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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical course of diabetic nephropathy was evaluated in 150 patients and the effect of hemodialysis in 68 of them. Proteinuria was the first sign of renal disease. Once renal dysfunction becomes evident, there is a rapid deterioration leading to dialysis within 3.0 +/- 0.2 years. Hypertension and circulatory congestion are common complications. The hypertension is probably volume dependent. Retinopathy was not invariably present at the onset of renal insufficiency but appeared with progression of renal failure. The course during hemodialysis was complicated by continued progression of diabetic
vascular disease
manifested by vascular access difficulties, worsening of retinopathy and
blindness
, and cardio- and cerebrovascular deaths. Mortality was higher than in nondiabetic dialysis patients.
...
PMID:Diabetic nephropathy: clinical course and effect of hemodialysis. 64 44
A brief description is given of the main clinical, histological and epidemiological circumstances of retinal vein occlusion. In an assessment of the pathogeneis of the condition, primacy is given to the role of arteriolar flow insufficiency and stress is laid on the long-standing capillaropathy which precedes the heamorrhagic phase of the disease. Basic therapeutic considerations are mentioned but stress is laid on the diagnosis of the pre-occlusive stage and on measures of a preventive nature that may be taken. Retinal vein occlusion and haemorrhagic cerebral infarct are compared with regard to their pathogenesis and the advantages are discussed of a common ophthalmoscopic study of retinal vein occlusion with neurologists interested in cerebral
vascular disease
leading to an interchange of therapeutic experience in both conditions. Finally, there are detailed the studies in retinal vein occlusion being conducted by the Jerusalem Institute for the Prevention of
Blindness
. These are studies of incidence, natural history and of pathogenesis as observed in the experimental disease produced in rhesus monkey.
...
PMID:Retinal vein occlusion. 83 Feb 41
One to ten years after laser coagulation for diabetic retinopathy, 229 type I diabetics (mean age 44.3 years) and 157 type II diabetics (mean age 65 years) were re-studied for morbidity and mortality (progression of late damage, duration of survival, cause of death). The duration of diabetes at the first laser coagulation averaged 23.1 years for type I diabetics (15.9 years for type II). Average period from the first laser coagulation to the re-examination was 6.5 years for type I, 5.1 for type II diabetics. Of those patients still alive 6.7% had gone blind (type II: 7.3%). 2.1% and 4.6%, respectively, were receiving dialysis treatment, while renal transplantation had been performed in 3.1 and 1.8%, respectively. Stroke was the most frequent macrovascular complications (8.4 and 16.5%), followed by leg amputation (3.6 and 14.7%) and myocardial infarction (3.7 and 18.3%). 83 patients had died: 35 (15.3%) type I and 48 (30.6%) type II diabetics. Causes of death were septicaemia 14.3% (0%), uraemia 11.4% (8.3%), myocardial infarction 14.3% (33.3%), heart failure 8.6% (29.2%) and stroke 5.7% (6.3%). 10.7% (24.2%) had died within the first 5 years after laser coagulation. Despite a lower incidence of
blindness
in patients with diabetic retinopathy, the
vascular disease
progresses in other vascular regions so that a large proportion of diabetics will develop renal failure or die early from macrovascular complications.
...
PMID:[Morbidity and mortality in type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus after the diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy]. 142 83
The prevalences of risk factors and
angiopathy
were studied in 260 diabetic patients, 100 females and 160 males, 35-54 years old, in Uppsala. The prevalence, in females and males separately, of hypertension (WHO-criteria) was 46-34%, of hypercholesterolaemia (greater than or equal to 6.7 mmol.l-1) 32-29%, and of obesity (relative BMI greater than or equal to 120%) 25-20%. Those smoking greater than 15 cigarettes/day were 11-20%. Mean HbA1 was 10.6-10.5%. The prevalence of angina pectoris was 11-6%, of possible infarction 4-6%, and of major ECG abnormalities 6-4%. Large vessel (cardiovascular) disease was independently related to HbA1 (strongly), hypertension, cholesterol, age and familial NIDDM. The prevalence of severe retinopathy (
blindness
, new vessels or large hemorrhage) was 0% with 7-13 years of diabetes duration, and 26% with greater than or equal to 14 years of duration. The prevalence of severe proteinuria was 4% with 7-13 years of diabetes duration, and 15% with greater than or equal to 14 years of duration. Small vessel (retinopathy and nephropathy) disease was independently related to diabetes duration (strongly), HbA1 and hypertension. The data were discussed related to data from the London, Berlin and Tokyo centres of the WHO Multinational Study of
Vascular Disease
in Diabetics, using the same study protocol in the present study.
