Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006271 (bronchiolitis)
5,174 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Few molecules are active against respiratory viruses. In upper respiratory tract infections, which are frequent and fortunately not severe, their deficiency is not a problem. However some molecules are able to block in vitro the interaction between a rhinovirus and its receptor: anti-receptor antibodies, soluble ICAM-1, capsid-binding agents. The lower respiratory tract infections (bronchiolitis, pneumonia...), mainly due to respiratory syncytial virus and influenza viruses are potentially more severe, and 2 groups of compounds are or have been used in these infections: amantadine and ribavirin. Ribavirin is effective in respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial, influenza and parainfluenza viruses, and on many other viruses. Its toxicity needs to administrate it as an aerosol, and in France, ribavirin is used as compassional treatment in severe forms of bronchiolitis or pneumonia due to respiratory syncytial virus, and in high-risk children. Anti-parkinsonian drugs, related to amantadine (Mantadix, Roflual) are no longer on sale. Therefore there is no active molecule yet available against these viruses.
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PMID:[Drugs active against respiratory viruses]. 918 39

In 1955, Epler and Colby first described idiopathic bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia. Davison and colleagues termed the entity cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. Clinically, the disease resembles a flu-like syndrome of acute or subacute onset. Other features include crackles, patchy infiltrates on chest radiograph, restrictive function, and decrease in diffusing capacity. Most cases of idiopathic bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia (BOOP) respond dramatically to corticosteroids. However, some patients deteriorate rapidly. Differences between idiopathic or secondary BOOP and other interstitial lung diseases are vast. CT findings and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid lymphocytosis are helpful in differentiating BOOP from idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
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PMID:Bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia. 936 77

A reverse transcription-PCR and hybridization-enzyme immunoassay (RT-PCR-EIA) has been developed to identify the major agents of bronchiolitis in infants: respiratory syncytial viruses A and B (RSVA and RSVB) and parainfluenzavirus 3 (PIV3). Two primer sets (P1-P2 and P1-P3) were selected in a conserved region of the polymerase L gene. In infected cell cultures, this method detected RSVA (n = 14), RSVB (n = 13), and PIV3 (n = 13), with the exclusion of PIV1 (n = 4), PIV2 (n = 3), measles virus (n = 6), mumps virus (n = 4), influenza A virus (n = 11), and influenza B virus (n = 4). The differentiation of the amplicons by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) showed a PvuII site for PIV3 strains and an AvaII site for RSV strains, with RSVA distinguished from RSVB by BglII. The hybridization-EIA, using three internal probes specific for each virus, correlated with the immunofluorescence assay (IFA) and RFLP results. Clinical aspirates from 261 infants hospitalized with bronchiolitis were tested by IFA, viral isolation technique (VIT), and RT-PCR-EIA. RT-PCR-EIA detected RSV sequences in 103 samples (39.4%), and IFA-VIT detected RSV sequences in 109 cases (41.7%). A few samples (2.6%) were IFA-VIT positive but PCR negative, and one sample was RT-PCR-EIA positive only. RT-PCR-EIA detected PIV3 sequences in 14 of the 15 IFA-VIT-positive isolates. The two methods showed very good correlation (96.9%), but RT-PCR-EIA was clearly more efficient in typing, leaving 5% non-A, non-B isolates, while IFA failed to resolve 23% of the isolates. The two methods contradicted each other for <5% of the isolates.
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PMID:Detection of respiratory syncytial virus A and B and parainfluenzavirus 3 sequences in respiratory tracts of infants by a single PCR with primers targeted to the L-polymerase gene and differential hybridization. 950 15

