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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a bronchopulmonary infection with Mycobacterium malmoense in a patient with severe immunosuppression due to
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus, humoral immunodeficiency after thymoma (Good's syndrome) and prolonged immunosuppressive treatment after myasthenic crisis. It presented as non-resolving
pneumonia
of the left lower lobe. Bronchoscopically, a bronchoesophageal fistula was detected. Numerous acid-fast organisms were found in the sputum specimen and in the bronchial biopsy around the fistula. M. malmoense was isolated from sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage and bronchial biopsy. Whereas conventional in vitro susceptibility testing revealed susceptibility only to ethambutol, multi-drug susceptibility testing confirmed susceptibility to rifampicin, ethambutol, clarithromycin and prothionamide. The clinical outcome after 12 months of therapy resulted in a stable remission and considerable suppression of the mycobacterial load, but not in complete eradication.
...
PMID:Bronchopulmonary infection with Mycobacterium malmoense presenting as a bronchoesophageal fistula. 875 16
This review is based on longitudinal studies on our seven patients with congenital generalized lipodystrophy, our patient with acquired generalized lipodystrophy, and published papers on these subjects. An inability to store energy in adipose tissue is of pathogenetic importance. In congenital lipodystrophy,
insulin
resistance is present from birth, resulting in hyperinsulinaemia, dyslipidaemia. and
insulin
-resistant diabetes with an anabolic syndrome worsened by a voracious appetite. Clinically, we observed increased height velocity in pre-school age children, and organomegaly with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which seems to be lethal in early adulthood: three of our patients died at the ages of 24, 32 and 37 years. The oldest alive, 39 years, suffers from stenocardia. Regarding treatment, it is most important to reduce energy consumption. The congenital form is recessively inherited. The aetiology may be related to insulin receptor or postreceptor mechanisms. Acquired generalized lipodystrophy seems to be an autoimmune disorder with secondary destruction of the adipose organ: the anabolic syndrome with
insulin
-resistant diabetes is secondary. Our patient died when 24 years old from
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Generalized lipodystrophy, congenital and acquired (lipoatrophy). 878 69
A veal calf with chronic
pneumonia
was characterized by reduced weight gain, feed intake and increased feed/gain ratio. Concentrations of hemoglobin, packed cell volume, red blood cell number and blood plasma levels of iron, albumin, urea, glucose,
insulin
, insulin-like growth factor-I and triiodothyronine were decreased, while plasma levels of total protein, immunoglobulin G and nonesterified fatty acids were increased. White blood cell number, blood plasma concentrations of triglycerides, growth hormone, cortisol and tumor necrosis factor-alpha were not changed. Hematological, metabolic and endocrine changes were interpreted as expressions of reduced energy and protein intake and of nutrient partitioning which contributed to reduced growth performance.
...
PMID:Endocrine, metabolic and hematological changes associated with reduced growth performance during chronic pneumonia in calves: a case study. 892 69
We undertook the present study to examine the acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in relation to hydration status in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). A total of 40
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus patients (22 male, 18 female), aged 18-61 years with DKA admitted to our hospital during the last 2 years, were studied. The duration of diabetes averaged 9 +/- 2 years. In all cases a detailed investigation of the acid-base status and electrolyte parameters was performed. Twenty-one patients had a pure metabolic acidosis with an increased serum anion gap, seven had DKA combined with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, nine had DKA coexisting with metabolic alkalosis, while three had DKA with a concurrent respiratory alkalosis. Hydration status as evidenced by the ratio of urea/creatinine seems to play an important role in the development of mixed acid-base disorders (detected by changes in the ratios delta anion gap/delta bicarbonate (delta AG/delta HCO3) and sodium/chloride (Na/Cl)). In fact, hyperchloremic acidosis developed in the patients with the better hydration status. However, contradictorily, the severely dehydrated patients who experienced recurrent episodes of vomiting developed DKA with a concurrent metabolic alkalosis. Finally, patients with
pneumonia
or gram-negative septicemia exhibited DKA combined with a primary respiratory alkalosis. We conclude that patients with DKA commonly develop mixed acid-base disorders, which are partly dependent on patients' hydration status.
