The descriptive epidemiology of diabetic coma at onset was investigated in a nationwide survey of insulin-dependent cdiabetic(IDDM) children (age at onset <18 yr) throughout Japan for the years 1970–81. Of the 1172 cases, 148 (12.6%) were unconscious at onset. Diabetic coma was highly associated with abnormalities in the biochemical variables. There was no sex difference in the frequency of coma; however, there was an inverse association with age wherein children under 5 yr of age were approximately two times more likely to present in coma than older children. There was a strong association with reported infections wherein patients with coma were more than twice as likely to report infection than patients without coma. It seemed that the frequency of coma did not decline during the study period. The risk of dying at onset was very high; diabetic children in coma (4.7%) were 12 times more likely to die than patients without coma.
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Original Contributions|
December 01 1985
Coma at the Onset of Young Insulin-dependent Diabetes in Japan: The Results of a Nationwide Survey
Japan and Pittsburgh Childhood Diabetes Research Groups
Japan and Pittsburgh Childhood Diabetes Research Groups
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Address reprint requests to Naoko Tajima, M.D., Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, 130 De Soto Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261.
Diabetes 1985;34(12):1241–1246
Article history
Received:
October 01 1984
Revision Received:
March 11 1985
Citation
Japan and Pittsburgh Childhood Diabetes Research Groups; Coma at the Onset of Young Insulin-dependent Diabetes in Japan: The Results of a Nationwide Survey. Diabetes 1 December 1985; 34 (12): 1241–1246. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.34.12.1241
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