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Query: UMLS:C0006271 (
bronchiolitis
)
5,174
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Swyer-James-MacLeod Syndrome (SJMS) is considered to be a relatively uncommon and complex disease characterized by roentgenographic hyperlucency of one lung, lobe, or part of a lobe, due the pulmonary vascular structure and alveolar overdistension. It is sometimes associated with bronchiectasis. This syndrome seems to be an acquired disease that develops after viral
bronchiolitis
and/or viral pneumonia in early childhood. Microscopically, there is evidence of patchy bronchitis and
bronchiolitis
.SJMS is usually asymptomatic and discovered accidentally by chest radiography in a child with respiratory symptoms and should be differentiated from other causes of unilateral hyperlucency on chest radiography, such as those related to congenital bronchial and/or vascular abnormalities. Treatment includes early control of lung infections, as well as
influenza
and pneumococcal vaccination. Few reports of this syndrome in children have been published. We describe the case of a 12-year-old boy with unilateral hyperlucency of the lung and respiratory symptoms of acute pneumonia and discuss the main diagnostic features of this syndrome.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic considerations in unilateral hyperlucency of the lung (Swyer-James-MacLeod Syndrome)]. 1545 22
Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia (COP) is one of the new recognized histological patterns of idiopathic interstitial pneumonias, in witch no cause or association is identified. Idiopathic
bronchiolitis
obliterans-organizing pneumonia (BOOP) is a synonymous. This rare entity is characterized by involvement of alveoli and bronchioles, which are filled by intraluminal polyps of fibroblastic tissue (Masson bodies). The clinical presentation often mimics that of community-acquired pneumonia. Persistent non-productive cough, dyspnoea with exertion and weight loss are common features, and in one-half of the cases the onset is heralded by a
flu
-like syndrome. Definitive diagnosis depends on histological data, and video-assisted thoracoscopic (VAT) has become the established technique. Spontaneous recovery is rare; corticosteroid therapy provides cure in two thirds of cases. The authors present a case of a patient whose lung biopsy by VAT confirmed the diagnosis. She was treated with corticoids without recurrence in a two year follow-up.
...
PMID:[Cryptogenic organizing pneumonia -- case report]. 1549 79
This study evaluated the overall impact of human metapneumovirus (hMPV) infection in 1,505 children and their households, and compared it with infections due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and
influenza
viruses. Nasopharyngeal swabs were used at enrollment to collect specimens for the detection of hMPV, RSV, and
influenza
virus RNA by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). hMPV was detected in 42 children (2.8%), RSV in 143 (9.5%; P < 0.0001 vs. hMPV), and
influenza
viruses in 230 (15.3%; P < 0.0001 vs. hMPV). Of the 42 hMPV-positive samples, one was also positive for RSV and six for
influenza
viruses, for a co-infection rate of 16.7%. Clinically, hMPV was identified only in patients with acute respiratory infection, whereas RSV and
influenza
viruses were also detected in patients with different clinical manifestations. Symptoms with statistically significant different proportions at presentation were fever (more frequent in the hMPV- and
influenza
-positive children) and wheezing with
bronchiolitis
or asthma exacerbation (more frequent among hMPV- and RSV-positive cases). The households of the hMPV- and the
influenza
-positive children had significantly more illnesses, needed significantly more medical visits, received more antipyretics, and missed significantly more work or school days than those of the RSV-positive children. Results show that hMPV is an emerging cause of acute respiratory infection in childhood, and may have a significant clinical and socioeconomic impact on children and their families.
...
PMID:Impact of human metapneumovirus in childhood: comparison with respiratory syncytial virus and influenza viruses. 1554 89
We studied epidemiologic and immunologic factors in infants with
bronchiolitis
caused by
influenza
virus. The proportion of these infants who were male and who had an immediate family member with a history of asthma was similar to that of a control group of infants with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
bronchiolitis
. In subjects with
influenza
virus infection, concentrations of the beta chemokine macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha), but not other beta chemokines, in nasopharyngeal secretions (NPS) were greater among infants with more severe, hypoxic
bronchiolitis
than in subjects with mild, nonhypoxic
bronchiolitis
, or upper respiratory tract infection alone. Quantities of MIP-1alpha were also correlated with lower values of oxygen saturation. These findings point out epidemiologic and immunologic similarities between
bronchiolitis
caused by
influenza
and RSV, and suggest that host factors are more important than the nature of the infecting virus in the development of severe forms of
bronchiolitis
caused by
influenza
and RSV.
...
PMID:A comparison of epidemiologic and immunologic features of bronchiolitis caused by influenza virus and respiratory syncytial virus. 1560 30
Community acquired respiratory viruses (CARVs) are increasingly recognized as serious threats to lung transplant recipients. While CARVs such as respiratory syncytial virus, parainfluenza,
influenza
, and adenovirus usually cause self-limited illnesses in immunocompetent subjects, infections in the transplant recipient can be dramatic. As transplant recipients live longer and diagnostic methods improve, the burden of CARVs will undoubtedly increase. Because of limited therapeutic options, some patients may succumb to CARV infections, while many survivors develop chronic allograft dysfunction. Recognition of this latter phenomenon has implicated CARVs in the pathogenesis of
bronchiolitis
obliterans.
...