...
PMID:Acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. 896 87
The pancreatic islets from 112 infants (66 males and 46 females) who died of SIDS during the years 1990-1992 have been studied. The control group consisted of endocrine pancreas tissue from 19 infants who died of a clear cause of death (
pneumonia
, drowning, sepsis, etc.). The mean age of the SIDS group was 5.1 months. We found histologically normally developed organs in all the SIDS cases. By evaluating the relative endocrine cell area of the pancreas by immunohistochemical investigations, A-cells were found to make up 10-30%, B-cells 30-60%, D-cells 10-30% and pancreatic polypeptide cells less than 10% in the SIDS group and in the controls with a small increase in glucagon and
insulin
cells among SIDS cases. The morphometric evaluation revealed that cell enlargement and cytoplasm shrinking occurred slightly more often in the SIDS group than in the control group. The diameter of the islets was normal and the maximal volume was not enlarged. The results did not show significant differences so that a relationship between alterations of the endocrine pancreas and sudden infant death syndrome could not be demonstrated.
...
PMID:Morphology, immunohistochemistry and morphometry of pancreatic islets in cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). 927 44
In a 63-year-old woman with longstanding type I diabetes mellitus, CAD and chronic heart failure, a subacute myocardial infarction developed, together with decompensation of cardiac function and diabetes and concurrent
pneumonia
. Acute heart failure with acute renal failure on top of diabetic nephropathy, and interstitial pulmonary edema was initially treated with hemofiltration and catechol amines together with antibiotic and perfusor-regulated
insulin
therapy, and systemic heparinization. Subsequent chronic treatment with digitalis, acetyl salicylic acid,
insulin
and a combination of an ACE inhibitor and a loop diuretic resulted in an improvement of heart failure to NYHA functional class II where PTCA of coronary multi-vessel disease could be performed with low risk.
...
PMID:[Heart failure after myocardial infarct in decompensated diabetes mellitus. Acute therapy with catecholamines--long-term therapy with ACE inhibitor-loop diuretic combination]. 937 33
We describe a rare case of a rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) superimposed on diabetic nephropathy. A 68-year-old woman with non-
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) complicated with diabetic triopathy demonstrated a rapid deterioration of renal function. Her urinary sediment contained many red blood cell (RBC) cells and casts, suggesting an additional renal disease accompanying diabetic nephropathy. Renal biopsy revealed crescent formation in many glomeruli characteristic of the pauci-immune type of RPGN. Steroid pulse therapy transiently halted the deterioration in renal function, but the patient died of
pneumonia
complicated with methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection. The unusual findings in diabetic nephropathy indicated the coexistence of primary glomerulonephritis and diabetic glomerulosclerosis in this case.
...
PMID:Rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis concomitant with diabetic nephropathy. 947 49
Compromised travelers represent a diverse and challenging group of individuals. They include HIV-infected patients who are at risk for potentially adverse reactions to immunizations, and new exposures to enteric water-borne opportunistic pathogens associated with chronic infections. Such travelers may encounter unfamiliar opportunistic fungi and classical tropical infections, such as leishmaniasis, whose pathogenesis can be enhanced by the presence of prior HIV infection. Other immunocompromised groups include those who are functionally or anatomically asplenic, and patients who are iatrogenically immunosuppressed from medications utilized for solid organ transplantation, chemotherapy, or treatment of malignancies. This population of travelers also includes those with diabetes mellitus who may require adjustments in their dosing, administration, and possibly even the types of
insulin
used on their trips. These patients are also at greater risk for acquisition of tuberculosis, severe community-acquired
pneumonia
, urinary tract infections, and pyomyositis. Older travelers present both the infectious disease and travel medicine specialist with issues such events, malignancy-related infections, myocardial infarction, and other forms of cardiopulmonary compromise, which the authors address in this article.