A total of 1429 Saudi children of either sex and under 5 years of age who were admitted to King Khalid University Hospital, Riyadh during a three year period (April 1993-March 1996) with complaints suggestive of acute respiratory tract infections (ARTI) were investigated for viral aetiology of the infection. Viruses could be detected in 522 (37 per cent) cases with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) the most commonly detected (79 per cent) followed by parainfluenza type 3 (8 per cent). Detection of influenza A, B and adenoviruses accounted for 6 per cent, 3 per cent and 2 per cent respectively. Except for parainfluenza virus type 3 the peak of activity of the respiratory viruses was during the winter months (October-February). Parainfluenza virus type 3 could be detected all year round but epidemics can occur in the hottest months of the year (June-August) when the temperature can exceed 40 degrees C. Association between clinical manifestation, type of causative agent, and age was evaluated in 137 infected Saudi children in the first year of the study (April 1993-March 1994). The majority of our cases presented with bronchiolitis (58 per cent) while only 26 per cent had bronchopneumonia. There was a significant association between bronchiolitis and lower age groups (0-6 months), with RSV as the major causative agent of bronchiolitis cases (88 per cent).
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PMID:Viral aetiology and epidemiology of acute respiratory infections in hospitalized Saudi children. 960 99

We report a series of 19 cases of bronchiolitis obliterans with organized pneumonitis (BOOP) observed in two pneumology units at the Strasbourg University Hospital between July 1987 and June 1997. Mean patient age was 60 years. Clinical features included dry cough, exercise-induced dyspnea, and a flu-like syndrome in three-quarters of the cases. Standard chest x-ray showed a diffuse non-systemized alveolar syndrome with a air bronchogram in 18 cases and an interstitial syndrome in one-third of the cases. computed tomography of the thorax visualized bronchial dilatations by traction of the alveolar syndrome in one-third of the cases. Pulmonary function tests showed moderate restriction. Lymphocytes predominated in bronchio-alveolar lavage fluid. Pathology examination of surgical lung specimens (5 cases), transbronchial biopsies (5 cases) and scan-guided transparietal punctures (4 cases) provided the diagnosis. In 5 cases the diagnosis was based on the radiological and clinical presentation and favorable course on corticosteroid therapy. Recurrence was observed at corticosteroid withdrawal or dose reduction in 7 cases. In this series, bronchiolitis obliterans with organized pneumonitis was probably secondary to rheumatoid arthritis (1 case), breast radiotherapy (3 cases), and drugs (amiodarone: 1 case: sotalol: 2 cases: betaxolol: 1 case). An association with betaxolol has not been previously reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Bronchiolitis obliterans with organizing pneumonia. Retrospective study of 19 cases]. 976 99

The role of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and viruses in the various clinical presentations of acute respiratory-tract infection (ARTI) was studied in Saudi children seen at King Khalid University Hospital (KKUH) between January 1995 and January 1996. The study population comprised 511 children (age < 14 years) of both sexes. Nasopharyngeal aspirates (NPA) and acute-phase sera were collected. Convalescent sera were only available from 334 of the patients (with an interval of 15-42 days between collection of the acute and corresponding convalescent sera). Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was the most commonly detected virus, found in 69% of patients. Mycoplasma pneumoniae, found in 9% of the patients, appeared to be the second most common causative agent (this is the first time the prevalence of this agent in ARTI among Saudi children has been studied), followed by influenza A virus (present in 8% of the patients). RSV was highly prevalent during the colder months (October-April), with a peak in January-February, whereas there was little seasonal fluctuation in the prevalence of M. pneumoniae. Although most (60%) of the M. pneumoniae infections were in patients aged > 60 months, RSV was detected in 22% of the patients aged 1-5 months of age and only in 6% of those aged > 60 months. Infection with M. pneumoniae was found mainly in children with broncho-pneumonia (12 cases) and lobar pneumonia (three cases). Most of those infected with RSV had bronchiolitis (53 cases), followed by broncho-pneumonia (24 cases) and bronchial asthma (20 cases). As their prevalences were low, it was difficult to draw any conclusions about possible associations between the other viral agents encountered (influenza, para-influenza and adenovirus) and clinical disease.
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PMID:Role of Mycoplasma pneumoniae in acute respiratory-tract infections in Saudi paediatric patients. 979 33

