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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inhalation of dusts is an important cause of interstitial lung disease in the tropical countries such as India. While dusts of organic origin, such as the cotton dust causing byssinosis, generally cause bronchial or bronchiolar involvement and
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
, inorganic metallic dusts cause progressive pulmonary fibrosis. Silicosis, coal workers' pneumoconiosis, and asbestosis are the three most commonly recognized forms of pneumoconiotic pulmonary fibrosis. Pulmonary tuberculosis is an important complication seen in up to 50% of patients of silicosis in some reports from India. The presentation is generally chronic, although acute and accelerated forms of silicosis are known when the exposures are heavy. Breathlessness, dry
cough
, and general constitutional symptoms are commonly seen. Patients with silicotuberculosis or other forms of infection may also have significant expectoration, hemoptysis, fever, and rapid progression. Respiratory failure and chronic cor pulmonale occur in the later stages. The diagnosis is easily established if the occupational history is available. Dense nodular opacities on chest roentgenograms, which may be large in patients with massive pulmonary fibrosis, are characteristic. Emphysematous changes generally appear in advanced stages or in patients who smoke. Bronchoalveolar lavage and/or lung biopsy may occasionally be required to establish or exclude other causes of interstitial lung disease. Treatment is largely palliative, although a variety of drugs including corticosteroids and procedures such as whole lung lavage have been tried. None of these methods has yet been found successful in the treatment. Preventive safety steps, including removal of the patient from the site of exposure, are the only effective strategies to control disease progression.
...
PMID:Dust-induced interstitial lung disease in the tropics. 1158 75
Exposure to mushroom spores may cause many respiratory allergic diseases, however, there has been no serial study in a mushroom factory to address this problem. The aim of this study was to investigate the serial changes in respiratory allergy and the incidence of
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
(HP) in mushroom workers. A 3-year follow-up study, beginning in June 1996, was conducted in a newly operating mushroom factory in which one kind of mushroom is produced: Hypsizigus marmoreus (Bunashimeji). Allergic symptoms, chest roentgenogram, serum precipitins to the spores and soluble adhesion molecules in sera were evaluated once a year in 60 workers and 20 controls. Three out of the 60 subjects were diagnosed as having HP caused by inhalation ofthe mushroom spore and they were therefore excluded from this study, and the 57 non-HP subjects were evaluated. In this study 24 workers quit because of intolerable
cough
, runny nose, wheezing, sputum, fever elevation and/or shortness of breath at their place of work. During each year of this study as many as 70-80% of employees suffered some ofthe above symptoms,
cough
being the most frequent, and positive rate of serum precipitins to the spore revealed 30% in 1996, 93% in 1997 and 94% in 1998. From the June 1996 examination until the following May, serum soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 levels of the 15 workers who quit during that period were significantly higher than those in the 42 workers still employed in 1997 (P < 0.05). Workers in Bunashimeji mushroom factories might be at critical risk of developing respiratory allergy. In our 3-year study over 90% workers were sensitized to the spore, 40% quit because of the symptoms and 5% developed HP. It was suggested that workers should be counselled about the risk of mushroom allergy and precautionary measures should be taken to prevent its occurrence.
...
PMID:Three-year follow-up study of allergy in workers in a mushroom factory. 1177 90
Classical radiation pneumonitis has been described after single dose whole lung irradiation in experimental animals where above a threshold dose of irradiation, there is a sigmoid dose response curve with increasing morbidity and mortality. After clinical fractionated irradiation, however, acute radiation pneumonitis consisting of
cough
shortness of breath and patchy radiological changes, occurs in <10% of patients, has dyspnoea out of proportion to the volume of lung irradiated and usually resolves completely without long-term effects. There is increasing evidence that this represents a bilateral lymphocytic alveolitis or
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
and has been termed sporadic pneumonitis. Late radiation toxicity results in pulmonary fibrosis. This is a consequence of repair, which is initiated by tissue injury within the radiation portal. It follows release of chemotactic factors for fibroblasts including transforming growth factor-beta, fibronectin and platelet derived growth factor. Radiation fibrosis is the clinically more significant syndrome for patients. It may result in progressive dyspnoea and mortality in patients. The most predictable change in laboratory lung function tests is a decrease in transfer factor due to damage at the capillary-alveolar level. It also results in decreased lung compliance, which will affect the total lung capacity and the forced vital capacity. The forced expiratory volume in 1 s is less affected, although this seems to depend on the volume of lung irradiated. There is also a decrease in perfusion in the irradiated lung. Radiation fibrosis seems to depend, amongst other factors, on the volume of lung, which is irradiated above a threshold of 20-30 Gy. The morbidity of radiation fibrosis may therefore be minimized by the use of dose volume histogram to minimize the volume of normal lung irradiated in patients at high risk, e.g., patients with who present with poor lung function. The importance of the baseline perfusion in the irradiated areas continues to be studied.
...
