Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred and eighty-eight known Type 2 diabetic patients aged over 60 years identified by a geographically based survey of a population of 40,076 were followed for a median of 6 years to determine the incidence of various complications. There were 63 deaths and two patients were lost to follow-up. The presence of complications was determined using a structured questionnaire and clinical examination. Incidence rates of ischaemic heart disease, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease (PVD) were 56 (95% CI 41-75), 22 (13-35), and 146 (117-174) 1000-person-years-1 of follow-up, respectively. Rates of stroke and PVD rose significantly with age. Retinopathy occurred at a rate of 60 (42-83) 1000-person-years-1 and cataract at 29 (17-46) 1000-person-years-1 although visual acuity in survivors did not deteriorate overall, probably reflecting the high mortality associated with cataract. The rate of proteinuria (albumin concentration greater than 300 mg l-1) was 19 (9-34) 1000-person-years-1. Incidence rates were unrelated to sex or duration of diabetes. Diabetes is associated with a continuing incidence of complications into old age. Adequate facilities are required to assess and treat the resulting morbidity in a population with an increasing proportion of elderly people.
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PMID:A population-based study of the incidence of complications associated with type 2 diabetes in the elderly. 183 44

413 NIDDM Sudanese patients were studied. The patients' ages at the onset of diabetes ranged from 20-72 years, with the majority of patients (44%) developing diabetes at the age between 40-50 years. Female to male ratio was 1.9:1. 46.2% of patients were obese and a family history of first degree relatives was obtained in 63% of patients. Complications of diabetes in this study were as follows: Neuropathy (31.5%), retinopathy (17.4%), cataract (16%), nephropathy (9.2%), coronary heart disease (5.1%), cerebrovascular disease (4.4%) and peripheral vascular disease (3.4%). Microangiopathic complications of diabetes were significantly related to the duration of diabetes and the degree of hyperglycaemia (P less than 0.001 using chi 2 test). Macroangiopathic complications were significantly related to aging and hyperglycaemia. Patients with good metabolic control (blood glucose less than 160 mg%) had less prevalence of complications than uncontrolled patients. We conclude that NIDDM is a common type of diabetes in our diabetic clinic. It is a disease with severe complications and morbidity and needs more attention regarding metabolic control, since good control reduces the prevalence of diabetic complications.
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PMID:Features of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) in the Sudan. 201 36

448 Sudanese diabetics were included in this study. 30% of patients were in the age group 40-50 years and only 6.3% had childhood diabetes. The predominant sex was female (64.5%). Obesity was found in 39% of patients, a positive family history in 66.5% and a history of diabetic ketoacidosis in 25.2%. 100 patients (below the age of 40) had a plain X-ray abdomen done but none had evidence of pancreatic calcification. Percentages of diabetic complications in this study were as follows: neuropathy 28.1%, retinopathy 18.5%, cataract 14.7%, hypertension 12.9%, nephropathy 11.6%, peripheral vascular disease 6.2%, coronary heart disease 4.2% and pulmonary tuberculosis 2.7%. The majority of our patients were uncontrolled, only 16.7% had normoglycaemia (FBG less than 140 mg%).
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PMID:Pattern of diabetes mellitus in the Sudan. 263 51

The late complications associated with diabetes mellitus affect the eye (retinopathy and cataract), the kidney (diabetic glomerulosclerosis), the nerves (mononeuropathies, distal symmetric polyneuropathy, and autonomic neuropathy), and the large blood vessels (coronary artery, cerebrovascular, and peripheral vascular disease). With the exception of large blood vessel disease, evidence in animals and humans has suggested that the development of diabetes-associated complications is related to metabolic abnormalities associated with hyperglycemia. Although the exact mechanism by which hyperglycemia causes damage in individual tissues is unknown, a number of potentially pathogenic mechanisms have been proposed. These include increased activity of the polyol pathway, disturbance in the metabolism of myo-inositol and its phospholipid derivatives, abnormal permeability of the small blood vessels, and excessive glycosylation of various proteins. With the introduction of potent aldose reductase inhibitors, the role of increased activity of the polyol pathway (and related abnormalities in myo-inositol metabolism) in the pathogenesis of diabetes-associated complications can be clarified.
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PMID:Complications of diabetes. Prevalence, detection, current treatment, and prognosis. 407 75

Records of 849 consecutive diabetic Ethiopians revealed that 171 had type I diabetes, 462 type II nonobese, 210 type II obese, and 4 drug-induced. Undernutrition (BMI less than 18 kg/m2) was present in 12.9% of patients. Forty percent of all patients require insulin; ketoacidosis has occurred in 7.8%. Diabetes was present 10 yr or less in 73%, only 11% have been diabetic more than 15 yr, and none more than 32 yr. During 7 yr, 66 (7.8%) are known to have died. Renal failure caused 30.3% of known deaths, and ketoacidosis 3%. About 4% of those diabetic 6-10 yr have a clinically significant complication. The incidence of "diabetic triopathy" rose rapidly after 10 yr. Of those diabetic 16-20 yr, 27.7% had nephropathy, 27.7% neuropathy, and 33.3% retinopathy. Hypertension was seen in 12.1% of patients without nephropathy. Cataracts were seen in 1.4% of new diabetic patients, rising to 40.7% in those diabetic more than 20 yr. Peripheral vascular disease was uncommon and myocardial infarctions occurred in eight patients. Thus, "diabetic triopathy," hypertension, and cataracts are frequent in and after the second decade of diabetes in Ethiopians.
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PMID:The clinical pattern of diabetes mellitus in Ethiopians. 670 67

