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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (
chest pain
)
17,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-two episodes of fever,
chest pain
, increased leukocytosis, and pulmonary infiltrate ("acute chest syndrome") were studied in 28 adults with sickle cell anemia. Possible bacterial pathogens were identified in sputum cultures from less than half of the episodes; no pneumococci were found, and Staphylocococcus aureus was the only bacterium associated with a longer illness than that seen when only normal flora were recovered. Much disease diagnosed as "pneumonia" in adults with sickle cell anemia is probably pulmonary infarction. Many of these patients will recover with no more than modest supportive care; if antibiotics are used they should be directed against S aureus (and possibly Hemophilus species). Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine has great potential for preventing life-threatening infection in children with sickle cell anemia, but may not change the incidence or severity of the
acute chest syndrome
in adults.
...
PMID:"Acute chest syndrome" in adults with sickle cell anemia. Microbiology, treatment, and prevention. 3 55
The symptoms of thromboembolism in sickle cell anemia patients with acute chest syndromes are difficult to differentiate from the similar symptoms of painful thoracic crises and infectious pulmonary episodes. Furthermore, the chronic pulmonary abnormalities in sickle cell disease frequently contribute to the confusing results of noninvasive diagnostic procedures usually employed in evaluating pulmonary thromboembolism. In this study the chronic pulmonary status of asymptomatic sickle cell patients was defined, and this information was used in the evaluation of patients with acute chest syndromes suggestive of pulmonary thromembolism. Sixteen asymptomatic sickle cell patients were prospectively studied by chest roentgenography, spirometry, arterial gas analyses, and radioisotopic lung scans. There was an appreciable degree of preexisting chronic restrictive lung disease with mild to moderate arterial hypoxemia and abnormal lung scans in more than half of the patients. These prospective baseline data were incorporated into the diagnostic evaluation of four of these patients who later developed an
acute chest syndrome
suggestive of pulmonary thromboembolism. Determination of the cause of the
chest pain
was greatly faciliated by the existence of the baseline pulmonary data. In another patient persistence of abnormal studies following a presumed thromboembolic episode aided diagnostic evaluation when another episode of
chest pain
occurred. The findings indicate that comprehensive pulmonary studies in sickle cell patients while in an asymptomatic state will provide baseline data which aid the evaluation of possible pulmonary thromboembolism in acute chest syndromes without resorting to high-risk invasive studies.
...
PMID:The diagnosis of pulmonary thromboembolism in sickle cell disease. 54 37
A link between cigarette smoking and "acute chest syndrome" in sickle cell anemia is suggested.
Acute chest syndrome
in the patient with sickle cell anemia is characterized by fever, leukocytosis, cough,
chest pain
, and pulmonary infiltrates in the chest radiograph. This article describes the results of a study of 69 adolescent and young adult sickle cell anemia patients. Twenty-nine of these patients were smokers, three were former smokers, and 37 were nonsmokers. Patients completed respiratory questionnaires that focused on smoking habits and included a history of chest syndrome. Information obtained was confirmed by review of clinical records. The chi-square test demonstrated a strong relationship between cigarette smoking and chest syndrome in sickle cell anemia. All 29 smokers had a history of chest syndrome, but only 24 of 37 nonsmokers had such a history. Although the exact mechanism of the relationship between smoking and the development of
acute chest syndrome
remains speculative, cigarette smoking joins infection, hypoxia, acidosis, infarction, dehydration, and analgesics as a causative factor in adolescent and adult patients with sickle cell anemia. Behavioral modification of the smoking habit in patients with sickle cell anemia may decrease the frequency of
acute chest syndrome
and sequelae of sickle cell lung disease.
...
