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

The adenosine-receptor antagonist 8-phenyltheophylline (8-PTH) was used to study the role of endogenous adenosine in modulating insulin-stimulated myocardial glucose uptake (MGU) in vivo. Dogs were surgically instrumented under pentobarbital sodium anesthesia to measure hemodynamics and obtain blood samples for determinations of oxygen and glucose concentrations. Myocardial uptake of these substances was calculated as the product of the appropriate arterial-coronary sinus differences and circumflex blood flow. The response to insulin was determined with the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp technique. During insulin infusion, MGU increased from 3.12 +/- 0.8 to 9.20 +/- 1.8 mg/min (mean +/- SE). In contrast, insulin failed to increase MGU when 8-PTH was being infused into the circumflex artery. These results demonstrate that some degree of adenosine-receptor-mediated activity is required for insulin to stimulate myocardial glucose uptake. It is suggested that the presence of adenosine at its receptor may be an important factor during conditions in which myocardial insulin resistance may develop.
Diabetes 1988 Jun
PMID:Adenosine is required for myocardial insulin responsiveness in vivo. 329 2

A personal series of 256 cases of acromegaly/gigantism seen over a 20-year period from 1963 is described. The insidious nature of the condition resulted in delay in diagnosis which was often made by a doctor when seeing the patient for an unrelated problem. Other features which commonly led to the diagnosis being made were headache, change in appearance, carpal tunnel syndrome, amenorrhoea and diabetes. The Hardy system for grading the radiological appearance of the pituitary tumour was used. Widely invasive tumours were not common but tended to occur in patients with younger age of onset and high GH levels. The occurrence of various symptoms and clinical features was noted and the changes resulting from reducing the GH level to normal. The incidence of hypertension, but not of coronary artery disease, is increased and the blood pressure may be reduced following successful treatment. The effects on the upper and lower respiratory tract are reported as well as sleep apnoea and problems associated with anaesthesia. Skin manifestations included sweating, pigmented skin tags, acanthosis nigricans and cutis verticis gyrata. In the skeletal system the incidence of kyphoscoliosis and osteoarthritis especially of the hip is reported: the question of hip replacement is discussed. Diabetes mellitus disappeared in most cases if the acromegaly was cured. In men but not in women the incidence of colloid nodular goitre was increased as was hyperthyroidism in middle-aged women. In two patients a parathyroid adenoma was present: hypercalcaemia was present in five additional patients, but the cause was not determined. The common occurrence of amenorrhoea in the younger women was noted, it was not always associated with hyperprolactinaemia, and often responded to successful treatment of the acromegaly. The association of acromegaly with hirsutism and galactorrhoea is confirmed. The incidence of impotence and loss of libid in the men is discussed: in a proportion of those in whom the acromegaly was cured, potency returned, but in a number depression occurred and what was believed to be psychogenic impotence persisted. Hyperprolactinaemia was found in 49 out of 151 patients with active acromegaly in whom the prolactin level was measured. Previous reports have indicated a doubling of death rates in acromegalics. In this series there were 47 deaths observed compared to 37.2 expected. The increased death rate was in women of all ages and in men under the age of 55, The increased deaths in the women were from cardiovascular and cerebrovascular causes and from breast cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Acromegaly. 330 90

Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum is an unusual dermatologic condition with a characteristic clinical appearance and a clear association with diabetes mellitus. There is currently no treatment that reverses the atrophic changes associated with this lesion. We have carried out a clinicopathologic study on 15 subjects and, in addition, have reviewed 10 further biopsy specimens of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum. We found a frequent association of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum with other chronic complications of diabetes mellitus, including limited joint mobility. It is possible that nonenzymatic glucosylation or other changes in collagen may be important in the etiology of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum and the limited joint mobility. We confirmed that cutaneous anesthesia is usually present in the necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum lesions. With the use of an antibody to S100 protein and an immunohistochemical method, there was an apparent decreased number of nerves in the skin lesions. We suggest that sensory loss results from local destruction of cutaneous nerves by the inflammatory process. Finally, in six elliptical biopsies extending into clinically normal skin, we demonstrated that the inflammatory infiltrate of necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum extended from the lesion into apparently normal skin surrounding clinically active lesions. Thus, intradermal steroids might be administered to perilesional areas surrounding active lesions in the hope of halting progression.
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PMID:Necrobiosis lipoidica diabeticorum: a clinicopathologic study. 335 Oct 15