PMID:Community acquired respiratory viral infections after lung transplantation: clinical features and long-term consequences. 1563 38
HCoV-NL63, the fourth human coronavirus, has been isolated recently from children with respiratory tract infections, including upper respiratory infection,
bronchiolitis
, and pneumonia. The virus has been also detected in immunocompromised adults with respiratory tract infections. A total of 118 nasopharyngeal swab samples from 118 hospitalized young children aged less than 2 years with
bronchiolitis
who were not infected with human respiratory syncytial virus,
influenza
A or B, or human metaneumovirus were selected. Three (2.5%) of the 118 samples were positive for HCoV-NL63 by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction tests. HCoV-NL63 may be one of the causative agents of
bronchiolitis
in young children.
...
PMID:Detection of human coronavirus NL63 in young children with bronchiolitis. 1564 61
For analysis of clinical features and outcome of hospitalized infants with respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract infection, was carried out. Cross-sectional study with 89 infants, hospitalized in two public hospitals during the 1997 and 1998 RSV seasons, in Rio de Janeiro city. Nasopharyngeal secretions were obtained and specimens processed for viral antigens detection by indirect immunofluorescence assay with the use of anti RSV, anti-
influenza
A and B and anti parainfluenza type 3 monoclonal antibodies. Patients were allocated into three diagnostic groups:
bronchiolitis
or wheeze bronchitis (n = 44); Pneumonia (n = 26) and
bronchiolitis
or wheeze bronchitis and pneumonia (n = 19). Positivity for RSV was found in 42 (47.1%) patients. More days of hospitalization were seen in 1997 in comparison with the follow year (p >0.05). No clinical differences were found between RSV positive and negative children. The sensitivity and specificity for wheezing concerning the isolation of RSV were, respectively, 85% and 65%. RSV was the major cause of LRTI in hospitalized infants.
...
PMID:[Respiratory syncytial virus -- associated lower respiratory tract infections in hospitalized infants]. 1571 87
During the winter seasons of 2003 and 2004, a total of 282 nasopharyngeal aspirates (NPAs) were obtained from infants and young children admitted to the Buraidah Maternity and Pediatric Hospital, Al-Qassim, Saudi Arabia, and clinically diagnosed as suffering from acute lower respiratory tract infections. NPAs were screened for the presence of respiratory viruses and further confirmed for the presence of
influenza
, parainfluenza, and adenovirus using direct fluorescein-labeled monoclonal antibody assay. Of all the 282 specimens, 44 (15.6 per cent) were found positive for
influenza
, parainfluenza, and adenovirus.
Influenza
A and B were identified in 22 (7.8 per cent), 4 (1.4 per cent), respectively, parainfluenza 1, 2, and 3 in 9 (3.2 per cent), 4 (1.4 per cent), and 1 (0.4 per cent), respectively, and adenovirus in 4 (1.4 per cent).
Influenza
and parainfluenza viruses were noted more in patients below the age of 1 year; 11.3 per cent and 6.2 per cent, respectively.
Bronchiolitis
, coughing, and tachpnea were significantly more frequent in infants with
influenza
infection: 13.1 per cent, 55 per cent, and 50 per cent, respectively. The availability of rapid viral diagnostic assay is an important tool for physicians to make more accurate treatment decisions and therefore reduces unnecessary antibiotic usage and hospital stay for patients.
...
PMID:Rapid detection and clinical features of influenza and parainfluenza in infants and young children hospitalized with acute lower respiratory illnesses. 1585 7
Community-acquired viral respiratory tract infections (RTI) in lung transplant recipients may have a high rate of progression to pneumonia and can be a trigger for immunologically mediated detrimental effects on lung function. A cohort of 100 patients was enrolled from 2001 to 2003 in which 50 patients had clinically diagnosed viral RTI and 50 were asymptomatic. All patients had nasopharyngeal and throat swabs taken for respiratory virus antigen detection, culture and RT-PCR. All patients had pulmonary function tests at regular intervals for 12 months. Rates of rejection, decline in forced expiratory volume (L) in 1 s (FEV-1) and bacterial and fungal superinfection were compared at the 3-month primary endpoint. In the 50 patients with RTI, a microbial etiology was identified in 33 of 50 (66%) and included rhinovirus (9), coronavirus (8), RSV (6),
influenza
A (5), parainfluenza (4) and human metapneumovirus (1). During the 3-month primary endpoint, 8 of 50 (16%) RTI patients had acute rejection versus 0 of 50 non-RTI patients (p=0.006). The number of patients experiencing a 20% or more decline in FEV-1 by 3 months was 9 of 50 (18%) RTI versus 0 of 50 non-RTI (0%) (p=0.003). In six of these nine patients, the decline in FEV-1 was sustained over a 1-year period consistent with
bronchiolitis
obliterans syndrome (BOS). Community-acquired respiratory viruses may be associated with the development of acute rejection and BOS.
...
PMID:Clinical impact of community-acquired respiratory viruses on bronchiolitis obliterans after lung transplant. 1599 56
Beginning in the 1950s respiratory viruses have been gradually discovered by isolation in cell cultures The last were the coronaviruses in the 1960s. No new respiratory viruses were discovered until 2001 when human metapneumovirus was found in respiratory specimens from children with
bronchiolitis
. A year later, in November 2002, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) suddenly appeared as atypical pneumonia. A novel virus belonging to the Coronaviridae family was found to be a cause of this infection. In 2004, a second coronavirus was discovered (CoV-NL63) and in 2005 a third new coronavirus was described (CoV-HKU1). In addition, several subtypes of the
influenza
A virus, previously known to infect only poultry and wild birds, were recently found to have been directly transmitted to humans. Respiratory infection has been a considerable problem for humans for centuries. Now, in the 21st century, with new associated viruses continuously emerging, it remains an important field for work.
...
PMID:[SARS, avian influenza, and human metapneumovirus infection]. 1615 44
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