RESUMO
The long-term survival rate of hematological malignancy patients with Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition (GLIM)-defined malnutrition and sarcopenia is poor, but nutritional rehabilitation effects in such patients are unknown. Here, two cases of older hematological malignancy patients in whom nutritional rehabilitation was effective against GLIM-defined malnutrition and sarcopenia are reported. By undergoing nutritional rehabilitation, the myeloma patient increased her six-meter walking speed and her maintained body mass index (BMI), appendicular skeletal muscle mass (ASM), and hand grip strength, whereas the Hodgkin lymphoma patient regained his hand grip strength and maintained his BMI, ASM, and six-meter walking speed.
RESUMO
A 22-year-old Japanese woman presented with general fatigue. Five days later, she demonstrated a body temperature of 39 degrees C and a loss in weight of 5kg. She thereafter became unconscious and was taken to Tomakomai City General Hospital. Urinary ketone body was positive, and plasma glucose was 1063mg/dl. The serum asparate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase levels were 158 and 1220IU/l, respectively. An arterial blood gas analysis showed metabolic acidosis. Glycated hemoglobin was 10.9%. Urinary C-peptide immnoreactivity was 11microg/day. Anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase antibody was 12.4U/ml. In general, islet-associated autoantibodies are detectable several years before the development of overt autoimmune diabetes, thus suggesting that an autoimmune reaction against beta-cells had already started in this case. On viral examinations, hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibody was negative, while HCV-RNA was positive. Based on these findings, she was diagnosed to have autoimmune diabetes and acute hepatitis C. In addition, her serum interleukin-18 level was elevated to 506pg/ml. The duration of diabetic characteristic symptoms before diagnosis is usually several weeks in most cases of autoimmune diabetes. However, it was extremely short in this case. Taken together, these findings suggested that the progression of autoimmune diabetes might have been accelerated due to the infection of HCV.