Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An analysis of 500 consecutive pulmonary tuberculosis cases shows that lower lungfield tuberculosis occurs in 6.8 percent of the negroid population studied and therefore shows no racial predelection. The ratio of female to male involvement was 3:1. A clear association with young women and with pregnancy with or without other infections was demonstrated. Affected men were in the much older age group. Some association with
diabetes
and heart failure were also observed. The initial diagnosis of most of these patients was basal pneumonia or lung abscess. Therefore, the most useful clinical pointers were
productive cough
with or without haemoptysis unresponsive to various conventional antibiotics. The right base was most favoured and cavitation with fluid levels were frequent. We believe that the aetiological factors would include stress as could occur with pregnancies and poor basal tissue oxygenation due to diminished basal expansion in abdominal distension or cardiac failure.
...
PMID:Lower lungfield tuberculosis in a rural African population. 206 90
Three hundred and sixteen patients with cystic fibrosis were seen at the Brompton Hospital during 1965-83; 178 (56.3%) of them were male and 136 female, and their ages ranged from 12 to 51 years. Most patients presented in infancy with respiratory symptoms and malabsorption, but 19 (6%) were diagnosed in adult life, three in their 30s. Pulmonary disease was almost universal (99.7%), being responsible for 97% of all deaths and three quarters of hospital admissions. All patients had developed a
productive cough
by the age of 21 and over half before the age of 5. Many complained of wheezing, but reversible airflow obstruction was present in only 40% of those tested. Minor haemoptysis was very common (62%), but major episodes less so (10%). Pneumothorax was seen in 61 cases (19%), and was often recurrent. Some irreversible airflow obstruction was present in all patients with pulmonary disease. Two patients have been followed for over 20 years without showing appreciable decline in lung function. Thirty five patients (11%) had no symptoms of malabsorption. Acute meconium ileus equivalent was seen in 16% and a chronic partial obstruction with episodic symptoms in a further 19%.
Diabetes mellitus
developed in 36 patients, 13 of whom were insulin dependent. Hepatomegaly was common (29%), often occurring without abnormal results in biochemical tests of liver function; only 1% of patients developed portal hypertension with varices and ascites. Skin reactions to at least one common allergen, including Aspergillus fumigatus, were positive in 70%, but very few patients suffered from hay fever or eczema. One hundred and twenty one patients have died, 97% from infection or other pulmonary complications, and 195 were alive in December 1983 (mean age 23 years). Seventy eight per cent of patients were in full time education or full or part time employment, or were housewives, and only 41 were unemployed for reasons for health. Many patients are married and 10 women have borne children. Most patients were admitted to hospital only three or four times during the period of follow up and 50 individuals (16%) have never been in hospital at all. The improvement in prognosis and quality of life for adults with cystic fibrosis should encourage a positive attitude in those who care for them.
...
PMID:Cystic fibrosis in adolescents and adults. 343 96
We conclude that chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis is a clinical entity which has not usually been recognized as one of the forms of pulmonary disease due to Aspergillus species. Patients are middle-aged, and often have some evidence of impairment of host defenses such as
diabetes mellitus
, a connective tissue disorder, poor nutrition, chronic obstructive lung disease or low dose corticosteroid therapy. They are almost always symptomatic with fever and a
productive cough
, and their chest roentgenogram shows infiltrative and cavitary disease, typical of a chronic destructive lung process such as tuberculosis or anaerobic infection. Cavity formation is often accompanied by the development of a mycetoma. The disease is usually of 1 to 6 months duration but can be present for years prior to diagnosis. The diagnosis is suggested by the clinical course and the isolation of the fungus from pulmonary secretions; negative cultures for other pathogens and failure to respond to antibacterial or antimycobacterial therapy are characteristic. The diagnosis is confirmed by pathologic evidence of tissue invasion by the fungus or a response to specific antimycotic therapy. The symptomatic response to antifungal chemotherapy, at times combined with surgical drainage or resection, is favorable. However, roentgenographic resolution is not uniform, and many patients have residual cavitary disease. The long-term prognosis is uncertain.
