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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
When glucose utilisation is impaired due to decreased insulin effect, ketones are produced by the liver from free fatty acids to supply an alternate source of energy. This adaptation may be associated with severe metabolic acidosis and tends to occur in patients with type I (insulin-dependent)
diabetes mellitus
. In addition, hypovolemia is an almost invariable finding with marked hypoglycemia and is primarily induced by the associated glucosuria. Ketoacidosis stimulates both the central and peripheral chemoreceptors controlling respiration, resulting in alveolar hyperventilation (Kussmaul's respiration). With the ensuing fall in pCO2 the patient tries to raise the extracellular pH. A fruity odor of acetone on the patient's breath sometimes suggests that ketoacidosis is present. The classical triad of symptoms associated with hyperglycemia are polyuria, polydipsia, and weight loss. Circulatory insufficiency with hypotension is not uncommon due to the marked fluid loss and acidemia. In more severely affected patients, neurologic abnormalities may be seen, including lethargy,
seizures
or coma. Some patients also have marked vomiting and abdominal pain. The history and physical examination may provide important clues to the presence of uncontrolled
diabetes mellitus
. Once suspected, the diagnosis can be easily confirmed by measuring the plasma glucose concentration. Glucosuria and ketonuria can be semiquantitatively detected with reagent sticks. Blood gas analysis and anion gap give objective information as to the severity of the metabolic acidosis. Therapy must be directed toward each of the metabolic disturbances: hyperosmolality, ketoacidosis, hypovolemia and potassium, and phosphate depletion. The mainstays of therapy are the administration of low-dose insulin and volume repletion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ketoacidotic diabetic metabolic dysregulation: pathophysiology, clinical aspects, diagnosis and therapy]. 817 67
This self-directed learning module highlights the preexisting comorbid conditions and the medical complications during and after rehabilitation of the patient with stroke. Part of the chapter on stroke rehabilitation in the Self-Directed Medical Knowledge Program for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation, this article identifies several of the major associated medical problems, such as venous thromboembolism, pneumonia,
seizure
, and pressure sore; discusses methods of management for each of these problems; and reviews implications of associated conditions, such as heart disease,
diabetes
, and hypertension, and secondary complications for rehabilitation and outcome.
...
PMID:Stroke rehabilitation. 2. Comorbidities and complications. 818 63
Maternal and fetal magnesium homeostasis is reviewed. Current evidence suggests that pregnancy-associated growth is unlikely to cause maternal magnesium deficiency and that the case for magnesium supplementation during pregnancy is unproven. Similarly, data do not support the use of magnesium in prevention of preterm labor or its preferential use in tocolysis. Magnesium might have a role to play in the prevention/treatment of eclamptic
seizures
. Hypomagnesaemia occurs in poorly controlled diabetic pregnancy and may be part of the cause of the hypomagnesaemia in the infants of such mothers. Fetal magnesium homeostasis is poorly understood as is the mechanism of placental transfer. Data from the rat suggest that the bulk of maternofetal placental magnesium transfer occurs via a transcellular route utilising a Na+/Mg2+ exchanger and that maternofetal flux of magnesium is reduced in the presence of maternal
diabetes mellitus
. Further study of diabetic pregnancy will increase our understanding of magnesium homeostasis both in normal and abnormal pregnancy.
...
PMID:Magnesium and pregnancy. 826 17
We report the findings of a total population survey of Thugbah community in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia (SA) to determine its point prevalence of neurological diseases. During this two-phase door-to-door study, all Saudi nationals living in Thugbah were first screened by trained interviewers using a pretested questionnaire (sensitivity 98%, specificity 89%) administered at a face-to-face interview. Individuals with abnormal responses were then evaluated by a neurologist using specific guidelines and defined diagnostic criteria to document neurological disease. The questionnaire was readministered blind by a neurologist to all those with abnormal responses and a 1-in-20 random sample of those without abnormal responses, respectively. The family members of an individual with an abnormal response were also screened to improve accuracy. A total of 23,227 Saudis (98% of the eligible subjects) were screened and those residing in Thugbah on the reference date (22,630) were used to calculate the point prevalence rates. Forty-two percent of those screened were in the first decade of life and only 1.5% were more than 60 years old. There were marginally more females (50.2%) than males (49.8%). Consanguineous marriages especially between first cousins were present in 54.6%. The demographic characteristics of Thugbah community were similar to those in other parts of SA. The overall crude prevalence ratio (PR) for all forms of neurological disease was 131/1,000 population. All subsequent PRs are per 1,000 population. Headache syndromes were the most prevalent disorder (PR 20.7). The PR for all
seizure
disorders was 7.60, and the epilepsies (6.54) were more frequent than febrile convulsions (0.84). Mental retardation, cerebral palsy syndrome, and microcephaly were common pediatric problems with PRs of 6.27, 5.30 and 1.99, respectively. Stroke, Parkinson's disease, and Alzheimer's disease were uncommon with respective PRs of 1.8, 0.27 and 0.22. Central nervous system (CNS) malformations (0.49) such as hydrocephalus and meningomyelocele were more prevalent than spinal muscular atrophy (0.13), congenital brachial palsy (0.13) and narcolepsy (0.04). Multiple sclerosis was rare (0.04). Osteoarthritis and low back pain syndromes were the main non-neurological conditions seen. The major medical diseases that may be neurologically relevant were
diabetes mellitus
, hypertension, and connective tissue disorders.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:A community survey of neurological disorders in Saudi Arabia: the Thugbah study. 827 77
Several medical illnesses commonly occur in the pregnant patient admitted to the emergency department. Some, such as hyperemesis gravidarum and urinary tract infection, occur exclusively or with increased frequency in pregnancy. Thromboembolic disease is the leading cause of maternal death in pregnancies that survive the first 3 months. Sickle cell disease,
seizures
,
diabetes
, and asthma are common in young women, and the emergency physician needs to know the ways in which pregnancy alters presentation and management of these illnesses.
