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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Exocrine and endocrine function of the pancreas was assessed in the early postoperative period (< or = 2 months) and subsequently (mean, 25 months; range, 3 to 120) in 103 patients (69 men, 34 women; mean age, 42.4 +/- 11.6 years) undergoing operation for chronic pancreatitis. Alcohol was the main causative agent (69%) and pain the most frequent indication (87%) for operation. Drainage procedures (n = 23) did not alter pancreatic function either initially or on long-term follow-up. In the early postoperative period, distal pancreatectomy (n = 42) often impaired endocrine function without affecting exocrine function; seven patients (17%) became diabetic, and results of oral glucose tolerance test showed deterioration in 23 of 28 patients (82%, p < 0.05). On subsequent follow-up, 11 patients developed exocrine failure (p < 0.01) and 10 patients endocrine (p < 0.01) failure. Proximal pancreatectomy (n = 38) precipitated clinical exocrine failure in 14 patients (37%, p < 0.01), yet pancreolauryl tests in 18 patients showed little objective change in exocrine status (0.50 > p > 0.10). Endocrine function was initially spared after proximal pancreatectomy, but six additional patients (16%, p < 0.05) required treatment for diabetes at a mean of 19 months (range, 3 to 34). Deterioration in pancreatic function is thus not an invariable immediate consequence of pancreatic drainage procedures or partial pancreatectomy for chronic pancreatitis. Progression of disease must account, in part, for failure of both exocrine and endocrine function on long-term follow-up. Drainage operations appear to delay this progressive decline in pancreatic function.
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PMID:Pancreatic exocrine and endocrine function after operations for chronic pancreatitis. 146 19

The association between medical risk factors and the outcome of foot ulcers was evaluated in 208 consecutive diabetic patients with severe peripheral vascular disease (systolic toe blood pressure < or = 45 mm Hg). All patients were treated and followed by the same foot care team. Eighty patients healed primarily, 83 healed after a minor or major amputation, and 45 died. The systolic toe blood pressure was higher among primary healed (30 +/- 13 mm Hg) compared with amputated (22 +/- 15 mm Hg; p < 0.001) and deceased patients (20 +/- 14 mm Hg; p < 0.001). The patients were comparable regarding age, sex, and diabetes and wound duration. Only 41 (19%) patients had intermitten claudication, whereas 153 (77%) lacked palapble pedal pulses, 36% of whom healed primarily. Rest pain occurred in 72 (33%) patients, 38 (47%) of whom had an amputation and 18 (25%) who healed primarily (p < 0.01). Peripheral edema and proteinuria were more common among patients who healed after amputation compared with those who healed primarily (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively). Signs of sensory neuropathy were found in 158 (77%) patients. There were no differences concerning cardiovascular disease, smoking habits, or short-term metabolic control between patients who healed primarily or after an amputation. In conclusion, diabetic patients with foot ulcers and severe peripheral vascular disease with low systolic toe blood pressure were not excluded from the possibility of primary healing. The most important risk factors for amputation were a systolic toe pressure of less than 30 mm Hg, peripheral edema, rest pain, and proteinuria.
J Diabetes Complications
PMID:Medical risk factors in diabetic patients with foot ulcers and severe peripheral vascular disease and their influence on outcome. 147 42

As part of a large epidemiological study concerning 494 diabetic patients undergoing dialysis throughout France--the so-called Uremidiab section study--we collected data with the aim of describing objective as well as subjective aspects of quality of survival. Questionnaires were completed from medical records and from direct interviews by trained collectors. The data included: (a) medical status and impairments; (b) functional status with the Barthel index for basic activities of daily living; (c) subjective aspects through self-estimation of fatigue, pain, care burden, quality of life and working capacity. Only 21% of the patients had type 1 diabetes and more than 71% were currently insulin-treated. Among the various long-term complications registered, visual impairment was a prominent feature: 25% of the patients were blind and the best eye vision scored 0.8 or more for only 20%. The differences found between the two types of diabetes are discussed. As a result of these impairments, functional status was poor even when considering basic activities, with a mean Barthel index (BI) of 80 +/- 19. Type 2 patients and those patients undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis had significantly lower BI. The results are discussed in the light of the literature. Compared with a group of 121 non-dialyzed diabetics, patients scored higher for fatigue and pain, but not for care burden and quality of life.
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PMID:Assessment of handicap in chronic dialysis diabetic patients (Uremidiab section study). 148 47

Laseropuncture in patients with diabetes mellitus associated with angiopathies of the lower extremities (grade II and III) produced a pronounced clinical effect which was manifested by removing the pain syndrome, improvement of the peripheral circulation and extremity function and function of the lower extremities, improvement of thermographic values. But this positive dynamics was more pronounced in angiopathies of the lower extremities of the stage of functional disorders than obliterating atherosclerosis of the legs. Sterility of the laser beam, possibility of local effect on biologically active points, non-painful procedure, absence of age limits and side effects allow to widely recommend this method for the treatment of Diabetes mellitus associated with angiopathies of the lower extremities.
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PMID:[Laser puncture in the treatment of diabetic angiopathies of the lower extremities]. 148 57

