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This study is a description of a patient who exhibited diabetic ketosis associated with an alkalosis rather than acidosis and a review of eight previously reported cases. Precipitating factors for this syndrome are severe vomiting with loss of hydrogen, potassium, and chloride ions, and dehydration. The ingestion of alkali may also result in this mixed acid-base disturbance. Treatment consists primarily of replacement of potassium and chloride. All reported patients had received large doses of insulin for initial therapy; however, limited insulin (20 U) therapy in this patient almost completely reversed the metabolic abnormality with 12 hours.
Diabetes Care
PMID:Mixed acid-base abnormalities in diabetes. 10 96

Carnitine metabolism is reviewed in lipid storage myopathies, diabetes, vomiting sickness of Jamaica, malnutrition, hyperthyrodism, Duchenne dystrophy, and a few other disease states.
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PMID:Carnitine metabolism in human subjects. III. Metabolism in disease. 41 8

The usual metabolic derangement in uncontrolled diabetes mellitus is metabolic acidosis, with an increase in the anion gap because of increased ketoacids and lactate. However, diabetic ketoalkalosis may occasionally be encountered, the prominent clinical feature of which is vomiting, with depletion of potassium, chloride, and hydrogen ions. Self-medication with absorbabe alkali may also contribute to the alkalosis. It would be dangerous to treat hyperlgycemic patients with alkali if their condition is ketoalkalosis instead of ketoacidosis.
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PMID:Diabetic ketoalkalosis. 45 54

It is today's general medical opinion that children's diabetes mellitus was uncommon in the past. It was generally admitted at that time the initail stages were so sudden as to make difficut its early diagnosis. It's increased incidence is at present an alarming truth; however, a parallel increase of diabetic coma or of mulminant types has rather dropped. Diabetes may be diagnosed by just considering the main symptoms at the onset which are polydipsia, polyuria and weight loss. If an early diagnosis is not made, acidosis (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting) may appear within a few days or weeks followed by coma (Kussamul's acidotic respiration and dehydration). Coma may be avoided by an early diagnosis and a life may be saved. It must be stressed that an important percentage of children and adolescents show a slow and gradual evolution (week or months) of their diabetes: gradual weight loss, sometimes with noticeable polyphagia, occasional enuresis, but without other associated symptoms. Asymptomatic, intermittent glucosurias are also frequent; they vary in magnitude an almost always they appear without ketonuria and with fasting normal glycemia. According to our experience they may precede in weeks or months the clinical manifestations of the disease. Postprandial glycemia is a sure diagnostic resource; it is of greater trustworthines than fasting glycemia; therefore we advise it as a routine diagnostic procedure which we recommend widely. In uncertain situations, the oral glucose tolerance test is advisable.
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PMID:[Diabetes mellitus in childhood and adolescence. Clinical types]. 48 58

Hyperosmolar nonketotic coma is characterized by hyperglycemia, hyperosmolarity and dehydration in the absence of ketoacidosis. Two cases of hyperosmolar nonketotic coma, in which both the patients recovered, were presented. One of the cases was a 59-year-old female who had suffered from a metastatic brain tumor. After removal of the tumor, the patient's condition improved for a period. This was followed by a period of frequent vomiting, subsequently followed by coma. The laboratory data showed the absence of ketoacidosis in the blood sugar measured at 672 mg/dl and serum osmolarity at 343.1 mOsm./kg. The other case was a 74-year-old female who was admitted to the clinic because of cerebral thrombosis. Her caloric in-take was restricted and insulin was administered because of a mild diabetes mellitus which occured after admission. Then she entered a hyperosmolar non-ketotic coma. The laboratory data revealed blood sugar to be 1068 mg/dl and serum osmolarity to be 418 mOsm./kg. Immediately after large amounts of intravenous drip infusion and insulin were administerd, she recovered from the syndrome. The clinical observations and the pathogenesis of this syndrome were discussed.
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PMID:[Two cases of nonketotic hyperosmolar coma in neurosurgery (author's transl)]. 91 16