The results of a five-year study of paired sera from 410 hospitalised patients-mainly children-with respiratory illness are reported. Samples were divided into groups based on clinical diagnosis. The data of each group were analysed in relation to patient age (under or over 1 year of age). The percentage of positive serological diagnoses ranged from 29.4% in the respiratory viral illness group to 46.2% in the bronchiolitis group. Each group showed a prevalent serological diagnosis. Respiratory viral illness patients over 1 year were diagnosed mainly with Influenza virus infection (73.8% positive diagnosis), pharyngotonsillitis patients with Adenovirus infection (72.2%), laryngitis patients with Parainfluenza virus infection (100%), pneumonia patients with Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection (56.7%), and bronchiolitis patients with Respiratory Syncytial virus infection (100%). The serological diagnosis patterns of each group or subgroup were statistically significant with respect to the other groups (chi 2 or Fisher exact tests). Unlike previous reports, none of the patients under 1 year in our study was diagnosed with Influenza virus infection or Parainfluenza virus type 3. Conversely, Respiratory Syncytial virus infection data were in line with previous reports, being the most frequently diagnosed infection in the bronchiolitis group and in the subgroups of patients under 1 year of age. The present report provides new information on patterns of respiratory infections.
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PMID:Serological diagnosis of respiratory viral infections. A five-year study of hospitalised patients. 981 18

Viral respiratory infections are common causes of illness in infants and children. Examination of clinical specimens submitted for diagnosis during a 3-year period (August 1993-July 1996) at King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center (KFSH & RC) in Riyadh revealed a wide spectrum of diseases associated with the isolation of five respiratory viruses. Severity of disease ranged from mild upper respiratory illness to threatening lower respiratory illnesses including bronchiolitis and pneumonia. Of the 256 isolates, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) accounted for 73 (28.5%), adenoviruses for 70 (27.3%), influenza viruses for 61 (23.8%), enteroviruses for 39 (15.2%) and para-influenza for 13 (2.3%). Viruses were found more frequently in children attending emergency or paediatric wards than in outpatients. RSV appears in November and the seasonal peak occurs during January and February. Influenza activity begins in September and peaks in November and December. Para-influenza type I emerges in winter and para-influenza type III follows the influenza epidemic and may be detected sporadically in summer. The other viruses (enteroviruses, adenoviruses) were isolated throughout the year.
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PMID:Respiratory viruses in children attending a major referral centre in Saudi Arabia. 992 68

We report a case of slow-resolving pneumonia secondary to bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP) in a 73-year-old woman. Owing to a delayed diagnosis of BOOP, the clinical course was quite long. This syndrome is caused by a nonspecific inflammatory pneumonitis, either idiopathic or associated with infectious or irritant agents (or drugs). It generally presents as a flu-like illness, followed by progressive dyspnea, cough, fever, and bilateral patchy alveolar infiltrates, and lasts several weeks. The diagnostic work-up of slow-resolving pneumonia is discussed.
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PMID:Slow-resolving pneumonia secondary to bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia. 1040 25

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infects most people by the time they are 2 years old and reinfects throughout life. RSV is best recognised for causing bronchiolitis in infants--it is one of the most important respiratory pathogens in childhood in industrialised countries. The clinical manifestations of RSV infection in adults and elderly people, from upper respiratory tract infection to pneumonia, are less well known. Part of the burden of winter mortality in elderly people is attributable to RSV infection and it may be as important a cause of death as influenza. Recent advances in RSV vaccines have made RSV a more important topic for epidemiological research and surveillance. Basic research required before vaccine programmes can be developed includes describing the natural history of RSV infection in adults, quantifying the burden of disease attributable to RSV, and defining the best surveillance methods with which to evaluate different vaccination strategies.
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PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus: an underestimated cause of respiratory infection, with prospects for a vaccine. 1059 79


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