...
PMID:Prevalences of risk factors and angiopathy in diabetic patients in Uppsala. 152 37
Clinical, radiological, and immunohistochemical findings in brain biopsy specimens from six patients with cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
-associated intracerebral hemorrhage were reviewed. Acute clinical presentations included headache, nausea and vomiting, loss of consciousness, and focal neurological deficits such as hemiplegia and
blindness
. Transient ischemic attacks experienced by one patient and referable to one hemisphere did not indicate impending hemorrhage in that region. Computed tomographic scans revealed acute, irregular, superficial, lobar hemorrhage with occasional ring enhancement. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on biopsy specimens using primary antibodies against portions of the Alzheimer A4 (beta-) peptide or gamma-trace peptide (the vascular amyloid protein in patients with hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis-Icelandic type). In all patients, anti-A4 and anti-gamma-trace labeled cerebral microvessels. Immunoreactive senile plaques were few compared with the numbers of stained microvessels. Reactive astrocytes in some patients were labeled by both antiserum samples, suggesting uptake or production of these proteins by the astrocytes. This study demonstrates the heterogeneous clinical and radiological features of cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
-related brain hemorrhage and the value of anti-A4 and anti-gamma-trace immunohistochemical study of biopsy material from patients with suspected cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
-related intraparenchymal bleeding.
...
PMID:Cerebral hemorrhage with biopsy-proved amyloid angiopathy. 172 64
Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of
blindness
between the ages of 24-64 years. The first half of this period corresponds to peak fertility and the childbearing years. The effects of pregnancy on diabetic retinopathy are unclear, but recent studies suggest that pregnancy may be less harmful to the retina of the diabetic subject than was thought previously. Nevertheless, there is reason to believe that at least some women experience a worsening of their retinopathy as a result of pregnancy. Thus, careful ophthalmic evaluation and follow-up are essential for the pregnant woman with diabetes. This should include a minimum of one complete eye examination every trimester and within 3 months postpartum. Color fundus photography and laser treatment are safe, whereas fluorescein angiography, although commonly used to evaluate retinal
vascular disease
, can usually be avoided during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Diabetic retinopathy in pregnancy: a review. 240 23
Between 1960 and 1976 117 patients underwent pituitary implantation with yttrium-90 (90Y) for treatment of proliferative retinopathy at the Hammersmith Hospital, London. Mean age at operation was 35 +/- 11 years (mean +/- SD), and mean duration of diabetes 18.6 +/- 10.0 years. Mean insulin dosage prior to implant was 67.2 +/- 24 units, falling to 30.4 +/- 14.9 units post-implant. Thirty-two per cent of patients are still living, 60% are deceased and 8% are lost to follow-up. The 5-year survival rate was 82%. Of the causes of death, 21% died of infection, adrenal insufficiency or hypoglycaemia, 12% of renal failure, and 47% of myocardial or cerebral
vascular disease
. Ophthalmological follow-up was carried out on the 100 patients operated on between 1965 and 1976. The mean age of this group at implant was 35 +/- 10.5 years, and mean duration of diabetes 17.2 +/- 8.7 years. Visual acuity in the better eye at operation was 6/12 or better in 84% of patients, and this percentage remained similar at the time of the 5 and 10 year follow-up.
