Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0050p194 | Clinical Biochemistry | SFEBES2017

A well recognised but forgotten cause of undetectable Magnesium

Ahmad Sajjad , Akbar Saeed , George Lindsey , Evans Marc

A 74 years old man prsented with gradually worsening confusion with associated jerky movements with background of well controlled type 2 Diabetes, CKD-3, IHD and previous duodenal ulcer. His was on Finasteride, Omeprazole, Mirtazapine, Tamsulocin, Metformin, Atorvastatin, Humulin I insulin. He was taking omeprazole for Duodenal ulcer since 1993.On examination he had jerky movements of the arms suggestive of muscles spasms. Res...

ea0050p194 | Clinical Biochemistry | SFEBES2017

A well recognised but forgotten cause of undetectable Magnesium

Ahmad Sajjad , Akbar Saeed , George Lindsey , Evans Marc

A 74 years old man prsented with gradually worsening confusion with associated jerky movements with background of well controlled type 2 Diabetes, CKD-3, IHD and previous duodenal ulcer. His was on Finasteride, Omeprazole, Mirtazapine, Tamsulocin, Metformin, Atorvastatin, Humulin I insulin. He was taking omeprazole for Duodenal ulcer since 1993.On examination he had jerky movements of the arms suggestive of muscles spasms. Res...

ea0094p195 | Bone and Calcium | SFEBES2023

A case of Severe hypercalcemia secondary to Milk-Alkali syndrome:

Nagarajah Kalyani , Panagiotou Grigorios , George Lindsay , Evans Marc

Milk – alkali syndrome is a rare and distinctive disorder caused by ingestion of large amounts of calcium and absorbable alkali resulting in hypercalcemia. It is characterized by a triad of hypercalcemia, metabolic alkalosis and renal failure. Here we present a 59 years old female patient, who presented to Emergency department for a fall and Syncopal episode. She had a few days history of increasing thirst, polyuria and diffuse abdominal discomfort. This prior to her sync...

ea0015oc21 | Tumours, diabetes, bone | SFEBES2008

Delineating the mechanisms of Visfatin regulation in human AT and the implications of TZD treatment in Type 2 Diabetes

McGee Kirsty , Harte Alison , da Silva Nancy , Creely Steven , Baker Adam , Kusminski Christine , Khanolkar Manish , Evans Marc , Chittari Madhu , Patel Vinod , Boardman Shirine , Kumar Sudhesh , McTernan Philip

Objective: The adipocytokine visfatin, expressed in abdominal adipose tissue (AT) is thought to mimic insulin activity. However, whilst central adiposity is closely related to insulin resistance (IR) and T2DM, visfatinsÂ’ role in the development of these conditions remains unclear.Method: We investigated circulating visfatin levels in non-diabetic (ND) and diabetic (T2DM) subjects and in T2DM patients pre- and post- rosiglitazone (RSG) treatment. We ...