattern closely approximating normal levels, the complete elimination of subjective symptoms and the normalization of basal insulin secretory patterns. The clear superiority of the new delivery system and the combination insulins in relation to the quality of life of this patient is demonstrated.
...
PMID:Treatment of type 1 diabetes using a pen-style delivery system and a preparation combining short- and intermediate-acting insulin. 811 79
We have investigated a 15 year old girl with progressive external ophthalmoplegia, including bilateral ptosis and retinal rod and cone cell dysfunction with atypical retinal pigmentation, complicated by cerebellar ataxia, partial cardiac conduction block, and
diabetes mellitus
. In infancy she had a severe crisis of bone marrow depression, and as a child she suffered from hypersensitivity to light, increasing
fatigue
, and vertigo, signs that were initially though to be psychosomatic. Histological examination showed mitochondrial myopathy, and subsequent mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analysis showed a deletion of approximately 5500 base pairs in 35 to 40% of her muscle mtDNA. We therefore conclude that this patient has developed the Kearns-Sayre syndrome after a Pearson syndrome-like crisis in her first year of life.
...
PMID:Juvenile Kearns-Sayre syndrome initially misdiagnosed as a psychosomatic disorder. 815 37
Since alpha-interferon has been introduced an efficient therapy of chronic active hepatitis has become available for the first time. Among some of the treated patients, however, alpha-interferon therapy causes typical side effects. Fever, chills, loss of weight,
fatigue
as well as arthralgia, myalgia, loss of concentration and hematologic side effects have to be mentioned in particular. We report the occurrence of a
diabetes mellitus
under alpha-interferon therapy. The metabolic disorder gradually normalized after 3 weeks of antidiabetic treatment, although the interferon medication had been continued. We consider this disorder to be an effect caused by the alpha-interferon. The underlying mechanism might be an insulin resistance or an autoimmunologic defect. For that reason, when administering alpha-interferon, we recommend regular analyses of the blood sugar level during the regular patient monitoring.
...
PMID:[Transient insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus with alpha-interferon therapy in chronic active hepatitis]. 825 76
Despite advances in the delivery of hemodialysis, significant dialytic morbidity persists. Sodium modeling in older adults has been shown to decrease some dialytic symptoms, but clear benefits in young patients without coexisting
diabetes
or advanced cardiovascular disease have not been shown. The effects of sodium modeling were evaluated in 16 adolescent and young adult hemodialysis patients (16 to 32 yr of age) treated with conventional hemodialysis for a median of 11.5 months. The 8-wk study was divided into four 2-wk blocks. During each block, one of three sodium programs or a constant (control) dialysate sodium of 138 mEq/L was used. During each sodium program, the initial dialysate sodium of 148 mEq/L was decreased by an exponential, linear, or step program to 138 mEq/L. Treatments with sodium modeling were significantly better than those with constant sodium dialysate. When all sodium programs were grouped and compared with constant dialysate sodium, the odds of improvement in dialytic cramps, headaches, and nausea were 1.8, 2.1, and 3.9, respectively (P < 0.05). Sodium modeling also significantly decreased the frequency of postdialysis hypotension and interdialytic
fatigue
, dizziness, and muscle cramping (P < 0.05). No differences were seen among the sodium protocols in the incidence of symptomatic hypotension, the amount of normal saline administered, the degree of hemo-concentration during treatments, or the decrease in serum osmolality. There was no increase in pretreatment or posttreatment serum sodium concentrations, interdialytic thirst, weight gain, or hypertension. Sodium modeling dramatically decreases both intradialytic and interdialytic morbidity in young hemodialysis patients. There was no increase in adverse events associated with sodium modeling.
...
PMID:Sodium modeling ameliorates intradialytic and interdialytic symptoms in young hemodialysis patients. 830 46
Arterial reconstructive surgery for upper limb ischaemia of non-traumatic non-embolic origin is uncommon in comparison to that of the lower extremities and long-term follow-ups are rare. Forty-eight patients (27 females, 21 males) with a median age of 58 years (range 22-88) were retrospectively analysed for risk factors, survival and patency rates. Seventy-three per cent were smokers, 42% had hypertension and 33% had had previous vascular interventions.
Diabetes
was only seen in 4% of the cases. Effort
fatigue
was the dominant cause for surgery followed by micro-embolism and rest pain or gangrene. The left side was more frequently affected with 30 procedures compared to 18 on the right. Bypass with either Dacron, ePTFE or autologous vein was the most frequent procedure in 56% of the cases followed by thrombendarterectomy (23%) and subclavio-carotid transposition (11%). Arm-arm index rose from 0.63 (SD 0.28) preoperatively to 1.02 (SD 0.12) after 1 month and at the end of follow-up (median 75 months) it was 0.96 (SD 0.15). Cumulative survival rates were at 1 month 98%, 1 year 91%, 5 years 81% and at 10 years 73%. Cumulative primary patency rates at the same intervals were 96, 96, 88 and 80%, respectively. Thus the survival rate and patency rate are favourable in comparison with arterial surgical procedures of the lower extremity.
...
PMID:Long-term results of arterial reconstruction of the upper extremity. 830 15
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