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

A review of necrotising external otitis, a relatively unknown and dangerous disease, brings out that, initially, it has three characteristics: a granulating necrotising ostitis of the external meatus, extreme pain and a yellowish green secretion. It is always caused by a pseudomonas infection and in almost all cases the patients suffer from diabetes mellitus. If the condition is not recognized in good time and an extensive debridement of the bone involved not performed promptly, ostomyelitis of the base of the skull may follow with involvement of cranial nerves. Severe chronic osteomyelitis of cervical vertebrae occurred in one of our cases. The neurologist must bear this disease in mind in the differential diagnosis when cranial nerves are affected because the nerve disturbances may become evident only after the local condition has subsided or the nerve deficits may be more prominent than and obscure the local ear condition. The most commonly involved nerve is the facial although there may be multiple cranial nerves involved including the third through the twelfth. If the cervical vertebrae become affected there may be nerve root lesions. A torpid meningoencephalitis may also occur. Close cooperation between otologists and neurologists is necessary to recognize and treat these conditions properly.
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PMID:[To the differential diagnosis of cranial nerve lesions: the progressive necrotising external otitis (author's transl)]. 5 Oct 78

The results of extended deep femoral angioplasty (EDFA) have been alaysed for 74 legs in 72 patients. In 69 per cent a femoropopliteal bypass would have been possible, so DEFA is considered here as an alternative operation. The success rate was 66-9 per cent, the failure rate 25-6 per cent and no effect was achieved in 7-5 per cent. Diabetes adversely affected the results. Of the failures, 45 per cent were diabetic, while the incidence of diabetes was only 14 per cent in the group where the operation was successful. The long term results of the operation were reasonable, 75 per cent being successful for 10-39 months. Age had no bearing on success or failure. The effects of EDFA were most dramatic on intermittent claudication. In 52 per cent it was abolished and in 92 per cent claudication distance was increased to over 200 yards. Good results were achieved after failed lumbar sympathectomy and failed femoropopliteal bypass. Successful results of EDFA could be predicted best by inspection of angiograms. Success or failure could have been predicted from the state of the run-off in 81 per cent of the cases. Claudication and rest pain were the most relieved by EDFA, followed by isachaemic ulceration of the leg. Gangrene of digits was helped but less than had been hoped. We conclude that the indications for femoropopliteal bypass are limited to cases of digital gangrene where angiography shows that bypass is possible or where an EDFA operation has failed.
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PMID:Extended deep femoral angioplasty: an alternative to femoropopliteal bypass. 12 11

Pain, tactile, vibration and temperature sensitivity, and also electroexcitability of individual nerves were determined. Neuropathy incidence was almost the same among males and females. There was found no association between neuropathy and excessive weight of the patients and the type of treatment. The frequency of affection increased with the advance of age and was maximum (40.4%) in patients aged from 55 to 64 years. The frequency of neuropathy proved to depend on the duration of diabetes. Sensitivity was chiefly distributed by distal and polyneuritic type. Affection of the lower limbs occurred in all the cases. Improvement after the treatment was noted in 69.3% of patients; however, in 13.5% of cases only it was objective in character. The irritative-pain syndrome was the one which yielded to the treatment best. Analysis of the results demonstrated the treatment to be more affective in younger persons with a lesser duration and severity of diabetes. The duration of partial remission constituted from 3 to 13 months. This pointed to the necessity of prophylactic therapeutic courses.
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PMID:[Diabetic peripheral polyneuropathy]. 19 65

The pain of diabetic peripheral neuropathy responds poorly to current modes of treatment. We treated eight patients with this disorder whose pain was refractory to standard regimens but who experienced remarkable pain relief within two to five days after treatment with fluphenazine hydrochloride, amitriptyline hydrochloride, or a combination of the two. In four patients whose regimens were discontinued, pain recurred within two days and again remitted on reinstitution of the drug regimens. These findings suggest that fluphenazine alone or in combination with amitriptyline may be of benefit in treating the painful peripheral neuropathy associated with diabetes.
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PMID:Peripheral diabetic neuropathy treated with amitriptyline and fluphenazine. 19 54

