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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since Kahn et al. reported in 1976
insulin
resistant diabetes due to anti-insulin receptor antibodies, an unusual form of diabetes mellitus (type B) has been found in many countries. We had two diabetic patients with anti-insulin receptor antibodies, associated with either acanthosis nigricans or systemic lupus erythematosus. Remission occurred 15 months after the onset of
insulin
resistant diabetes. One patient unfortunately died of acute
pneumonia
and the other has been followed up. The anti-insulin receptor antibodies were measured according to the method of Omori and Hirata by using the pellet of human placental membrane. The anti-insulin receptor antibodies in both cases diminished as remission occurred. Reverse hemolytic plaque assay (PFG) detected immunoglobulin-producing cells. In Case 2, the plaque forming cells were twenty times as many as the normal value. Immunosuppressive therapy with cyclophosphamide reduced the immunoglobulin secreting cells as remission occurred. The patients with
insulin
resistance (type B) should be treated with enough
insulin
inspite of the presence of
insulin
resistance. Besides, cyclophosphamide, 6-mercaptopurine and prednisolone should be used with caution. Plasma exchange is a treatment to be tried. It is important to note that spontaneous remission may occur more than half a year after the onset of
insulin
resistant diabetes.
...
PMID:Remission of insulin resistant diabetes in two patients with anti-insulin receptor antibodies. 675 1
Four patients, treated with pentamidine because of Pneumocystis carinii
pneumonitis
, displayed severe fasting hypoglycemia during this treatment. Diabetes mellitus appeared later, requiring
insulin
therapy in the three of them who survived more than a few weeks. The metabolic study, performed in two cases during the hypoglycemic period, demonstrated inappropriately high
insulin
levels in the postabsorptive state. 28 +/- 1 microunits/ml (blood glucose 41 +/- 4 mg/dl) and 86 +/- 5 microunits/ml (blood glucose 15 +/- 5 mg/dl) vs. 15 +/- 3 microunits/ml in 10 control subjects and 55 +/- 3 microunits/ml in 6 patients with a verified B-cell tumor, respectively. Poor B-cell secretory responses followed the stimulations by oral glucose (maximal increment over basal: +5 microunits/ml vs. + 40 microunits/ml in control group and +77 microunits/ml in the insulinoma group), by i.v. arginine (maximal increment + 10 and +28 microunits/ml, respectively, vs. +55 in the controls and +90 microunits/ml in the insulinoma group) and by i.v. glucagon (+10 and +23 microunits/ml, respectively) vs. +40 microunits/ml in both the control and the insulinoma groups). Plasma cortisol and glucagon, and the A-cell response to arginine were higher than normal. These high, nonsuppressible, nonstimulable
insulin
levels and the sequence of hypoglycemia followed by
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus is consistent with the hypothesis of a selective toxicity turned towards the B-cells. In vitro incubation of islets with pentamidine 10(-10) M produced a passive release of
insulin
, followed by a significant decrease in B-cell response to glucose + theophylline. It is suggested that pentamidine can induce hypoglycemia because of an early cytolytic release of
insulin
, and then diabetes mellitus because of B-cell destruction and
insulin
deficiency.
...
PMID:Diabetes mellitus following pentamidine-induced hypoglycemia in humans. 675 11
The antibody responses of 102 adult
insulin
-treated diabetics who received 14-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine were measured. Grand mean preimmunization antibody levels were similar for diabetics, 255 ng protein N/ml, and controls, 234 ng protein N/ml. Postimmunization, the values in the diabetics, 1009 ng protein N/ml, and 834 ng protein N/ml in 48 healthy controls, were not significantly different. The height of antibody response in the diabetic group did not correlate with age, sex, duration of diabetes,
insulin
dose, concentration of glycosylated hemoglobin, fasting or 2-h postprandial glucose concentrations, or the presence of retinopathy. Side effects were minimal and occurred in 26%. Antibody response to pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine is not impaired in adult diabetics. Pneumococcal immunization is safe and may reduce the frequency of
pneumonia
and its complications in the diabetic population.
...
PMID:Pneumococcal immunization in adult diabetics. 720 57
One hundred and twenty lumbar sympathectomies were performed in 110 old people (over 65 years of age) as the treatment for severe lower limb ischaemia. Only one quarter of the patients benefited from the operation. In nearly half the cases the limb was ultimately amputated. The operative mortality was 7%, with
pneumonia
the most common cause of death. Age and mild diabetes mellitus had no effect on the result of treatment. Diabetics on
insulin
, however, derived no benefit from the operation. the degree of severity of the ischaemia, and the location of the arterial occlusion affected the result of treatment.
...