PMID:Smoking is a factor in causing acute chest syndrome in sickle cell anemia. 157 2
In the absence of evidence for pneumonia or pulmonary embolus, primary pulmonary infarction has been assumed to be the cause of the syndrome of
chest pain
, fever, and pulmonary infiltrate on chest X-ray that commonly complicates sickle cell anaemia. To find out whether the syndrome might be due to rib infarction, 99mTc-diphosphonate bone scans were done. In the eleven episodes thus investigated (10 patients) the scans showed segmental areas of increased radionuclide uptake in ribs, indicative of bone infarction. A possible sequence of events is that the rib infarcts are primary and cause bone pain, followed by soft tissue reaction, pleuritis, and splinting. The resultant hypoventilation leads to atelectasis and subsequent development of the radiographic changes of the
acute chest syndrome
. Prevention of hypoventilation and treatment of bone pain are important therapeutic goals.
...
PMID:Rib infarcts and acute chest syndrome in sickle cell diseases. 167 22
This article describes a 28-yr-old black man with sickle cell anemia who presented with severe
chest pain
secondary to acute infarction of the body of the sternum, hypoventilation, and hypoxemia with no evidence of
acute chest syndrome
. A bone scan performed 5 days after admission revealed increased uptake in the sternum, suggesting sternal infarction. Repeat bone scan performed 2 mo later demonstrated normal concentration in the sternum.
...
PMID:Severe hypoxemia secondary to acute sternal infarction in sickle cell anemia. 186 89
Vaso-occlusive crisis is the most common cause of morbidity in patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA). Those patients are frequently admitted with chest signs and symptoms suggesting an infective process. The term
acute chest syndrome
(
ACS
) is used to describe those chest episodes in SCA patients, and it is postulated that a primary bone vaso-occlusive crisis may be the cause of the
acute chest syndrome
in SCA patients. In this study we report 52 episodes of
ACS
in a group of 22 children with SCA.
Chest pain
, fever, and leukocytosis were a constant clinical finding. The hematological, radiological, and bacteriological studies are reported. There is a constant and significant fall in hemoglobin levels from 88 +/- 10 g/L (8.8 +/- 1.0 g/dl) to 68 +/- 15 g/L (6.8 +/- 5 g/dl). Unilateral or bilateral pulmonary basal infiltrations were found in 50 episodes. Pleural effusion was noticed in 60 episodes, and it was bilateral in three. No significant bacteriological findings were present.
...
PMID:Acute chest syndrome in children with sickle cell anemia. 239 72
Sickle cell chronic lung disease (SCLD) is a prime contributor to mortality in young adult patients with sickle cell disease, especially those with sickle cell anemia (SS). Both perfusion and diffusion defects have been demonstrated, with generalized pulmonary fibrosis and disabling restrictive lung failure. We report 28 cases (25 SS, 1 S beta(0) thalassemia, 1 S beta(+) thalassemia and 1 SO-Arab) which began during the second decade of life and which ended in death by the fourth decade, after an ordered progression to pulmonary failure and cor pulmonale. Myocardial hypoxia with multifocal fibrosis and segmental infarction occurred in more than one-third of the cases and sudden death was a frequent final event. We define 4 stages of SCLD, based on pulmonary function tests, chest roentgenograms, blood gases, and noninvasive cardiac studies; each stage is 2 or 3 years in length, until death ensues in Stage 4. Case-control analysis showed that the significant risk factors associated with SCLD are 1) the total number of
acute chest syndrome
events in an individual before the onset of SCLD, (p = 0.0001), 2) sickle cell crisis marked by
chest pain
(p = 0.03) and 3) aseptic necrosis (p = 0.005). Temporal clustering of
acute chest syndrome
episodes frequently heralds the onset of SCLD. The pulmonary arterial bed, which has low oxygen tension and low pressure in a slow-flow system, is ideally suited to facilitate the polymerization of sickle hemoglobin, causing endothelial damage and culminating in an obstructive arteriolar vasculopathy. Identification of the significant risk factors predictive of SCLD can lead to early diagnosis of the disease; this is the only hope for effective intervention therapy.
...