...
PMID:Chronic necrotizing pulmonary aspergillosis: a discrete clinical entity. 703 73
Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis generally occurs in immunocompromised hosts such as patients with leukemia, and other malignancies, who are receiving anti-cancer chemotherapy. In this report, two non-immunocompromised patients who developed invasive pulmonary aspergillosis are presented. Case 1: A 63-year-old man complained of
productive cough
and fever. He received antibiotic therapy from his personal physician. This symptoms did not respond, however, and dyspnea developed. He was then transferred to our hospital, about one month after the onset. The chest X-ray showed a meniscus shadow suggesting an aspergilloma in the right upper lung field and an infiltrative shadow in the remaining right lung field. Case 2: A 78-year-old man was admitted because of dyspnea,
productive cough
and appetite loss over the previous three months. The chest X-ray showed a meniscus shadow in the left upper field, an infiltrative shadow in the left lower field and a right pleural effusion sign was also observed. Both cases were diagnosed as having aspergillosis, early in their illness, by the detection of aspergillus antigen in their sera and histopathological and cultural studies of specimens obtained by TBLB. Both improved with intravenous amphotericin B (30 mg/day) and intravenous ulinastatin (200000 IU/day) administration. On the examinations conducted during hospitalization, there was no evidence of any immunosuppressive diseases or immunoincompetent conditions such as leukemia, and other malignancies human immunodeficiency virus infection,
diabetes
or alcoholism.
...
PMID:[Two cases of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis in non-immunocompromised hosts]. 784 9
A 77-year-old man with
diabetes mellitus
who was being treated as an outpatient had abnormal shadow in the right lower lobe on a chest roentgenogram in June 1993. In July 1994, a
productive cough
developed, and subsequent dyspnea obliged him to enter our hospital. Retention of pleural fluid led us to suspect tuberculosis pleurisy and to perform a pleural biopsy and a thoracentesis to remove pleural fluid but no final diagnosis was reached. About 14 months later he died of dyspnea with a rapidly growing tumor. An autopsy disclosed a giant tumor that occupied the right pleural cavity, excluding the lung. The tumor was well-defined between the lung and had infiltrated into the mediastinum. The histopathological diagnosis was primary malignant mesothelioma, sarcomatous type, of the visceral pleura.
...
PMID:[Sarcomatous malignant mesothelioma diagnosed after death]. 877 71
Melioidosis is a rare but potentially fatal infectious disease in Taiwan, although it has been endemic in Southeast Asia, especially northeast Thailand, and northern Australia. In this article, we report a male
diabetes
with fulminant pneumonia, and septicemia caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei without traveling abroad before this episode.
Productive cough
and intermittent chills, high fever for one week, followed by progressively deteriorating dyspnea, shock, disturbed consciousness status were the major presentations. Blood culture grew B. pseudomallei on the fifth admission day. Unfortunately, the patient died on the 9th admission day, despite intensive care and the broad-spectrum antimicrobial regimen used.
...
PMID:An indigenous melioidosis: a case report. 1037 72
We report a case of Mycobacterium abscessus infection complicated with
diabetes mellitus
. A 38-year-old man with
diabetes mellitus
as an underlying disease, was admitted to our hospital because of a
productive cough
. He had had pulmonary tuberculosis two years before. Chest radiography revealed infiltration in both lung apices and chest CT showed a cavitary lesion in the left upper lobe. Gaffky 2 was found on a sputum smear. However, in the examination of PCR on sputum, not only M. tuberculosis but M. avium complex was negative, and repeated cultures of sputum were positive for M. abscessus. On the basis of the diagnosis of an M. abscessus infection, the patient was initially treated with amikacin, imipenem/cilastatin and levofloxacin during hospitalization while receiving insulin for
diabetes mellitus
. The smear and culture of sputum became negative for Mycobacterium, and the findings of chest radiography and chest CT improved. After discharge, treatment was continued with clarithromycin and levofloxacin. It is considered that the choice of effective drugs and the additional treatment of an underlying disease are very important for the treatment of a Mycobacterium abscessus infection.