Occlusion of the common and internal carotid arteries in a patient with symptomatic severe cerebral ischemia, with or without contralateral carotid disease, portends a poor prognosis. The present study has described our experience with subclavian and external carotid artery revascularization for symptomatic severe cerebral ischemia from common and internal carotid artery occlusion. Nine patients (five men and four women) with a mean age of 62 (range 41 to 82 years) were diagnosed as having symptomatic severe cerebral ischemia. All patients had ipsilateral hemispheric symptoms, seven had amaurosis fugax, and two had associated syncope. Four patients (three men and one woman) were hypertensive, four (two men and two women) had diabetes, eight smoked, and all had a history of coronary artery disease. All of the patients had noninvasive laboratory studies and preoperative angiography, and three had postoperative angiography. Five patients were successfully revascularized to a patent external carotid artery despite nonvisualization by angiography. Six patients had unilateral and three bilateral occlusion of the common and internal carotid arteries appropriate to their symptoms. Using regional anesthesia, four patients underwent a subclavian-external carotid bypass with polytetrafluoroethylene; saphenous vein was used in five; and three had concomitant axilloaxillary bypass grafting with polytetrafluoroethylene. Neurologic improvement (that is, no subsequent deficit and no progression of symptoms) was noted in all nine patients with a follow-up of 4 to 28 months (mean 11.2 months). Two patients died from myocardial infarction 4 and 7 months after operation. Subclavian-external carotid artery bypass is a safe addition to the options for the treatment of symptomatic severe cerebral ischemia with occlusion of the common and internal carotid arteries, visualization of a superior thyroid collateral vessel on the recipient end, and nonvisualization of the external carotid artery.
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PMID:Subclavian-external carotid bypass for symptomatic severe cerebral ischemia from common and internal carotid artery occlusion. 335 78

Studies examining the increased surgical morbidity among obese gravidas have focused mainly on differences in outcome between obese and nonobese mothers. Little is known, however, about the cause for worsened operative outcome in obese mothers or the potential impact of perioperative interventions. To define more precisely the clinical determinants of postoperative morbidity, multivariate analysis was used to relate antepartum and intrapartum variables to three measures of morbidity in 107 consecutively delivered obese women undergoing cesarean. Although obesity is clearly an operative risk factor, this study suggested that among obese gravidas, varying degrees of maternal obesity and accompanying medical complications, such as diabetes and hypertension, were not associated with greater operative morbidity. Furthermore, neither choice of skin incision nor type of anesthesia appeared to be related to operative morbidity. However, two factors potentially under the control of the clinician, increased length of surgery and operative blood loss, were associated significantly with measures of operative morbidity. A finding of worsened outcome with prophylactic antibiotics and heparin requires further study.
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PMID:Determinants of morbidity in obese women delivered by cesarean. 335 56

We retrospectively reviewed the charts of 55 patients with ischiorectal abscesses treated from 1980 to 1983 at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. The patients were treated by placement of a 10F to 16F soft latex mushroom catheter into the abscess cavity under local anesthesia as an office procedure. The end of the catheter was shortened to leave 2 to 3 cm exiting the skin, and a bandage was applied. No sutures or irrigations were used, and the drains were removed an average of 12 days after placement. Antibiotics were not given. The patients ranged in age from 17 to 76 years (mean, 40 years) and 36% were female. Four patients had diabetes, and eight had a history of inflammatory bowel disease. Nine patients had been treated previously for anorectal abscesses. There were no complications. Adequate follow-up was obtainable in 31 patients (ten to 63 months; mean, 30 months). Eight of them (26%) were subsequently treated for fistulas found after resolution of the abscess, and an additional eight (26%) had a second abscess form during the follow-up period. The average time to this recurrence was 20 months. Catheter drainage of ischiorectal abscess in selected cases resulted in healing with low morbidity and significant cost savings.
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PMID:Catheter drainage of ischiorectal abscesses. 335 66

Carotid endarterectomy in 39 elderly patients was carried out under local anesthesia and neuroleptic analgesia. There were no deaths within 30 days. Two patients required an intraoperative shunt because of signs of ischemic changes (aphasia, motor changes) during two-minute test cross-clamping. In two patients, transient vocal cord paresis was observed, and seven patients (18%) experienced immediate postoperative hypertension. Our results support the contention that in awake elderly patients the need for an intraoperative shunt can be accurately assessed by simple neurological monitoring. Carotid surgery under local anesthesia and neuroleptic analgesia appears to be a safe procedure, and is especially recommended for elderly patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus or ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:Carotid surgery under local anesthesia in the elderly. 337 34