PMID:Sickle cell chronic lung disease: prior morbidity and the risk of pulmonary failure. 333 82
The etiology of most cases of
acute chest syndrome
(
ACS
) in sickle cell disease (SCD) is unknown. Although pulmonary fat embolism (PFE) is frequently found on autopsy, it is rarely considered in the differential diagnosis in pediatric patients. We conducted a study to determine if we could identify PFE in SCD patients with
ACS
, define the clinical and laboratory course of PFE, and determine if bronchoalveolar lavage is safe and useful in diagnosis of PFE. Twenty-seven SCD patients with
ACS
were evaluated and compared with 43 control patients. Serial tests (complete blood count, platelet count, nucleated red blood cells [NRBCs], chest x-ray, and oxygen saturations) were compared with steady-state results. Diagnosis of PFE was made by quantitative evaluation of pulmonary macrophages for intracellular fat. No serious complications from bronchoscopy were observed. In the SCD patients with
ACS
, 12 were PFE+ and 15 were PFE-. The clinical course of the two groups was quite different. All PFE+ patients experienced bone pain and 11 of 12 had
chest pain
. In contrast, only 6 of 15 of PFE- patients had bone or
chest pain
. Neurologic symptoms developed in 6 of 12 of the PFE+ group and in none of the PFE- group. Mean hospital days for PFE+ was 13 compared with 7 for PFE-. Laboratory studies in PFE+ showed a significant decrease in hemoglobin (-2 g, P < .05), platelet count (-293,000, P < .001), and an increase in NRBCs/100 white blood cells (+8.3, P < .001) compared with PFE-. These results indicate that when PFE is associated with
ACS
, it is characterized by a distinct clinical course, and that bronchial lavage is a safe and useful test in diagnosing PFE in patients with
ACS
.
...
PMID:Pulmonary fat embolism: a distinct cause of severe acute chest syndrome in sickle cell anemia. 819 47
Patients with sickle cell disease often develop
acute chest syndrome
(
ACS
). Signs of
ACS
include
chest pain
, fever, prostration, and pulmonary opacities. Pneumonia and infarction have been implicated in the pathogenesis of this syndrome. Infarction as a result of microvascular occlusion and pneumonia are not easily differentiated with chest radiography or ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy. The authors evaluated the ability of thin section (3-mm) chest computed tomography (CT) to help diagnose microvascular occlusion in
ACS
and thus help differentiate two of its most likely causes. CT scans of the chest of 10 patients with moderate to severe
ACS
were retrospectively reviewed by two observers, who listed the number of bronchopulmonary segments showing consolidation; areas of ground-glass attenuation due to early hemorrhagic edema; and paucity or absence of small vessels, arterioles, and venules. In all patients, the degree of hypoxia was out of proportion to the extent of consolidation evident at chest radiography. The CT scans showed microvascular occlusion and areas of ground-glass attenuation in nine patients. Infection was ruled out in eight patients. High-resolution CT may play an important role in the initial evaluation and timely selection of an appropriate treatment regimen aimed at improving tissue perfusion, thus forestalling irreversible organ damage and chronic pulmonary arterial hypertension in patients with sickle cell disease.
...
PMID:Acute chest syndrome in sickle cell disease: CT evidence of microvascular occlusion. 845 35
The
acute chest syndrome
(
ACS
), characterized by fever,
chest pain
, leukocytosis and a new infiltrate on chest roentgenogram, is a common complication of sickle hemoglobinopathies. The major differential diagnoses of
ACS
are pneumonia and pulmonary vaso-occlusive disease, which may occur simultaneously. Bacterial pulmonary infections are documented infrequently in
ACS
with the exception being in the pediatric population under 5 years of age. Because there are no clinical or laboratory parameters that clearly allow for distinction between pneumonia and vaso-occlusive disease, empiric use of antibiotics directed against S. pneumoniae and other pathogens commonly seen in community-acquired pneumonias remain a mainstay of therapy.
...
PMID:The acute chest syndrome of sickle cell disease. 848 94
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