...
PMID:Medical illness during pregnancy. 830 28
There are health requirements for acquiring and renewing a driver's license. Physicians are legally obliged to inform the local health authorities when a patient no longer meets these health requirements. This paper describes the current Norwegian legislation, formalities of administration, and practice of traffic medicine. Visual acuity, field of vision,
seizures
, heart disease,
diabetes mellitus
, abuse of alcohol and drugs, psychiatric disorders, aging and dysfunction of the locomotor system are discussed in brief.
...
PMID:[Driver's licenses and medicine. A review of legal requirements and practice]. 836 98
The first disease due to disturbances in a cell organelle was discovered in 1959-62, and its basis was loose-coupling of oxidative phosphorylation in the skeletal muscle mitochondria accompanied by severe alterations of their structure (Luft's disease). During the 1980s, functional disturbances and structural alterations in the mitochondria were observed in more than 100 disease entities, mainly in parts of the central nervous system and skeletal muscles. A second breakthrough in this area was the discovery in 1963-64 that mitochondria had their own DNA, mtDNA. Following the observation in 1988 of mutations of mtDNA in mitochondrial diseases, such mutations--mainly deletions and point mutations--were observed in almost all mitochondrial diseases. A remarkable extension of the area is the notion that "normal" ageing is accompanied by decreased oxidative phosphorylation and the appearance of mtDNA mutations. During the last two years, such changes have been demonstrated in diseased states in tissues and organs, which are especially reliant on oxygen supply: in the central nervous system (Parkinson's disease, some types of epilepsy and
seizures
, Huntington's disease, possibly also in Alzheimer's disease); in heart muscle (cardiomyopathies) and in skeletal muscle. Type 2
diabetes
or NIDDM engages two tissues most reliant on oxygen consumption, the pancreatic islets (insulin secretion) and skeletal muscle (insulin sensitivity). Both these functions are genetically determined, the latter to a high degree also controlled by "environmental" factors. The evident age factor in the development of NIDDM could be on a par with the "normal" ageing process.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Physiopathology of mitochondria. From Luft's disease to aging and diabetes]. 836 14
431 newborns of diabetic mothers (NDM) were studied between the years 1980 and 1990. They were divided into two groups: a first group of 227 patients born from mother with gestational diabetes mellitus; a second group of 204 patients born from mother with pregestational
diabetes mellitus
. The first and the second group were subdivided into two subgroups: the A, referring to the period 1980-85, and the B, referring to the period 1986-90. Subgroups B were characterized by a better metabolic control of pregnancies. Our protocol consisted of anamnestic study, clinical, metabolic, instrumental examinations and clinical follow-up for a period ranging from 1 to 10 years. The study of our data suggests that embryo-feto-neonatal mortality doesn't show significantly difference between the first and the second group and between subgroups A and B. The percentage of preterm infants was significantly more elevated in the second group, the percentage of full-term newborns was significantly higher in the first group. The incidence of cesarean sections was significantly higher in subgroups B. Mean birthweight was more elevated in the first group and the incidence of macrosomia was higher in subgroups A. The incidence of asphyxia, hypotonia,
seizures
, transient cardiomegaly, transient hypoglycaemia and hypocalcemia, was higher in subgroups A, without significant difference between the first and the second group. Congenital anomalies were heterogeneous and there were no significant difference between the first and the second group. Only the incidence of congenital cardiopathies was significantly more elevated in the second group. At follow-up neurologic sequelae were mainly characterized by behavioural anomalies.
...
PMID:[The newborn infant of the diabetic mother: the clinical findings in 431 subjects]. 841 73
Central nervous system (CNS) complications (disturbance of consciousness, focal motor deficits, and
seizures
) after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and cardiac valve surgery were studied retrospectively. The incidence of CNS complications was significantly more frequent in CABG (11%, 71/638) than in valve surgery (7%, 24/345). Major contributory factors of CNS complications were preexisting cerebrovascular disease and cardiopulmonary bypass time. In comparison to previous reports, older age, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, and cerebrovascular disease were more common in the patients undergoing CABG. The preexisting cerebrovascular disease and prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass time probably increase the risk of cerebral embolism and/or cerebral hypoperfusion. We conclude that patients undergoing CABG surgery are at greater risk for neurological damage in comparison to those undergoing valve surgery.
...
PMID:Central nervous system complications after cardiac surgery: a comparison between coronary artery bypass grafting and valve surgery. 842 92
The clinical characteristics and neuropathological findings of 22 organ transplant recipients with CNS aspergillosis were reviewed. Thirteen patients had liver, six kidney, two heart and one had cluster transplants. The most frequent neurological symptoms were alteration of mental status (86%),
seizures
(41%) and focal neurological deficits (32%). Meningeal signs were less common (19%). Aspergillus spp invasion of the blood vessels with subsequent ischaemic or haemorrhagic infarcts, and solitary or multiple abscesses were the predominant neuropathological findings. The lungs were the probable portal of entry; however, isolated CNS aspergillosis was seen in two patients. Antemortem diagnosis of the infection was made in half of the patients. Concomitant
diabetes mellitus
was noted in 59% of the patients and bacterial or other severe infections in 86%. No specific clinical or pathological pattern could be identified among patients with different types of organ transplants. In addition CNS aspergillosis was preceded by organ rejection and the need for intense immunosuppression and retransplantation in the majority of the patients.
...
PMID:CNS aspergillosis in organ transplantation: a clinicopathological study. 843 8
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