PMID:Lumbar sympathectomy in the treatment of severe lower limb ischaemia in old people. 741 4
Outcome of and complications associated with bilateral adrenalectomy in 8 cats with pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism and bilateral adrenocortical hyperplasia and outcome of and complications associated with unilateral adrenalectomy in 2 cats with adrenocortical tumor (adrenocortical adenoma, 1 cat; adrenocortical carcinoma, 1 cat) and unilateral adrenomegaly were determined. Glucocorticoids were administered to all cats at the time of surgery, and mineralocorticoids were administered to the 8 cats that underwent bilateral adrenalectomy. A ventral midline celiotomy was performed in all cats. Intraoperative complications did not develop in any cat. Postoperative complications developed in all cats and included abnormal serum electrolyte concentrations (n = 8), skin lacerations (n = 5), pancreatitis (n = 3), hypoglycemia (n = 2),
pneumonia
(n = 1), and venous thrombosis (n = 1). Three cats died within 5 weeks after surgery of complications associated with sepsis (n = 2) or thromboembolism (n = 1). Clinical signs and physical abnormalities caused by hyperadrenocorticism resolved in the remaining 7 cats 2 to 4 months after adrenalectomy.
Insulin
treatment was discontinued in 4 of 6 cats with diabetes mellitus. Median survival time for these 7 cats was 12 months (range, 3 to > 30 months). Two cats died of acute adrenocortical insufficiency 3 and 6 months after bilateral adrenalectomy, 2 cats were euthanatized because of chronic renal failure 3 and 12 months after bilateral (n = 1) or unilateral (n = 1) adrenalectomy, and 2 cats were alive 9 and 14 months after bilateral adrenalectomy. In the remaining cat, clinical signs recurred 10 months after the cat had undergone unilateral adrenalectomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Adrenalectomy for treatment of hyperadrenocorticism in cats: 10 cases (1988-1992). 755 48
Pentamidine is known to cause severe dysglycaemia by damaging beta-cell function of the pancreas. The exact mechanism still remains unclear. We report the case of a 53-year-old man infected with the human immunodeficiency virus who developed
insulin
-dependent permanent diabetes mellitus 3 days after starting intravenous treatment with pentamidine for pneumocystis carinii
pneumonia
. Discharged from hospital the daily need of
insulin
increased continuously over one year now requiring an average dose of 80 units per day. So far, a number of cases of
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus following pentamidine therapy has been reported, but long-term observations are rare.
...
PMID:Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus following pentamidine therapy in a patient with AIDS. 771 9
Subtotal adrenalectomy was given to 10 adult patients with Cushing's disease, concurrently with or following therapeutic regimen by long term reserpine administration and pituitary irradiation. In the present study, we describe long term follow-up results. Two patients died after the operation due to acute adrenal crisis and
pneumonia
, respectively. The other 8 patients achieved clinical and biochemical remissions and were followed for long term. Three patients relapsed 9, 14 or 17 years after achieving remission, two patients developed hypopituitarism 12 or 20 years after and one died of cerebral vascular accident at 64 years, 5 years after the remission. The remaining 2 patients maintained remission for 10 or 18 years, respectively. During the remission periods of 0.5 to 20 years with a mean of 10.1 +/- 6.7 years, 6 of 7 patients examined by 1 mg overnight dexamethasone test showed normal suppressibility of plasma cortisol. Provocative tests of plasma GH by l-arginine infusion and/or
insulin
-induced hypoglycemia were performed in 6 patients in the early remission period. All of 5 patients in the arginine infusion test and 3 of 5 in the
insulin
-induced hypoglycemia test showed normal responses. Furthermore, to facilitate prediction of long term response or failure to our therapeutic regimen, long term reserpine administration and pituitary irradiation, pretreatment clinical and biochemical characteristics were analyzed retrospectively in 3 divided groups; the present 10 patients treated with reserpine and pituitary irradiation followed by subtotal adrenalectomy, 11 patients achieving long term remission treated by our regimen alone, and 7 patients failed with our regimen alone. There were no significant factors predictive of response to our regimen. These findings suggest that subtotal adrenalectomy does not lead favorable outcome, however, reserpine administration shows usefulness to improve pituitary functions in treating Cushing's disease.
...
