The intestinal and liver complications of diabetes mellitus.
Mots clés
Abstrait
Gastroparesis, constipation, diarrhea, and fecal incontinence occur frequently in diabetics with long-standing and often poorly controlled insulin-dependent diabetes. These motor abnormalities of the gastrointestinal tract tend to be associated in these patients with evidence of autonomic neuropathy and other diabetes-related complications such as peripheral neuropathy, nephropathy, and retinopathy. The management of these derangements of motility is generally frustrating and very difficult. The prokinetic agents currently available have fewer side effects than previously used drugs, and have expanded the treatment options for diabetics with motility disorders of the gastrointestinal tract. The treatment of diabetic diarrhea remains aimed at the symptom because the cause is often unknown. The diagnosis of diabetic diarrhea depends on a careful and judicious assessment, which allows for the distinction of this condition from other causes of diarrhea. For example, celiac disease can occur in insulin-dependent diabetics, but it is specifically treated by the elimination of gluten from the diet. In recent years, we have also gained a better understanding of the liver and biliary tree abnormalities that occur in the diabetic. The most common hepatobiliary lesions found in these patients include excessive glycogen deposition, fatty liver, and gallstones. Cirrhosis of the liver can develop in diabetics as a result of progressive fatty steatosis, pericentral hepatic fibrosis, and, at times, central hyaline sclerosis. Future study of the underlying pathogenesis of diabetes may one day allow us to find common threads in the seemingly disparate gastrointestinal and hepatic complications of this disease.