Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034186 (pyelonephritis)
6,144 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to investigate the perinatal morbidity and mortality in all the diabetic pregnancies seen at the HGO-"LCA" from January 1992 to December 1993. In that period 186 women (mean age 31 yr) were diagnosed as having diabetes during pregnancy: 54% of them had DMG, 40% DM-II and 6% DM-I, with serum glucose concentration of 133 +/- 41 mg/dL. Neonatal morbidity was given by macrosomia (17%), prematurity (14%), hyperbilirubinemia (11%), hypoglycemia (8%), congenital malformation (6%) and hypocalcemia (4%). Perinatal mortality was 5.3%. The principal causes of maternal morbidity were preeclampsia (17%), polyhydramnios (16%), pyelonephritis (4%) and ketoacidosis (0.05%). Cesarean section was performed in 62% of all diabetic patients. There was not any maternal death. This results showed a high perinatal morbidity-mortality in pregnancies complicated by diabetes mellitus which reclaim a better metabolic control during gestation period.
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PMID:[Perinatal morbidity and mortality in pregnant women with diabetes mellitus]. 778 45

Many animals with diabetes mellitus are severely ill on clinical presentation. The spectrum of disease is quite variable and includes diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), ketosis without acidosis, hyperosmolar nonketotic syndrome (HNKS), and other nonketotic variants (negative urine ketones, serum osmolality < 340 mOsm/kg with or without acidosis). These more severe forms of diabetes are often precipitated by concurrent diseases such as pyelonephritis, pancreatitis, pyometra, hyperadrenocorticism, renal failure, and heart failure. To make matters worse, in-hospital treatment of diabetic dogs and cats is commonly associated with serious complications, including hypoglycemia, hypokalemia, and hypophosphatemia.
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PMID:Complications and concurrent disease associated with diabetes mellitus. 1088 75

Infants often develop hypocarnitinemia and resultant hypoglycemia during long-term treatment with antibiotics that contain pivalic acid, but it is unknown whether maternal treatment with such agents during pregnancy induces hypocarnitinemia in fetuses or neonates. A woman at week 28 of pregnancy was prescribed cefcapene pivoxil for 84 consecutive days for treatment and prophylaxis of pyelonephritis. Using tandem mass spectrometry, both the mother and newborn were found to have hypocarnitinemia soon after delivery. It was concluded that the baby suffered from secondary hypocarnitinemia due to long-term prenatal treatment with antibiotics containing pivalic acid. Long-term treatment with antibiotics containing pivalic acid in pregnant women can induce hypocarnitinemia in both the mother and neonate; reported herein is the first case observed in humans.
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PMID:Newborn hypocarnitinemia due to long-term transplacental pivalic acid passage. 2533 95