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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To examine the role of
psychiatric diagnosis
in the surgical outcome of pancreas transplantation, we studied candidates with
type I diabetes mellitus
. Eighty of 140 candidates underwent transplantation. Survival analysis found the extent of human leukocyte antigen-DR (HLA-DR) matching, two diagnoses, and patients' perceived support from first-degree relatives to be related to duration of full-graft function. Lifetime diagnoses of tobacco use disorder (P = 0.029) and alcohol abuse/dependence (P = 0.006) were associated with less favorable outcomes; perceived support was associated with positive outcomes (P = 0.048). Subsequent analysis suggested that the four variables independently and directly affect outcome.
...
PMID:Psychiatric diagnosis and the surgical outcome of pancreas transplantation in patients with type I diabetes mellitus. 849 7
Insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
is one of the most common metabolic diseases and affects 150,000 persons in France. To achieve good metabolic control requires a strict daily management of the treatment by the patients themselves. Lack of active involvement can have direct consequences which underlines the importance of a good adherence to the treatment. About 50% of the patients do not obtain adequate metabolic control. The major problem of insulin treatment consists in the repeated occurrence of severe hypoglycemias which may be accompanied by an alteration of the perception of hypoglycaemic signs. On the other hand, when the risk of severe hypoglycaemia is removed, glycosylated haemoglobin levels rise. Permanent hyperglycaemia leads to numerous somatical complications. An extremely dramatic combination of these two types of metabolic unbalance is represented by the brittle diabetes characterised by very frequent and extreme oscillations between hypo and hyperglycaemia. This raises the question of the influence of psychopathological factors on metabolic control and the possibility of improving metabolic control by acting on these factors. Epidemiological studies in diabetic patients have established higher prevalence rates of psychiatric disorders, in particular mood and anxiety disorders. The current prevalence rate of depression was found to be homogeneous in the literature about 11% and life time prevalence rates of major depressive disorders vary between 24% and 29%. The symptom profile of depression in diabetic patients is similar to that in depressed non diabetic psychiatric patients and it has been shown that highly sensitive
psychiatric diagnosis
of depression can be made among diabetic patients. There is no specific personality pattern in diabetic patients. There seems to be a relationship between metabolic control as defined by glycosylated haemoglobin and psychiatric disorders. Indeed, high levels of glycosylated haemoglobin are found in patients with psychiatric disorders. There seems to be some evidence of an association between blood glucose levels and actual emotional states. Nothing is known about the specificity of the link between psychiatric disorders and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. No study has evaluated if the relationship between psychiatric disorders and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus is due to the disease itself or to the chronic feature of diabetes.
...
PMID:[Insulin-dependent diabetes and psychiatric pathology: general clinical and epidemiologic review]. 945 27
Although the causes of eating disorders remain unclear, epidemiological evidence suggests that peripubertal changes in body shape and weight predispose young women to develop unhealthy eating attitudes. A
psychiatric diagnosis
of an eating disorder can be made in up to 10% of young women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (
type 1 diabetes
). Eating disorders, anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, pose a particularly serious risk to health in young diabetic people. Several features associated with
type 1 diabetes
and its treatment, such as weight gain, dietary restraint and food preoccupation, may predispose young diabetic women to develop a clinical or subclinical eating disorder. The coexistence of these conditions could lead to poor metabolic control and an increased risk of microvascular complications.
...
PMID:Eating disorders in adolescents with type 1 diabetes mellitus. 1043 48