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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory parameters in adult diabetics with and without calcific shoulder periarthritis. 176 Jul 73
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.
...
PMID:Prevalence of peripheral and autonomic neuropathy in newly diagnosed type II (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes. 183 Mar 12
In an in-vitro study, the fluid movements were quantitatively recorded in natural teeth incorporated rigidly in a closed measuring system and exposed to an occlusal load of 122.6 N. Fluid movements under load are the result of elastic deformations of the tooth. Occlusal loads which were repeated within a short period of time caused a reversible plastic deformation. In comparison to the unfilled tooth the placement of an
MOD
restoration combined with a glass ionomer cement base caused the following alterations in fluid movements: composite inlay -24.7%, ceramic inlay +34.7%,
MOD
amalgam -3.1%; the placement of the base per se induced a reduction of -12.7%. In this in-vitro study, the physical properties of the restorative materials governed the magnitude of the fluid movements under load. The results are in contradiction to clinical findings and favor the pulpitis-related genesis of postoperative sensitivity. The intratubular and intrapulpal fluid movements under occlusal load simply seem to trigger the
pain
sensation.
...
PMID:[The hydrodynamic behavior of dentinal tubule fluid under occlusal loading]. 199 19
To investigate whether
pain
and paresthesias could identify two different subclasses of small-fibre diabetic neuropathy, and to evaluate their relation to the metabolic control, we tested nerve conduction velocity (NCV) of median nerve (sensitive-SM, and motor-MM) and deep peroneal nerve (DP) in 48 diabetics (24 IDDM, 24
NIDDM
) reporting
pain
(group A) or paresthesias (group B) that might be due to diabetic polyneuropathy. Glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) was also assessed. No difference between group A and group B was found either in NCV, in all nerves tested, or in HbA1c. No relation was observed between NCV of nerves tested and HbA1c, duration of diabetes, age and type of diabetes in both groups.
...
PMID:Neuroelectric procedure does not discriminate between painful and paresthetic diabetic neuropathy. 273 2
Two patients with longstanding
type II diabetes mellitus
presented with focal, unilateral protrusion of the abdominal wall, thought to be due to abdominal hernia. They were evaluated extensively for intra-abdominal pathology but none was found. In one patient, the protrusion was associated with spontaneous burning
pain
and hyperpathia, but in the other it was painless. In the patient seen during the acute phase there was denervation in paraspinal and abdominal muscles on EMG examination. In both patients, the protrusion subsided without specific treatment in 2 to 4 months. This seldom-described manifestation of diabetic truncal neuropathy masquerading as abdominal hernia needs a higher profile to avoid misdiagnosis and unnecessary investigation. Diagnosis may be quickly established by EMG examination of the paraspinal and abdominal muscles.
...
PMID:Diabetic truncal neuropathy presenting as abdominal hernia. 281 28
A case of sulindac-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) is described; the etiology, symptoms, and treatment of TEN are reviewed; and sulindac's pharmacokinetic characteristics and other adverse effects are discussed. A 62-year-old black woman was given a prescription for sulindac 150 mg twice daily to relieve
pain
associated with degenerative joint disease. She also had a nine-year history of
type II diabetes mellitus
that was being managed with tolbutamide 500 mg once daily. After two weeks of sulindac therapy she developed a rash that spread over her entire body. Sulindac therapy was discontinued, and one day later the patient was admitted to the hospital with a temperature of 104.6 degrees F, conjunctivitis, and an erythematous macular rash over 60% of her body. Initially, therapy included prednisone 160 mg orally every day, applications of silver sulfadiazine cream four times daily for two days, and methylcellulose 0.5% ophthalmic solution (two drops four times daily) for the conjunctivitis. She also received intravenous hydration. By the fifth hospital day the patient's skin lesions and conjunctivitis had improved to the point that the prednisone dosage was tapered to 120 mg, then to 80 mg, and then to nothing over the following three days. Her diabetes was managed by short-term treatment with NPH insulin; however, before discharge, tolbutamide therapy was reinstituted, and insulin was discontinued. At follow-up four weeks after discharge, the patient's skin was largely clear. TEN has multiple etiologies, but the basic mechanism of injury is believed to be an immunological reaction directed at the basal cell layer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sulindac-induced toxic epidermal necrolysis. 323 97
When opposing teeth with amalgam and gold restoration are in contact, current flows in the mouth at the instant the dissimilar metals touch. In this study, this condition was simulated by use of resistors and extracted human teeth with amalgam and
MOD
gold inlay restorations. When both teeth were in contact in a physiological saline solution, we measured current and electrical potential generated in each pulp chamber. Galvanic current generated in the tooth with amalgam was always larger (as much as 18.2 times at the instant of contact) than that in the tooth with gold. Electrical potential generated in the tooth with amalgam was always larger (as much as 9.7 times at the instant of contact) than that in the tooth with gold. It should be emphasized that the larger current generated in the tooth with amalgam was caused mainly by its larger electrical potential. These results correspond well with the clinical phenomenon of galvanic
pain
, which occurs in the tooth with amalgam rather than in the tooth with gold.
