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We identified 10 patients with symptoms beginning before the age of 20 years in a group of 69 patients with proven chronic pancreatitis. Six of the 10 patients were women. There was a family history of pancreatitis in three patients and alcohol exposure in seven patients. Three patients were dependent on narcotics at the time of presentation. Six of the 10 patients had pancreatic duct dilatation to 10 mm or more in diameter during observation. These six patients underwent pancreaticojejunostomy, with clinical improvement in five patients. The median time of follow-up was 19 years from presentation. No patient developed diabetes and one developed malabsorption. Only three patients were free of pain, but four other patients had only mild episodes that rarely required hospital admission. One patient died of metastatic abdominal carcinoma of unknown origin 51 years after developing familial pancreatitis. Chronic pancreatitis beginning at a young age is sufficiently common to merit special awareness. It is compatible with prolonged survival, and pancreaticojejunostomy may help if the pancreatic duct reaches sufficient size. The disease does not seem to burn out with time.
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PMID:Chronic pancreatitis beginning in childhood and adolescence. 173 55

The value of the vascular examination cannot be over-estimated. Symptoms of vascular disease present in the foot and lower extremity may actually be manifestations of severe life-threatening disease. Symptoms, their location, and the frequency and quality of the patient's pain often provide valuable clues for the clinician's diagnosis. Central nervous system symptoms, ocular disturbances, cardiac symptoms, impotence, or constitutional disturbances may all indicate systemic arterial disease. Risk factors for this disease include smoking, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, genetic predisposition, diabetes, emotional stress, and physical inactivity. Those factors attributable to hypercoagulability and venous disease are birth control pill use, estrogen chemotherapy, obesity, prolonged immobilization, paralysis, previous thrombotic episodes, venous stasis disease, and varicose veins. An accurate bilateral assessment of blood pressure, pulses, and capillary perfusion is of critical importance. Careful inspection of the extremity for trophic changes, skin color, texture, temperature, edema, ulceration, atrophy, or paresis, will provide clues of vasculopathy. A relatively accurate assessment of circulatory status may be obtained without the use of exotic instruments. Simple tests such as the elevation and dependency tests, capillary bed return test, venous filling time test, along with blood pressure, pulse, and possibly oscillometry data are valuable in arterial evaluation. Such venous tests as inspection, percussion, Homan's sign, Trendelenburg, and Perthes' tourniquet are useful in the determination of the presence of venous disease. Fortunately, over the past few years tremendous advances have been made in the technology of the vascular laboratory. If symptoms are discovered during the vascular history and physical examination, the complete noninvasive study will provide impressive data to quantitate and specifically establish the diagnosis.
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PMID:The vascular history and physical examination. 173 54

According to the 1988 Marseilles-Rome classification inflammatory pancreatic diseases are represented by acute (AP) and chronic pancreatitis (CP), pancreatic fibrosis and abscesses (due to infection of cystic cavities). Each form is defined by specific etiological, pathomorphological, functional and evolutive aspects. In our experience with 348 AP cases, gallstones and chronic alcohol abuse, alone or together, represent the major causative factors (over 70% of cases). Mortality observed in necrotizing AP only, varies from 26% of idiopathic to 8% of biliary cases. Ductal scars, exocrine and endocrine impairment were observed in about 45% and 20% respectively as sequelae of necrotizing AP, whatever the etiology. As far as CP is concerned, the main etiological factor is chronic alcohol consumption (82% of cases). The clinical evolution of CP may be roughly divided in two phases, the earlier (within 5 years from onset) characterized by frequently recurrent pain, calcifications and cystic cavities and the later when pain spontaneously regresses and steatorrhea and diabetes tend to appear. Heavy alcohol intake, smoking and frequent relapses are related to a less favourable course. About 60% of the patients underwent surgery within 5 years from onset. Pain relief was achieved in the large majority. Reduction in alcohol intake and the natural tendency of the disease to burn out, probably aid pain relief. Mortality in CP is due to diseases secondary to alcohol and smoking abuse (cardiovascular and neoplastic) more than to CP alone. We believe that multiple parameters are required for a complete definition of each pancreatic patient.
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PMID:Acute and chronic pancreatitis: an up-date. 174 47