Life expectancy after aneurysm surgery was analyzed for male patients over the age of 60 years with known risk factors classified by the Goldman cardiac risk index, which has previously been utilized for prediction of immediate perioperative risks of surgery and anesthesia. The preoperative risk factors, Goldman cardiac risk index, and long-term survival rates were tabulated for each of 96 male patients over the age of 60 years who had elective repair of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm. Follow-up data of up to 14 years (mean 4.2 years) was entered into a SurvPak-PC biostatistical software program for construction of Kaplan-Meier survival curves and actuarial life tables to measure differences in survival between groups and for performance of nonparametric analysis (by log rank test) of the influence of preoperative risk factors. The operative mortality rate was 3.1 percent and the 5 year survival rate for the whole group was 61 percent, with a median survival of 8.7 years. Five year survival rates for patients in three age groups (60 to 70 years, 71 to 80 years, and greater than 80 years), when compared with age-matched populations, were 67 percent versus 88 percent, 50 percent versus 73 percent, and 35 percent versus 39 percent, respectively. Patients in Goldman class 1, 2, and 3 or 4 had 5 year survival rates of 79 percent, 53 percent, and 41 percent, respectively. Factors that adversely affected long-term survival were Goldman classes 3 or 4 (median survival 2.1 +/- 0.4 years, p = 0.001), cerebrovascular disease (median survival 1.9 +/- 0.6 years, p = 0.004), history of cardiac disease (median survival 3.2 +/- 0.6 years, p = 0.012), and creatinine concentration greater than 3 mg/100 ml (median survival 3.1 +/- 1.6 years, p = 0.034), whereas Goldman class 2 or the presence of hypertension, pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular disease, and size of the aneurysm, although associated with a shortened length of survival, as independent variables did not reach statistical significance. A combination of any three of these risk factors, however, shortened the survival time markedly (median 1.9 +/- 0.7 years, p = 0.003). We believe that the Goldman cardiac risk index classification correlates with long-term survival in patients undergoing elective aortic surgery.
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PMID:Cardiac risk index as a predictor of long-term survival after repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm. 340 Aug 5

From 1982 to 1986, 79 women with severe health problems underwent tubal occlusion by minilaparotomy using local anesthesia and intravenous sedation as a permanent method of fertility regulation. All the patients reported herein were classified as "high risk" population for a surgical procedure due to the following medical reasons: cardiovascular (30.2%); diabetes mellitus (25.3%); thyroid disease (18.9%); adrenal dysfunction (11.3%); kidney transplantation (6.3%); severe hypertension (3.7%); and pulmonary problems (3.7%). The procedure morbidity was 3.7% and the mortality 0%. The follow-up rate at 1 year was 86% and no pregnancies or complications of the primary disease due to the surgical procedure have been reported. It was concluded that tubal ligation by minilaparotomy performed by well-trained staff and with back-up hospital services on an out-patient basis is a safe and effective method of family planning in patients considered as a "high risk" population. Post-doctoral research fellows in Reproductive Biology.
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PMID:Local anesthesia and minilaparotomy: a safe procedure for tubal occlusion in women with severe health problems. 342 66

Perioperative control of blood glucose in patients with diabetes has been difficult due to frequent occurrence of hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia. We developed a two-step protocol for management of insulin-treated patients during general anesthesia. Regular insulin was given intravenously before anesthetic induction according to the step I formula (initial): initial blood glucose - 150/10 = U. Regular insulin was then given during surgery according to the step II formula (hourly): blood glucose 150-250 mg/dl = 2 U; blood glucose greater than 250 mg/dl = 4 U. Fluid replacement of 5% dextrose with lactated Ringer's solution, 3 ml/kg estimated ideal body weight, was given hourly and additional lactated Ringer's solution was given as indicated. Thirty patients received preoperative (long- or intermediate-acting) insulin and were managed by the two-step protocol. Ten patients received preoperative (long- or intermediate-acting) insulin and were managed by a standard method used in the same institution. Thirty patients did not receive preoperative insulin and were managed by the two-step protocol. All patients underwent retinal surgery under general anesthesia. In comparing the two groups pretreated with insulin, patients treated by the standard method had significantly higher (mean) blood glucose levels (360.2 +/- 100.4 mg/dl) than those treated with the two-step protocol (181.2 +/- 50.8 mg/dl) (P = 0.0001) at the end of surgery. Of the two-step protocol patients, those pretreated with one-half the usual morning dose of long- or intermediate-acting insulin had lower (mean) blood glucose levels (225 +/- 87 mg/dl) than patients not pretreated (310 +/- 130.8 mg/dl) (P = 0.0069) the morning after surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Diabetes Care
PMID:Perioperative control of blood glucose in diabetic patients: a two-step protocol. 351 5


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