PMID:Long term follow-up of Cushing's disease treated with reserpine and pituitary irradiation followed by subtotal adrenalectomy. 807 28
An
insulin
-deficient 51-year-old man was put on dietary therapy and sulfonylurea (SU). Although there was good glycemic control for 2 years, the fasting blood glucose (FBG) level increased gradually over the subsequent 4-year period, and there was a marked increase in body weight. Secondary failure of SU therapy 20 years after the initial diagnosis led to
insulin
therapy. The FBG became unstable, and the C-peptide response disappeared. The patient died of nonketotic hyperosmolar coma and
pneumonia
at the age of 87. At autopsy, the pancreas showed marked atrophy (32 g) with extensive fatty degeneration. Islets replaced by islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP)-positive amyloid (IAPP-AM) amounted to 77% in the tail, 74% in the body, and 73% in the head of the pancreas. All islets were positive for IAPP-AM throughout the pancreas, except for a pancreatic polypeptide-rich lobe, where none were positive. IAPP-AM-positive islets had also undergone fatty change of the surrounding pancreatic acinar cells. beta-Cells decreased remarkably in number and were displaced to the periphery of the islets by the IAPP-AM deposits. These findings suggest that IAPP-related diabetes could have a progressive course, with secondary oral hypoglycemic agent failure and the subsequent development of severe
insulin
deficiency similar to that seen in
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Marked islet amyloid polypeptide-positive amyloid deposition: a possible cause of severely insulin-deficient diabetes mellitus with atrophied exocrine pancreas. 848 72
Insulin
-like growth factors (IGFs) have 6 types of binding proteins (IGFBPs), and IGFBP-3 is the major IGFBP in human sera. A proteolytic enzyme for IGFBP-3 has recently been reported to be present in human and animal pregnant sera. Although the physiological significance of a pregnancy-associated IGFBP-3 protease remains to be established, the proteolysis could result in lowering the affinity for IGFs, thereby enhancing their delivery to target tissues by increasing free IGFs in the circulation. The methods for detection of IGFBP-3 protease which have been widely used so far are a method reported by Lamson et al. which used affinity crosslinking or western ligand blotting. These methods need radioactive materials (iodinated IGFs and IGFBP-3) and it takes at least a few days to get the results. We have now developed a simple assay for the proteolysis of IGFBP-3. The method is western immunoblotting without radioactive materials. The results can be obtained in a day. With this method, we proved the absence of significant proteolytic activity in sera from rapidly growing children (early stage of puberty or precocious puberty), and sera from a severe type of growth hormone deficiency. Significant proteolytic activity, as in pregnant women, was detected in 6 out of 11 patients with acute disorders such as measles, Kawasaki disease, bacterial meningitis and mycoplasma
pneumonia
, some of whom were probably in a catabolic condition. These data suggests that the proteolysis of IGFBP-3 might also be important in modulating IGF action in some acute diseases during childhood. The increased bioavailability of IGFs by IGFBP-3 proteolysis may play a role in overcoming catabolic conditions.
...
PMID:Proteolytic activity of IGFBP-3 in various clinical conditions during childhood studied by means of western immunoblotting. 855 66
A large body of clinical experience on the adverse consequences of cytokine administration has accumulated since the last decade. Side-effects reported after the therapeutic use of cytokines has provided evidence that activation of the immune response may sometimes have deleterious consequences. Several effects appeared as a direct consequence of the immune activation induced by cytokines, e.g. flu-like reactions, vascular leak syndrome. Cytokine-induced exacerbation of underlying diseases or immune dysregulation were other complications of growing concern. Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) treatment has now been clearly linked with the exacerbation or the occurrence of several types of autoantibodies or autoimmune diseases (thyroiditis, systemic lupus erythematosus, hematologic disorders,
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus) or diseases involving altered cell-mediated immune functions (inflammatory dermatologic diseases, nephritis,
pneumonitis
, colitis). By contrast immunological side-effects of IFN-beta and IFN-gamma have been seldom reported. However, the extent of clinical experience with both of these cytokines is still very limited. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) has also been implicated in various conditions that may involve immunopathological processes (thyroid disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, dermatological diseases, interstitial nephritis). Growth factors have been more specifically linked with the development or the exacerbation of dermatological inflammatory diseases through neutrophils, monocytes/macrophages or eosinophils activation (e.g. cutaneous vasculitis and generalized cutaneous eruption, Sweet's syndrome, bullous eruption, psoriasis). Exacerbation of autoimmune thyroiditis was described with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) only. The immunogenicity of cytokines is also of great relevance and the occurrence of antibodies binding IFN-alpha and IFN-beta, IL2 and GM-CSF have been reported. While the clinical significance of non-neutralizing antibodies is not clearly established, an absence of response or reversal of clinical efficacy has been described in patients developing neutralizing antibodies. Finally, several isolated reports have recently suggested that IFN-alpha treatment may be associated with several immunosuppressive effects while IL-2 is clinically associated with an increased incidence of infectious complications.
...
PMID:Immune-mediated side-effects of cytokines in humans. 863 83
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