...
PMID:[Mycobacterium abscessus infection complicated with diabetes mellitus]. 1192 21
Stroke is the commonest neurological cause of morbidity and mortality. Changes in risk factors may influence stroke incidence. Definitive diagnosis of the type of stroke is necessary for management and it has a strong impact on stroke outcome. A total of eighty-five consecutive stroke patients irrespective of age and sex admitted during the period of August 2000 to June 2001 were studied. They were asked about occupation, area of habitat, smoking habit, family history of ischaemic heart disease and/or stroke, any febrile illness, recent history of
productive cough
, dysuria and diarrhoea. They were searched for hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, ischaemic heart disease, valvular heart disease and dislipidaemia. In every patient complete blood count, urine examination, fasting blood glucose and serum lipids, ECG, x-ray chest were performed. CT scan of brain was performed in 68 cases. Male was found 81.18% of cases with age 62.54 +/- 13.08 (m +/- SD) years. Female were 18.82% of cases with age 58.81 +/- 12.77 (m +/- SD). 75.29% of patients were belongs to middle class family. 51.76% of patients came from rural area and 48.24% of patients came from urban area. 78.82% of patients were hypertensive. Infection was associated with 37.65% of cases. Hemiplegia was commonest presentation (88.24%). Though altered consciousness was found more in haemorrhagic stroke (54.84%) but it was not significantly. High from ischaemic cases (p > 0.10) Male suffer more from stroke. Hypertension is the commonest risk factor. Infection is a common association of stroke. Altered consciousness is not a reliable guide to differentiate between ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke is hospitalized cases.
...
PMID:Risk factors & clinical presentations--a study of eighty-five hospital admitted stroke cases. 1239 82
A 62-year-old woman with
diabetes mellitus
and chronic hepatitis C was admitted to our hospital because of fever and
productive cough
. A thoracic CT scan demonstrated a cavity in the left upper lobe, thickening of the bronchial walls and multiple subpleural infiltrates. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy revealed aspergillus bronchitis. The patient was treated with 200 mg/day of oral itraconazole, but no effect was seen. Treatment with 300 mg/day of oral itraconazole, however, resulted in improvement of the symptoms and resolution of the radiographic abnormalities. We report a rare case of aspergillus bronchitis.
...
PMID:[A case of aspergillus bronchitis with effective oral itraconazole]. 1279 83
In this case, a 65-year-old man complained of fever and
productive cough
while being treated for
diabetes mellitus
at the outpatient clinic. His chest CT scan revealed multiple infiltrative lesions in both the right and left lower pulmonary lobes. He was therefore given an antibiotic on suspicion of having bacterial pneumonia, and he also received nutritional instruction in relation to
diabetes mellitus
, and remission resulted. However, he could not maintain sufficient glycemic control thereafter, and his pulmonary lesions persisted. Because his lesions changed into cavitied multiple nodular lesions, as seen on a chest CT scan, a transbronchial lung biopsy was performed. Histopathological examination of the biopsy specimen demonstrated Cryptococcus organisms, and the Cryptococcus antigen titer was high, which led to a diagnosis of pulmonary cryptococcosis. After oral treatment with fluconazole for 1 year and 4 months, only a small nodule in the right lower lobe and a funicular lesion in the left lower lobe remained on a chest CT scan, and the patient had neither subjective symptoms nor evidence of inflammation, although he still had a positive antigen titer for Cryptococcus. Thus, the treatment was terminated. Improvement of the clinical symptoms and of the laboratory and radiological findings demonstrated the therapeutic efficacy of this treatment.
...
PMID:[A case of secondary pulmonary cryptococcosis complicating diabetes mellitus]. 1506 86
1
2
3
Next >>