We studied the effects of intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) with a new nitrosourea (hydroxyethyl-chloroethyl nitrosourea: HeCNU) on the visual system of 68 patients with malignant gliomas. The intra-arterial chemotherapy was given as a complementary treatment of glioma after surgery (19 patients), after tumor recurrence (28 patients) and as the preliminary treatment before radiotherapy (21 patients). Eleven patients (16%) suffered a visual complication after two or more courses of chemotherapy. The main visual symptoms included mild to major decrease of visual acuity and in some cases ocular pain, palpebral edema and conjunctival injection. The delay in onset of ocular symptoms from the last course of IAC varied from 1 week to 9 months. From ophthalmoscopic findings, visual field testing and fluorescein angiography, the visual symptoms presented by our patients could be related to ischemic optic neuropathy or retinal vasculopathy. None of the patients had hypertension, diabetes, cardiopathy or hematological disease. Statistical analysis failed to demonstrate a relationship between the occurrence of visual toxicity and patient age, number of courses of HeCNU, the vascular axis treated, total systemic dose or dose by carotid artery, suggesting a possible specific sensitivity of some patients to chemotherapy. The pathophysiology and the therapeutic implications of this visual toxicity are discussed.
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PMID:Visual toxicity following intra-arterial chemotherapy with hydroxyethyl-CNU in patients with malignant gliomas. A prospective study with statistical analysis. 174 75

The symptom of intermittent claudication indicates a generalised arteriosclerosis. The high mortality of these patients is due to myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular events and rupture of aortic aneurysms. Prognostic factors for the progression of peripheral occlusive arterial disease to rest pain and trophical lesions are persistent nicotine consumption, arterial occlusions on more than one extremity, brachiopedal pressure quotient less than 0.5 and diabetes mellitus. Therapy of choice in most cases is the walking exercise. When the claudication distance remains very short or decompensation of peripheral circulation is imminent, reopening procedures like percutaneous transluminal angioplasty should be performed. If they are successless a prostanoid therapy is able to relief the complaints.
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PMID:[Intermittent claudication]. 175 Jan 57

The clinical and laboratory parameters of calcific shoulder periarthritis (CSP) were examined in 900 patients with type II diabetes mellitus as well as in 350 age- and sex-matched control subjects. A threefold increased prevalence of CSP in diabetics compared with the control group was associated with the presence of longstanding and poorly controlled diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertriglyceridemia suggesting pronounced diabetic angiopathy, as well as with minor trauma and hypomagnesemia. Aging and serum calcium concentrations were not related to the presence of CSP. Thirty-two percent of diabetics with CSP were symptomatic; 15% of them presented with severe pain and restriction of shoulder movement. These findings confirm a close pathogenetic interrelation between CSP and diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Clinical and laboratory parameters in adult diabetics with and without calcific shoulder periarthritis. 176 Jul 73

The autonomic nervous system may have a role in the pathogenesis of irritable bowel syndrome. If so, the occurrence of irritable bowel symptomatology in patients with autonomic neuropathy might indicate which, if any, of these symptoms are dependent on autonomic innervation. The prevalence of abdominal pain, abdominal distension and an abnormal bowel habit was recorded in 200 patients with diabetes, screened for autonomic neuropathy, and 200 matched controls. Constipation was significantly more common in patients with autonomic neuropathy than in those without, or controls (22.0% vs 9.2% vs 6.8%). The prevalence of abdominal pain and abdominal distension was no different in patients with and without autonomic neuropathy and their respective controls. The results of this study suggest that control of bowel habit is more dependent on the total integrity of the autonomic nervous system than the perception of pain or the production of distension.
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PMID:Functional bowel symptoms in diabetes--the role of autonomic neuropathy. 177 25

The symptoms of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction may be subtle and occur late in the course of diabetes. They include abnormal exercise-induced cardiovascular performance, postural hypotension, and cardiac denervation syndrome. Autonomic nervous system testing involves an evaluation of the responses of complex reflex pathways. Some of the most commonly used and validated cardiovascular autonomic tests are RR-variation, the Valsalva manoeuvre, and postural testing. Sinus arrhythmia during breathing is termed RR-variation. In diabetic patients with autonomic neuropathy the magnitude of the RR-variation is decreased. Abnormal exercise-induced cardiovascular performance has been observed in diabetic subjects with abnormal RR-variation due to autonomic neuropathy. The Valsalva manoeuvre consists of forced expiration against a standardized resistance for a specified period of time. The reflex bradycardia that follows the Valsalva period in normal subjects is lacking in diabetic patients with clinical evidence of autonomic neuropathy. Postural hypotension in diabetics may be due to neuropathy or to a variety of secondary causes. An algorithm is presented to facilitate assessment of diabetic patients with postural symptoms. Treatment of postural hypotension should be directed primarily to the correction of secondary causes, in the absence of which the symptoms can be controlled by mechanical measures, plasma volume expansion, and vasoconstriction. Cardiac denervation syndrome may result in denervation supersensitivity and afferent (pain) nerve dysfunction. The RR-variation is a sensitive indicator of impairment of cardiac autonomic innervation and is a simple method for identifying asymptomatic patients at risk for painless ischaemia. Formal cardiovascular stress testing may be prudent before initiating an exercise programme in such individuals.
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PMID:Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction: diagnosis and prognosis. 182 67