Blindness
(6/60 or worse) in both eyes was present in 12% of patients at the time of 5 and 10 year assessments. By 5 years new vessels on the disc had improved from a mean grading of 2.7 +/- 1.6 to 0.8 +/- 1.2 (p less than 0.001), and by 10 years there was no disc neovascularisation in any eye. There was a similar improvement in the grading of hard exudates, microaneurysms and haemorrhages, but there was an increase in fibrous retinitis proliferans.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of patients who underwent yttrium-90 pituitary implantation for treatment of proliferative diabetic retinopathy. 243 1
Nonspecific aortoarteritis is a systemic autoimmune disease eventuating in gradual stenosis of the aorta and the main vessels with ischemia of the respective organs. Ophthalmologic symptoms have been examined in 54 patients with nonspecific aortoarteritis. Subjective disorders of vision (short-term binocular
blindness
, metamorphopsia, pain behind the eye, amaurosis fugax) have been detected in 52% of the examinees. Organic lesions of the eye have been diagnosed in 60% of the patients: hypertensive
angiopathy
(22%), venous stasis retinopathy (17%), occlusion of the central retinal artery (1%), etc. Three possible mechanisms of the development of ocular symptoms have been established: (1) a result of symptomatic hypertension, (2) chronic ocular ischemia, (3) acute hemodynamic ocular circulation insufficiency.
...
PMID:[Ophthamologic pathology in non-specific aortoarteritis]. 256 80
Approximately 5.8 million people in the United States have been diagnosed by a physician as being diabetic, and an additional 4 to 5 million people have undiagnosed diabetes. Although the incidence of diabetes appears to be declining from a peak of 300 per 100,000 population in 1973, to 230 per 100,000 in 1981, its prevalence continues to rise, due to a 19 percent decline since 1970 in deaths caused by diabetes. In 1982, 34, 583 deaths were attributed to diabetes, resulting in diabetes being ranked as the seventh leading underlying cause of death. Medical and surgical complications of diabetes due to macro- and microvascular disease result in 5,800 new cases of
blindness
, 4,500 perinatal deaths, 40,000 lower extremity amputations and 3,000 deaths due to diabetic coma (ketotic and hyperosmolar) and at least 4,000 new cases of end-stage renal disease. Hyperglycemia is a major if not sole determinant of diabetic glomerulopathy. The exact mechanism underlying diabetic vasculopathy is under intensive study. Experiments in the induced-diabetic rat and dog suggest that small vessel injury may--under defined circumstances--be associated with the polyol (sorbitol) pathway of glucose metabolism, myoinositol deficiency, capillary hypertension, plasma hyperviscosity, stiff erythrocytes, elevated circulating thromboxane, and platelet-derived growth factor(s). As yet, no single hypothesis fits these seemingly disparate pieces together into a unified formulation of the genesis of diabetic complications. Clinical experience sustains the contention that a functioning kidney transplant proffers the uremic diabetic younger than age 60 a higher probability for survival with good rehabilitation than does either peritoneal dialysis or maintenance hemodialysis. Diabetics treated by kidney transplantation require more than the routine preoperative and postoperative attention afforded to nondiabetic ESRD patients. During initial nephrologic evaluation, concurrent extrarenal
vascular disease
--especially ophthalmic, cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and in the extremities, often demands immediate attention. Inventory of co-morbid risk factors pre-transplant facilitates their management post-transplant, thereby improving chances for rehabilitation. Consultations with an ophthalmologist and podiatrist familiar with management of the uremic diabetic should be obtained prior to transplant surgery. When performed as a component of pre-transplant evaluation, coronary angiography permits identification and correction, in many patients, of potentially fatal coronary artery disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Renal failure in diabetes: a substantive problem in provision of health care. 267 7
While sudden monocular
blindness
and occlusion of the central retinal artery associated with acute thrombosis of the internal carotid artery are well reported, concurrent unilateral ophthalmoparesis is not. We studied 3 adult men who did not have other major signs of
vascular disease
but who exhibited the complete syndrome. The initial paresis of the oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves varied in each individual and slowly cleared over days to weeks in all, but vision did not return in any. Each had mild-to-moderate signs of hemispheric dysfunction. In each, the thrombus extended from the origin of the internal carotid to its intracranial bifurcation into the anterior and middle cerebral arteries. It also occluded the proximal one-half to two-thirds of the ophthalmic artery. None had evidence of vasculitis or compromise of the posterior circulation.
...
PMID:Transient ocular motor paresis associated with acute internal carotid artery occlusion. 272 17
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