A 29-year-old female with type I diabetes mellitus developed pain, focal tenderness, and swelling in the posterior left thigh. Subsequent evaluation included a muscle biopsy, which revealed large confluent areas of necrosis and edema, compatible with a diagnosis of diabetic muscle infarction (DMI). Diabetic muscle infarction (DMI) is an unusual neuromuscular complication of diabetes mellitus. DMI begins with the acute onset of focal pain and swelling in the thigh. The anterior compartment (quadriceps muscle group) or posterior compartment (hamstring muscle group) are most frequently involved. The focal region of muscle damage can be noninvasively viewed by magnetic resonance imaging and radionuclide scans. Muscle biopsy demonstrates large confluent regions of muscle necrosis and edema. DMI needs to be differentiated from other processes that can cause leg pain in a diabetic patient.
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PMID:Case-of-the-month: painful thigh mass in a young woman: diabetic muscle infarction. 150 28

Between April, 1988 and August, 1990, the OmniPhase penile prosthesis, a non-inflatable self-contained penile prosthesis, was implanted in 34 patients, aged from 37 years to 79 years, averaging 54.2 years. The etiologies of the impotence were radical surgery for bladder cancer or rectal cancer in 17 patients, diabetes mellitus in 7 patients, vascular abnormality in 3 patients, spinal injury in 2 patients, penile disorders in 2 patients and others in 3 patients. Penile prosthesis was implanted by subcoronal incision under spinal or general anesthesia. Clinical results were evaluated 12 weeks after surgery. Thirty-two patients (94.1%) could have intercourse postoperatively. Eighteen patients (52.9%) were completely satisfied and 14 patients (41.2%) were satisfied, whereas one patient (2.9%) had no improvement and another patient (2.9%) deteriorated. There was no serious complication. However, prosthesis was explanted because of skin erosion in one patient. Pain, which lasted for more than 10 days, was seen in 3 patients (8.8%), penile edema in 11 patients (32.4%), and acute epididymitis in one patient. The obtained results showed that implantation of OmniPhase penile prosthesis is a safe and useful procedure for treatment of organic impotence.
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PMID:[Implantation of self-contained non-inflatable penile prosthesis in patients with organic impotence]. 150 23

The patient was a 63-year-old male who was with having diabetes mellitus since 1967. Hemodialysis was carried out from June 1983 for diabetic nephropathy. Neuropathy and retinopathy were already present at that time. He complained pain in penile glans from the middle of June 1990. Three month later, partial penectomy was performed because of the development of black-mummy-shaped necrosis on the whole glans. Histopathological examination widely revealed luminal obstruction and formation of thrombus due mainly to vascular lesions as a result of diabetes mellitus. As far as we know, case reports of diabetes mellitus complicated with penile necrosis are extremely rare, and this present case seems to be the 2nd one in Japan and the 5th one in the world, including those reported previously in the West.
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PMID:[A case of penile necrosis in a patient with diabetes mellitus]. 150 32

A case of Torulopsis glabrata osteomyelitis of the thoracic spine producing spinal cord compression and myelopathy is reported. The patient displayed several of the predisposing factors to T. glabrata infection, including diabetes mellitus, a history of abdominal surgery, and intravenous catheterization with hyperalimentation. The patient was successfully managed with surgical decompression, debridement, and curettage of the affected bone, postoperative immobilization, and systemic amphotericin B therapy. Her pain was relieved, spinal cord function recovered, and the vertebrae healed uneventfully. T. glabrata osteomyelitis is a rare and unpredictably progressive infection. This case demonstrates that it requires prompt therapy and close observation.
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PMID:Torulopsis glabrata vertebral osteomyelitis. 152 Sep 98

Thirty-five patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP) treated over a 15-year-period were studied. There were 29 men and 6 women with a mean age of 47 years (range 21-67). Twenty-seven (77%) were chronic alcoholics, two (6%) had gallstones, one had stenosis of the Ampulla of Vater and in five (14%) no obvious cause was found. Thirty patients (86%) presented with abdominal pain. Chronic diarrhoea was present in 8 (23%), and steatorrhoea was documented in 6 of these. Fifteen (43%) had pancreatic calcifications. Five developed pseudocysts and 16 (46%) developed diabetes mellitus. Twelve patients required surgery. Three continue to have severe recurrent relapses of pain but the majority (91%) have had a relatively stable course with medical management.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis in Jamaica. 152 34

Ultrasonography revealed evidence of liver abscess in 126 patients who were admitted to one hospital in northeastern Thailand over a 3-year period. There were 50 cases for which a pyogenic bacterial etiology was confirmed; 34 cases (group 1) were caused by Pseudomonas pseudomallei (nine patients died) and 16 cases (group 2) were caused by other bacteria (two patients died). Melioidosis was associated with anemia and underlying diabetes or renal disease; right-upper-quadrant pain and jaundice were more common in group 2 (P less than .05). Blood cultures were positive for bacteria in 68% of group 1 and 50% of group 2. Chest radiographs revealed abnormalities in 17 of 30 group 1 patients and 6 of 12 group 2 patients. The radiographic appearances of a blood-borne pneumonia suggested melioidosis. The serum indirect hemagglutination assay for antibodies to P. pseudomallei was of limited value in differentiating the two types of abscesses. Multiple hypoechoic areas on ultrasonography were significantly associated with melioidosis (P less than .01); associated splenic abscess occurred in 19 group 1 patients but only one group 2 patient (2-107, 95% confidence interval; odds ratio, 19). In an area where P. pseudomallei is endemic, these characteristic ultrasonographic findings should prompt immediate treatment for melioidosis.
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PMID:Pseudomonas pseudomallei liver abscesses: a clinical, laboratory, and ultrasonographic study. 155 25


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