Successful treatment of the diabetic patient is possible only if the patient himself takes an interest in his disease and also an active part in treating it, i.e. by adherence to diet, testing of urinary sugar and insulin administration. The precondition for cooperation is intensive medical advice covering the following three aspects: 1. education, 2. motivation to put the acquired knowledge into practice, 3. practicability of the advice given. Our program covers 5 points: 1. basic education on the nature of diabetes, 2. diet instructions, 3. testing of urinary sugar, 4. instruction on insulin administration, 5. oral hypoglycemic agents. Special instructions must be given to motorists and all other types of driver, and also for emergency situations (vomiting, fever etc.). An instruction sheet carrying the key points in helpful. The results of this educational scheme are regularly checked by questionnaire. Refresher courses have been found to be necessary at regular intervals. The permanent educational efforts of regional Diabetic Associations and appropriate literature (D-Journal) are also recommended. The time-consuming effort of achieving the goals associated with education of the diabetic calls for teamwork between general practitioner and teaching center, e.g. the hospital with its facilities (audiovisual program, dieteticians etc.). However, the crucial factor remains the physician's commitment to his patient and his disease, since education and treatment must be geared to the needs of the individual patient.
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PMID:[How do we counsel our diabetic patients?]. 99 29

Associations between previous induced abortion and demographic and health factors in pregnancy were measured in 9 874 women who gave birth and who had been interviewed during pregnancy. Previous abortion was most rare among women having their first baby and increased with increasing birth order up to the fourth, thereafter decreasing. It was positively correlated with maternal age and negatively with age at marriage. There was no effect of years of schooling, when other variables were taken into account, but there were significant differences between ethnic groups, abortion being commonest among Jewish women from North African countries and more prevalent in those from western and Asian countries than in the second-generation Israel-born or in Arab women.Women who reported abortions were less likely to be strict as regards religious observance and less likely to have had a previous stillbirth or child death, other variables being equal. They were more likely to be smokers or former smokers and to be delivered of their babies in certain obstetric units. They more often reported vomiting, bleeding, and medication in early pregnancy. On the other hand, there was no significant association with diabetes, anaemia, blood groups, or season of birth.The findings show that women reporting previous induced abortions differ significantly from other pregnant women in a wide range of demographic and health characteristics. Such women may also be biased for complications of pregnancy and outcome, particularly if selected from a clinic population. Observations that indicate a deleterious effect of induced abortions on subsequent pregnancy outcomes must therefore be interpreted with considerable caution.
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PMID:Characteristics of pregnant women who report previous induced abortions. 108 3

A patient with chronic active hepatitis developed vomiting, dyspnoea, tachycardia, diarrhoea and diffuse pains. For several years she had been treated with azathioprine and for a few weeks before admission with phenformin for mild diabetes. Laboratory examination revealed acute disseminated intravascular coagulation and lactacidaemia. Despite intensive treatment the patient died a few hours after admission, the post-mortem examination revealing diffuse pulmonary haemorrhages. The present case report and those published in the literature suggest that phenformin should not be given to diabetics who also have renal or hepatic disease. In any case, if phenformin is given, it should be stopped if hepatic, renal, infectious or thrombotic complications occur. In these cases and those of sudden unexplained deterioration in diabetics, hospitalisation is essential and lactic acid levels should be determined and coagulation tests performed.
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PMID:[Lactacidaemia and disseminated intravascular coagulation associated with phenformin medication (author's transl)]. 114 86

A case of lactic acidosis associated with phenformin therapy for diabetes mellitus is reported, and 34 previously reported cases of lactic acidosis associated with phenformin therapy are reviewed to determine if any predisposing factors to lactic acidosis were apparent. Observations of sex, age, duration of diabetes, pathologic conditions, dosage, duration of phenformin therapy and the onset of symptoms preceding lactic acidosis were made. Renal impairment, urinary tract infections, hepatic impairment, ethanol ingestion and poorly controlled congestive heart failure were found to be predisposing factors to lactic acidosis. The appearance of a syndrome of impending lactic acidosis consisted of anorexia, nausea, vomiting with abdominal pain or lethargy.
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PMID:Phenformin-associated lactic acidosis; a review. 114 21

Hyperthermia has recently been recognized as a manifestation of hypoglycemia. We describe two episodes of hypoglycemia associated with nausea, vomiting, chills, and impaired consciousness which were followed by marked hyperthermia. We suggest that the hyperthermia may result from excessive reaction to preceding hypothermia caused by the hypoglycemia. We would like to alert the clinician to the possibility of a previous, severe hypoglycemic episode in any diabetic patient with hyperthermia and coma.
Diabetes 1975 Sep
PMID:Marked hyperthermia as a manifestation of hypoglycemia in long-standing diabetes mellitus. 115 46


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