...
PMID:A measurement of galvanic current and electrical potential in extracted human teeth. 346 73
To evaluate the frequency of painless myocardial ischemia, all patients with positive exercise tolerance test responses (at least 2 mm of ST depression) from 1983 to 1985 were examined. Of the 211 patients with exercise-induced ischemia, 101 (48%) did not have
pain
during the ischemic period; 26 (12%) had diabetes mellitus, 24 of whom (92%) had
type II diabetes mellitus
. Lack of
pain
was not correlated with age, gender, history of cigarette smoking, systemic hypertension, past acute myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass grafting, use of beta-blocking or calcium-channel blocking drugs, number of narrowed coronary arteries or average calculated ejection fraction at cardiac catheterization. Patients with painless myocardial ischemia were less often taking nitrates (39% vs 55%, p less than 0.05) and reported prior episodes of chest pain less often (50% vs 82%, p less than 0.01) than control subjects. There was no difference in the frequency of painless myocardial ischemia between patients with and without diabetes mellitus (54% vs 47%). Duration of exercise was shorter in patients with diabetes mellitus and in patients who had
pain
with myocardial ischemia. No significant difference in age, gender, use of nitrates, beta-blocking or calcium-channel blocking drugs, history of myocardial infarction, angina pectoris or cigarette smoking was found between diabetic and nondiabetic patients. Systemic hypertension was more common in diabetic patients. Thus, painless myocardial ischemia is common in our patients with positive exercise tolerance test responses, but its frequency is similar in diabetic and nondiabetic patients.
...
PMID:Frequency of painless myocardial ischemia during exercise tolerance testing in patients with and without diabetes mellitus. 381 54
A 36-year-old male was admitted because of swelling and
pain
in the lower left limb. He had been diagnosed as having
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
4 years previously and had been treated unsuccessfully with insulin. Since gas formation was radiographically demonstrated in the soft tissue of the left foot, we treated him with antibiotics and hyperbaric oxygen under the diagnosis of gas gangrene. Despite this therapy, the gangrenous lesions progressed. Amputation of the left foot was necessary. Peptstreptococcus was isolated from the gangrenous area and identified as such on the seven hospital day. Nine cases of diabetic patients with non-clostridial gas gangrene who were treated with hyperbaric oxygen therapy have been reported in Japan. The results indicated that hyperbaric oxygen therapy is ineffective in the treatment of non-clostridial gas gangrene in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:[A case of NIDDM with non-clostridial gas-producing infection in the lower limb--the effects of hyperbaric oxygen therapy]. 815 Nov 55
A total of 40 patients with diabetes mellitus without anginal episodes and equivalents were studied. 24-hour monitoring identified 2 groups of patients: (1) 13 patients with recorded silent myocardial ischemic episodes and (2) 23 patients without episodes. Four patients were found to have stress-echocardiographic silent myocardial ischemia. Silent myocardial ischemia was detected in 42.5% of patients with diabetes mellitus. The patients from Group 1 exhibited more frequently
Type II diabetes mellitus
whose duration was over 9 years and concurrent retino- and polyneuropathies. There was a relationship between silent myocardial ischemia to heart failure and myocardial hypertrophy as evidenced by two-dimensional echocardiography. The patients from Group 1 had a higher
pain
sensitivity threshold than those from Group 2. Autonomic polyneuropathy was observed in 46% of Group 1 patients and in 21% of Group 2 patients.
...
PMID:[Silent myocardial ischemia in patients with diabetes mellitus without the clinical manifestations of ischemic heart disease]. 837 56
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