Spinal epidural neurostimulation, which evolved from dorsal column stimulation, has been found to be effective in the treatment of acute and chronic intractable pain. Urban and Hashold have shown that it is a safe, simplified alternative to dorsal column stimulation, especially because laminectomy is not required if the electrodes are inserted percutaneously. Percutaneous epidural neurostimulation is also advantageous because there can be a diagnostic trial period before permanent internalization and implantation. This diagnostic and therapeutic modality has been used in 36 patients during the past 3 years at Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Eleven of these patients had acute intractable pain, which was defined as pain of less than 1 year in duration. Initial postimplantation results from the 36 patients indicate that spinal epidural neurostimulation is most effective in treating the intractable pain of diabetes, arachnoiditis, and post-traumatic and postamputation neuroma. Long term follow-up, varying from 1 year to 3 years postimplantation in the 20 initially responding patients, indicates that the neurostimulation continues to provide significant pain relief (50% or greater) in a majority of the patients who experienced initial significant pain relief.
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PMID:Spinal epidural neurostimulation for treatment of acute and chronic intractable pain: initial and long term results. 31 23

Because of alarming delays in the diagnosis and treatment of vertebral osteomyelitis we have reviewed our experience over the past 15 years. Of the 36 cases, 25 were pyogenic and 11 tuberculous. Because of late referral there was a delay from onset of symptoms to diagnosis of at least three months in 13 patients. The reason for this was the failure of the initial physician to consider osteomyelitis in the differential diagnosis of a febrile illness associated with back pain. The majority of our patients from the onset did not have intense localized pain, tenderness and a high fever which is the classical clinical picture in this condition. Seven patients with a long history required surgical exploration and debridement of the lesion in order to eradicate the infection. The remainder did well on 6 to 12 weeks of antibiotic therapy. None required spinal fusion. Ten of 11 patients with spinal tuberculosis had curettage of the lesion and spinal fusion. Patients with diabetes, malignancy, alcoholism, corticosteroid therapy and recent lower urinary tract surgery were found to be at particular risk of developing spinal osteomyelitis. Very often it was difficult to identify differences in the presentation of pyogenic and tuberculous infections.
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PMID:Atypical manifestations of spinal infections. 40 8

The authors report on 142 patients treated surgically for chronic pancreatitis. They had an average age of 43.5; 34.5% were calcific; 62.7% were alcoholics: 28.9% had cysts; 19% had diabetes; 16.9% had steatorrhea; and all had pain. A follow-up of 55 patients undergoing pancreaticojejunostomy showed that, 4--21 years following operation 16 had marked improvement, 11 had some relief, four were not relieved from pain, and 24 had died, three within one month postoperatively and 21 later. Eighty to ninety-five per cent pancreatectomy was more effective in relieving pain in the 9 patients subjected to this type of resection than was the 50--80% pancreatic resection used in 16 patients. Pancreaticoduodenectomy was of some value in three of five patients so operated. Celiac ganglionectomy, used in 22 patients, and sphincteroplasty, used in 35 patients, were less effective in relieving symptoms than the other procedures.
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PMID:Results of surgical treatment of chronic pancreatitis. Report of 142 cases. 42 54

The diagnosis of rhinocerebral mucormycosis is most often made at autopsy. We report a series of nine patients in whom the diagnosis was established premortem. Six of the patients had underlying diabetes mellitus and three had acute leukemia. Facial or ocular pain was the complaint found in all patients, and frequently was the initial symptom. The diagnosis was established by examination and culture of infected tissue obtained by biopsy. In seven patients, identification of hyphal elements in smears of biopsy material allowed the immediate institution of amphotericin B therapy. Four of the seven patients treated with amphotericin B survived. All surviving patients had underlying diabetes mellitus and had undergone surgical debridement. Early diagnosis leading to immediate institution of appropriate therapy is most important for survival of patients with mucormycosis.
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PMID:Rhinocerebral mucormycosis: premortem diagnosis and therapy. 44 50

Marked weight loss with cachexia together with severe depression and pain from symmetrical peripheral neuropathy were noted in a 66-year-old man, known to have had diabetes for six years, which required insulin on admission to hospital. The patient died of bronchopneumonia after one year. The severe neuropathy was proven both neurophysiologically and at necropsy. There was no diabetic retinopathy and no histological evidence of renal glomerulosclerosis. There was no evidence of a malignant tumour either clinically or at necropsy.
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PMID:[Diabetic neuropathic cachexia (author's transl)]. 44 96

In patients with severe lower extremity ischemia (ischemic necrosis or pain at rest associated with physical findings of peripheral arterial insufficiency), diabetes mellitus should not deter thorough arteriography and consideration of arterial reconstruction. Infrapopliteal bypass can produce prolonged limb salvage in diabetic patients in lieu of primary amputation.
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PMID:Long-term results of femoroinfrapopliteal bypass in diabetic patients with severe ischemia of the lower extremity. 45 59


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