...
PMID:The compromised traveler. 965 50
The annual pilgrimage to Makkah (Mecca), Hajj, is a very stressful endeavour and requires strenuous physical effort, especially for the diabetic, the elderly and persons with other chronic illnesses. To identify the complications and to assess the needs of the Omani diabetics during Hajj (DOH), a special diabetes clinic was established in the camping site of Omani pilgrims (Hajjees) in Mina, where all Omani Hajjees convene for three days. The socio-demographic characteristics, the diabetes profile and the knowledge about complications of diabetes of all DOH were ascertained; their random blood sugar (RBS) was tested. Of 10,800 Omani who performed the Hajj in 1996, the 169 Hajjees with diabetes mellitus (prevalence rate 16 per 1000) included four per cent
insulin
dependent (IDDM), seven per cent on dietary control, and 89% on oral hypoglycaemic agents. Almost all DOH (98%) were medically examined before their departure for Hajj. All Hajjees with IDDM and 96% on oral hypoglycaemic agents brought their medicines with them. During the Hajj period, 2.4% of DOH had RBS < 75 mg/dl, 14% 75-110 mg/dl, and 49% were hyperglycaemic (RBS > 200 mg/dL). About half of the DOH (48%) knew the clinical presentation of hyperglycaemia, a fourth (24%) about symptoms of hypoglycaemia. Only 9.5% were trained to test themselves for blood sugar. The median age of DOH was 54 years (inter-quartile range 50-62). Some 7.5% females and 4.9% of males were obese (body mass index > 30). Forty seven (28%) of the DOH had other coronary heart diseases, hypertension or both. DOH moved between Holy places (four journeys; 5-15 km long) on foot (40%), by car or bus (31%), or both (29%). All DOH except one were not wearing protective shoes, 70% did not have identification wrist bands that show their diabetic status and regimen for treatment. Four per cent lost their way during Hajj, four per cent suffered from heat exhaustion, three per cent had cut wounds, 1.2% had
pneumonia
, and two per cent went into coma. There is a need for a special health education programme and for special services for the diabetics during Hajj. Hajjees should learn about symptoms and signs of hypoglycaemia, were protective shoes and identifying wrist bands. Specialised services for the diabetics would alleviate a lot of the stress during Hajj among the diabetics.
...
PMID:Profile of diabetic Omani pilgrims to Mecca. 974 36
Pneumococcal infection is responsible for a wide range of diseases, including upper respiratory tract infections such as otitis media and sinusitis,
pneumonia
and other lower respiratory infections, and the disseminated infections of bacteremia and meningitis. Invasive pneumococcal disease and
pneumonia
, which represent the threat of serious morbidity and mortality, occur most frequently in certain age groups, selected ethnic populations, and individuals with chronic medical diseases or immunosuppression. There are two pneumococcal vaccines currently available, Pneumovax 23 and Pnu-Immune 23. Indications for vaccination include medical conditions that make individuals susceptible to invasive pneumococcal disease (eg, chronic cardiac, pulmonary, or hepatic disease; sickle-cell disease;
insulin
-dependent diabetes; immunosuppressive disorders; age >65 years; or history of splenectomy). Approximately 85%-90% of the pneumococcal serotypes that cause invasive infection in the United States are represented in the pneumococcal vaccine. Pneumococcal vaccines with improved immunogenicity and potentially improved efficacy against this deadly pathogen are currently under investigation. Millions of individuals at high risk for pneumococcal disease in the United States have not yet received the vaccine. After invasive infection, mortality is high, with an estimated 40,000 deaths annually in this country. With the pneumococcal vaccine's safety profile and proven efficacy against invasive disease in appropriate populations, it is imperative that the medical community improve its effort to vaccinate those individuals considered to be at risk for life-threatening pneumococcal disease.
...
PMID:Pneumococcal vaccine. 1116 53
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