Between 1988 and 1992, 565 type 2 diabetic patients were examined for nephropathy and diabetes-associated diseases during hospital treatment. Stages of nephropathy were defined as no clinical sign of nephropathy (N = 280), microalbuminuria (N = 38), overt proteinuria (N = 105), impaired renal function (N = 55), and chronic dialysis therapy (N = 87). In dialyzed patients, HbA1c averaged 6.8%, and, in the other groups, HbA1c was between 7.6% and 8.3% (normal range, 3.8%-6.1%). Cataract was not associated with the severity of nephropathy. Stroke was most common in the stage of renal insufficiency (34%). The following complications, as found in medical history or as current event, showed a significant association with the stage of nephropathy and occurred most frequently in dialysis patients (percentage is displayed for patients with nephropathy in comparison to diabetic dialysis patients): hypertension (53%-89%), left ventricular hypertrophy (39%-81%), myocardial infarction (14%-36%), peripheral vascular disease (27%-77%), foot lesions (7%-75%), minor or major amputations (3%-23%), proliferative retinopathy (6%-46%), blindness (2.9%-16.1%), and internal carotid artery stenosis (15%-36%). In this preselected cohort of diabetic patients, a high morbidity was found already without nephropathy that increased several-fold in the course of the development of nephropathy. Our data identify patients with diabetic nephropathy as a high-risk group for excess morbidity.
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PMID:Morbidity in 565 type 2 diabetic patients according to stage of nephropathy. 955 88

There are two endemic areas of long-term exposure to arsenic from drinking water in Taiwan. Residents in the southwestern and northeastern endemic areas started using high-arsenic artesian well water in the early 1910s and late 1940s, respectively. Public water supply system using surface water was implemented in southwestern and northeastern endemic areas in the 1970s and 1990s, respectively. Systemic health hazards of long-term exposure to arsenic in drinking water have been intensively investigated since the 1960s, especially after 1985 in Taiwan. Several diseases have been well documented to be associated with chronic arsenic poisoning from drinking water showing a dose-response relation. They include characteristic skin lesions like hyperpigmentation or depigmentation, hyperkeratosis in palms and soles, and Bowen disease, peripheral vascular disease (specifically blackfoot disease), ischemic heart disease, cerebral infarction, microvascular diseases, abnormal peripheral microcirculation, carotid atherosclerosis, QT prolongation and increased dispersion in electrocardiography, hypertension, goiter, diabetes mellitus, cataract (specifically posterior subcapsular lens opacity), pterygium, slow neural conduction, retarded neurobehavioral development, erectile dysfunction, and cancers of the skin, lung, urinary bladder, kidney, and liver. The method of choice to mitigate arsenic poisoning through drinking water is to use safe drinking water from uncontaminated sources.
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PMID:Health hazards and mitigation of chronic poisoning from arsenic in drinking water: Taiwan experiences. 2455 58

It has been clear that at least 1 billion adults worldwide are smokers and at least 700 million children are passive smokers at home. Smoking exerts a detrimental effect to many organ systems and is responsible for illnesses such as lung cancer, pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cancer of head and neck, cancer of the urinary and gastrointestinal tract, periodontal disease, cataract and arthritis. Additionally, smoking is an important modifiable risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease such as coronary artery disease, stable angina, acute coronary syndromes, sudden death, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, congestive heart failure, erectile dysfunction and aortic aneurysms via initiation and progression of atherosclerosis. A variety of studies has proved that cigarette smoking induces oxidative stress, vascular inflammation, platelet coagulation, vascular dysfunction and impairs serum lipid pro-file in both current and chronic smokers, active and passive smokers and results in detrimental effects on the cardiovascular system. The aim of this review is to depict the physical and biochemical properties of cigarette smoke and, furthermore, elucidate the main pathophysiological mechanisms of cigarette-induced atherosclerosis and overview the new therapeutic approaches for smoking cessation and augmentation of cardiovascular health.
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PMID:Smoking and atherosclerosis: mechanisms of disease and new therapeutic approaches. 2517 28

This study evaluated the effect of gout on the risk of dry eye disease (DED) by using the National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). Data for 30,192 gout patients (21,081 men and 9111 women) and 30,192 non-gout patients (21,005 men and 9187 women) were analyzed. Approximately 1 million patients were randomly sampled from the NHIRD registry. After applying exclusion criteria, patients diagnosed with gout were enrolled in the study group. Thereafter, each individual in the study group underwent the matching process via the propensity score with another non-gout individual, which constituted the control group. The main outcome was defined as the development of DED in accordance with the corresponding International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision. In addition to DED, other risk factors including age, sex, and urbanization, and several co-morbidities were included in the multivariate model. The incidence of DED with the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) and cumulative probability were evaluated in the gout and non-gout patients. A total of 2913 DED events were observed in the study group, whereas 2631 DED events were observed in the control group. A higher incidence rate ratio was found in the study group after adjustment (aHR: 1.065). Moreover, the cumulative probability indicated a significantly increased risk of DED in the study group (p = 0.001). The other potential risk factors of DED according to the multivariate analysis include older age, female gender, higher degree of urbanization, keratopathy, age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, cataract, ischemic heart disease, hyperlipidemia, peripheral vascular disease, chronic pulmonary disease, rheumatic disease, peptic ulcer disease, liver disease, and malignancy. In conclusion, gout increased the risk of DED after adjustment, and the risk is positively correlated to a longer disease period.
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PMID:Gout as a Risk Factor for Dry Eye Disease: A Population-Based Cohort Study. 3063 89