Cases reported "Diabetic Angiopathies"

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1/7. Cerebral venous thrombosis during diabetic ketoacidosis.

    Neurological deterioration during an episode of diabetic ketoacidosis is usually assumed to be caused by cerebral oedema. We present a case of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis presenting in a similar manner, also associated with severe iron deficiency anaemia. Computed tomography scanning provided the correct diagnosis and allowed institution of anticoagulation with improvement in neurological outcome. neuroimaging should always be performed in suspected cerebral oedema associated with diabetic ketoacidosis in order to exclude other pathologies.
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ranking = 1
keywords = anaemia
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2/7. insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus showing microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation.

    It has been reported that microangiopathic hemolytic anemia occasionally occurs in patients with severe diabetic microangiopathy. We report a case of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in whom microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and chronic disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) were thought to be complicated. The patient showed fragmentation hemolytic anemia and progressive diabetic microangiopathy, together with a mild elevation of serum fibrin(ogen) degradation products. Considering the state of chronic DIC, heparin therapy was started, but mild hemolysis persisted. It is possible that microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and chronic DIC cause a vicious cycle in patients with severe diabetic microangiopathy, leading to rapid progression of diabetic microangiopathy.
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ranking = 108.1546601637
keywords = hemolytic
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3/7. Rapid development of nephrotic syndrome, hypertension, and hemolytic anemia early in pregnancy in patients with IDDM.

    In recent years, the prognosis for a successful pregnancy has greatly improved for women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) who are under good glycemic control and free of complications such as vascular disease and nephropathy. We report the rapid development of severe nephrotic syndrome, malignant hypertension, and microangiopathic hemolytic anemia during the first trimester of pregnancy in a 29-yr-old woman with IDDM of 18 yr duration. Our patient had no pregestational history of retinopathy or hypertension and only minimal proteinuria. Significant improvement in blood glucose levels had been achieved over the 6 mo before conception. kidney biopsy performed before the termination of pregnancy at 10 wk gestation revealed diabetic nephropathy. No other etiology for her renal disease could be found. An arteriole was noted to have entrapped red blood cell fragments and platelet thrombi, revealing the probable source of her hemolytic process. By 8 wk postpartum, her nephrotic syndrome and hemolysis had completely resolved. At 3 mo postgestation, the patient's hypertension was still present but less severe. Her serum creatinine has continued to decrease toward normal. This is the first report of a woman with IDDM in White's classification C who developed a toxemia-like syndrome during the first trimester of pregnancy, attributable to the underlying diabetic state.
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ranking = 81.115995122773
keywords = hemolytic
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4/7. Diabetic microangiopathic hemolytic anemia: beneficial effect of an antiplatelet agent?

    A 66-yr-old man with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus complicated by retinopathy and nephropathy presented with shortened red cell survival associated with prominent fragmentation of erythrocytes and leading to severe hemolytic anemia. Neither abnormal carbohydrate tolerance per se nor renal failure was related to the red cell fragmentation syndrome. Also, a marked platelet hyperaggregability, which disappeared under treatment with ticlopidine, was demonstrated. Furthermore, during treatment with this potent platelet inhibitor, red cell survival normalized and all signs of hemolysis, as well as the schistocytes present in the peripheral blood smears, disappeared. Two weeks after stopping ticlopidine administration, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia relapsed. We suggest that the fragmentation hemolysis in this patient was related to diabetic microangiopathy, and that the beneficial effects of ticlopidine are related to its platelet-inhibiting activities. This case further reaffirms that antiplatelet agents may have a beneficial effect on the vascular disease of diabetes mellitus.
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ranking = 81.115995122773
keywords = hemolytic
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5/7. Case report: diabetic microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia with antiphospholipid syndrome.

    A 38 year-old man with a 12-year history of noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus with rapidly progressive diabetic complications presented with microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia. He had no disorders that could induce microangiopathic hemolytic anemia other than diabetic microangiopathy. In addition, there was a significant negative correlation between serum lactate dehydrogenase levels and peripheral platelet counts, which suggested that the hemolysis and thrombocytopenia occurred through the same mechanism. Activated partial thromboplastin time was slightly prolonged, and lupus anticoagulant and antiphospholipid immunoglobulin g antibodies were positive. Both the hemolysis and the thrombocytopenia spontaneously improved after the initiation of hemodialysis. This is a unique case of diabetic microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and thrombocytopenia in which antiphospholipid syndrome also may be involved.
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ranking = 94.635327643236
keywords = hemolytic
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6/7. Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia as a complication of diabetes mellitus.

    A mature-onset diabetic patient who developed microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MHA) is presented. Although numerous causes of hemolysis are reported in the literature, MHA is a rare complication of diabetes. The proposed mechanism of hemolytic anemia is thought to be related to the abnormal formation of cell membranes in the diabetic environment. The ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid in the core of the membrane is altered in diabetics; as a result, the red blood cell wall becomes rigid and nondeformable. The abnormal cells becomes disrupted as they circulate through the microangiopathic blood vessels. The mechanism of action of the antiplatelet agents is to enhance cell membrane compliance. With improved cell-wall compliance, one can expect a reduction in hemolysis, as occurred in our patient. The literature on diabetes mellitus-related microangiopathic hemolytic anemia is reviewed.
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ranking = 94.635327643236
keywords = hemolytic
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7/7. Fragmentation haemolysis in patients with severe diabetic angiopathy.

    Haemolytic anaemia associated with prominent red cell fragmentation is described in seven patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus. A common freature in the patients was severe microangiopathy as detected by retinal examination and microscopic examination of the kidneys. Renal or pancreatic islet malfunction per se is not involved in the haemolytic syndrome, since red cell abnormalities persisted in one patient for over a year following successful renal and pancreatic transplantation--this, despite the maintenance of normal renal and carbohydrate homeostasis. The kinetics of fragmentation was sutdied by tranfusing snormal type O cells into this type A patient. With reisolation of these cells by the Ashby-technique, rapid and porgressive red cell fragmentation was demonstrated by: (a) membrane lipid loss; (b) osmotic fragility increase; and (c) increase in mean cell haemoblobin concentration. This studies indicate that a red-cell-fragmentation haemolytic anaemia may occur in long-standing diabetes mellitus, related to the angiopathy of this disease and not to insulin deficiency or renal malfunction.
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ranking = 2
keywords = anaemia
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