Internal Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-7235
Print ISSN : 0918-2918
ISSN-L : 0918-2918
48 巻, 13 号
選択された号の論文の16件中1~16を表示しています
EDITORIALS
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
  • Eiji Oda, Ryu Kawai
    2009 年 48 巻 13 号 p. 1127-1134
    発行日: 2009年
    公開日: 2009/07/01
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
    Objective Low-grade systemic inflammation is proposed as a component of metabolic syndrome (MS) and is reported as a predictor of diabetes. We studied the association between white blood cell count (WBC) and MS and diabetes in Japanese men and women.
    Methods Cross-sectional associations between WBC and metabolic syndrome (MS) defined by revised NCEP criteria for Japanese, Japanese MS (JMS) defined by the Examination Committee for Criteria of Metabolic Syndrome, and diabetes were examined using medical check-up data from 1,880 men and 1,079 women.
    Results The prevalence of MS, JMS, and diabetes was 6.4%, 5.5%, and 4.3%,13.2%, 11.5%, and 5.5%, 15.1%, 13.8%, and 5.1%, and 24.3%, 21.3%, and 8.5%, respectively through the quartiles of WBC in men (p<0.0001, <0.0001, and <0.01, respectively in comparison between the lowest quartile of WBC and the highest quartile of WBC) and 2.2%, 0.4%, and 0.4%, 4.5%, 0.7%, and 1.1%, 9.3%, 1.9%, and 1.5%, and 12.3%, 4.8%, and 3.3%, respectively through the quartiles of WBC in women (p<0.0001, <0.01, and <0.05, respectively in comparison between the lowest quartile of WBC and the highest quartile of WBC).
    Conclusion The prevalence of MS, JMS, and diabetes increases through the quartiles of WBC in Japanese men and women. Thus, WBC may be useful as a marker of cardiovascular disease risk.
  • Yoshinori Abe, Teiji Yamamoto, Tomoko Soeda, Tomohiro Kumagai, Yoshihi ...
    2009 年 48 巻 13 号 p. 1135-1141
    発行日: 2009年
    公開日: 2009/07/01
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
    Background Unilateral movement disorders and contralateral neuroimaging abnormalities of the striatum have been sporadically reported as a rare syndrome associated with diabetes mellitus. Despite characteristic imaging findings and clinical manifestations, the mechanism underlying this syndrome is still unclear.
    Methods Six patients with this syndrome were studied clinically and subjected to MRI neuroimaging; one underwent biopsy of the striatum, and another underwent additional MR spectroscopy at 3.0T and FDG-PET.
    Results Neuroimaging findings were characterized by a T1-hyperintense unilateral lesion restricted to the striatum, contralateral to the symptomatic limbs. The biopsied striatum contained patchy necrotic tissue, severe thickening of all layers of arterioles, and marked narrowing of vessel lumens. Hyaline degeneration of the arteriolar walls, extravasation of erythrocytes, and prominent capillary proliferation were also notable, together with lymphocytic infiltration and macrophage invasion. In one patient, PET examination revealed decreased accumulation of FDG in the lesion. The MR spectrum for the diseased striatum revealed a decrease in the NAA/Cr ratio (1.35), normal Cho/Cr ratio (1.22), and a peak for myoinositol, while the spectrum on the contralateral site revealed a decrease in the NAA/Cr ratio (1.48), increase in Cho/Cr (1.32), but no peak for myoinositol.
    Conclusion The constellation of signs and symptoms and neuroimaging characteristics in previous reports and the six additional cases described here with neuropathological data and findings of MR spectroscopy appears unique enough to be termed "diabetic striatopathy." This syndrome appears in poorly controlled diabetics due to obliterative vasculopathy with prominent vascular proliferation, vulnerability to which is restricted to the striatum.
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