A personal series of 6780 patients with diabetes mellitus is reported. Of these 1410 were thought to have insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetes and 4926 non-insulin-dependent (Type 2) diabetes. Among the former, 128 patients were only diagnosed when in severe ketoacidosis or coma. In 116 patients the diabetes was diagnosed in pregnancy. Chronic alcoholism was an aetiological factor in 75 patients; in 52 it led to the diagnosis being made, and it complicated treatment in 129 additional patients. In the patients with Type 2 diabetes whose treatment was stabilized 23.5% were having insulin injections, 44.5% tablets, and 32.0% diet only. Sight-threatening retinopathy developed in 21.3% of patients with Type 1 and 7.9% of those with Type 2 diabetes. The rate of developing sight-threatening retinopathy was 1.1% of patients per year. Blindness occurred in 0.28% of patients with Type 1 diabetes per year and 0.097% per year in Type 2 diabetes. If the mean survival of patients with retinopathy going blind is 7.5 years, this would mean 7500 people in the UK blind from diabetic retinopathy. There was a striking drop in the annual incidence of blindness after 1970 coinciding with the introduction of specific treatment for diabetic retinopathy. Juvenile cataract developed in 1.7% of patients who developed Type 1 diabetes before 30 years of age. Clinically important diabetic neuropathy developed in 17.4% of patients with Type 1 and 11.6% of those with Type 2 diabetes. The main features were paraesthesiae and numbness (49%), neuropathic ulceration (37%), pain (5%), autonomic symptoms (5%), and amyotrophy (4%). Oculomotor palsies and mononeuropathies were noted. Foot ulceration occurred in 81 patients with Type 1 and 279 of those with Type 2 diabetes. Charcot changes in the feet were noted in 21 patients. Major amputations were needed in 18 patients with Type 1 and 60 with Type 2 diabetes. Proteinuria believed to be due to diabetic nephropathy developed in 12.8% of patients with Type 1 and 4.7% of those with Type 2 diabetes. The prevalence of early renal failure was 4.6% and 1.4%, respectively. Coronary artery disease was noted in 9% of patients with Type 1 diabetes, and was more common in those who developed diabetes after 20 years of age. Myocardial infarction was as common in women as in men. In Type 2 diabetes coronary artery disease gave rise to symptoms in 19.1%, and myocardial infarction was more common in men.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Diabetes in the United Kingdom: a personal series. 182 47

Type II (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes (NIDDM) can be preceded by a relatively long period of disturbed glucose metabolism. Therefore, the prevalence of neuropathy and its possible relationship to metabolic abnormalities were investigated in 95 newly diagnosed type II diabetics (upper age limit was set at 55 years) with a mean age of 49.7 years (men/women ratio 1:1). The study program was as follows: Detailed history, clinical investigation of peripheral nerves, sensory assessment to touch and pain (pinprick), vibration sensation using established techniques, and motor nerve conduction velocities (MNCV) of the fibular (peroneal) and ulnar nerves. Three cardiovascular autonomic function tests were performed: the Valsalva maneuver, standing (ratio between RR-intervalmax: RR-intervalmin), and deep breathing (maximum/minimum heart rate). Vascular diseases were diagnosed using a conventional 12-lead resting electrocardiogram (ECG) and impedance measurement of the lower extremities. The results were as follows: abnormal vibration sensation in 80.0%, abnormalities of MNCV in 15.7%, abnormal sensations to touch or pinprick in 14.7%, and loss of reflexes in 13.6%. If peripheral neuropathy was defined as having at least three of the four abnormalities plus neuropathic symptoms, the prevalence was 6.3% (6 of 95 patients). Abnormalities of the three cardiovascular autonomic function tests were much less prevalent in type II diabetic patients (2.1-7.3%). In conclusion, the study showed that peripheral and autonomic neuropathy is not common at diagnosis in middle-aged type II diabetic patients without signs of microvascular or macrovascular complications.
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PMID:Prevalence of peripheral and autonomic neuropathy in newly diagnosed type II (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes. 183 Mar 12


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