PMID:Lung toxicity following chest irradiation in patients with lung cancer. 1180 81
In January 2001, three machinists at an automobile brake manufacturing facility in Ohio (plant A) were hospitalized with respiratory illness characterized by dyspnea,
cough
, fatigue, weight loss, hypoxia, and pulmonary infiltrates.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
(HP) was diagnosed in all three workers. In March 2001, additional employees began seeking medical attention for respiratory and systemic symptoms. In May 2001, union and management representatives requested assistance from CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in determining the cause of the illnesses and preventing further illness in employees. This report describes two case reports and the preliminary results of the ongoing investigation, which found that exposure to aerosolized nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) might be contributing to the observed respiratory illnesses in this manufacturing facility. Clinicians and public health professionals should be alert to the variable presentation of occupational respiratory disease that might occur in workers in the machining industry.
...
PMID:Respiratory illness in workers exposed to metalworking fluid contaminated with nontuberculous mycobacteria--Ohio, 2001. 1200 86
Metal working fluids (MWFs) have been widely known to cause asthma and neoplasia of the larynx, pancreas, rectum, skin and urinary bladder (Textbook of Clinical Occupational and Environmental Medicine (1994) 814; Am. J. Ind. Med. 32 (1997) 240; Am. J. Ind. Med. 33 (1997) 282; Am. J. Ind. Med. 22 (1994) 185). Other non-neoplastic respiratory effects in industrial workers attributed to MWFs include increased rates of
cough
, phlegm production, wheeze, chronic bronchitis and chest tightness (Eur. J. Resir. Dis. 63(118) (1982), 79; J. Occup. Med. 24 (1982) 473; Am. J. Ind. Med. 32 (1997) 450). The epidemic and endemic nature of immune mediated lung morbidity commonly known as
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
in workers from several different industries using MWFs has been well documented (J. Allergy clin. Immunol. 91 (1993) 311; Chest 108 (1995) 636; MMWR45 (1996) 606; Am. J. Ind. Med. 32 (1997) 423). We studied morphological/functional and antioxidant outcomes in lungs after inhalation exposure of vitamin E deficient mice to MWF (27 mg m(-3) 17 weeks, 5 days a week, 6 h a day). Mice were given vitamin E deficient (<10 IU kg(-1) vitamin E) or basal diets (50 IU kg(-1) vitamin E) for 35 weeks. Inhalation exposure to MWF started after 18 weeks on diet. Microscopic observation of lungs from mice given vitamin E deficient or sufficient diets revealed no inflammation or morphological alteration after exposure to MWF. Mice given vitamin E deficient diet exhibited a significant decrease (P<0.05) in breathing rate, peak inspiratory/expiratory flow, minute ventilation, and tidal volume compared with sufficient controls. However, no differences were found after exposure to MWF in pulmonary function, with the exception of tidal volume which also significantly decreased (P<0.05). Exposure to MWF reduced vitamin E, protein thiol and ascorbate level in lungs. Exposure to MWF in combination with a vitamin E deficient diet resulted in significantly enhanced accumulation of peroxidative products compared with vitamin E deficient controls. This is the first report that describes the increase of oxidative stress in the lungs after MWF exposure.
...
PMID:Metal working fluids: sub-chronic effects on pulmonary functions in B6C3F1 mice given vitamin E deficient and sufficient diets. 1213 30
A 36-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of fever, dry
cough
, dyspnea on exertion and body weight loss in August 2000. Chest radiography and CT scanning showed diffuse ground glass opacity and small centrilobular nodules in the middle and lower lung fields of both lungs. Serum antibody against Trichosporon cutaneum was positive; and summer-type
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
was therefore initially diagnosed. Treatment with methylprednisolone and prednisolone decreased the symptoms, but the dyspnea reappeared when the patient was at home. Inspection of her house revealed the presence of fungi under the floor. After these were removed, her symptoms disappeared completely. The lymphocytic stimulation test of the peripheral blood was positive for the fungi, and it was therefore suggested that they were the cause of her
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
. The fungi were identified as Gyrodontium versicolor. This is the first report of
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
caused by Gyrodontium versicolor.
...
PMID:[A case of hypersensitivity pneumonitis caused by Gyrodontium versicolor]. 1216 60
A 58-year-old man, a dairy farmer, was admitted to Engaru Kosei Hospital because of
cough
, fever and dyspnea following repeated exposure to moldy silage in a silo. Chest radiography showed ground-glass opacity and tiny nodules in both lung fields. Arterial blood gas analysis showed severe hypoxia (PaO2, 30.8 torr). The patient was referred to Asahikawa Medical College Hospital for a diagnostic evaluation. At the time of admission, his symptoms were slightly resolved and the lung density on the chest radiograph was decreased. Pulmonary function tests revealed restrictive ventilatory impairment with a reduction in diffusing capacity. Bronchoscopic examination revealed mild lymphocytosis in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF). Neither bacteria nor fungi were cultured from the BALF. Transbronchial lung biopsy specimens showed alveolitis with lymphocyte infiltration. The symptoms and signs disappeared spontaneously without any specific treatment, such as corticosteroids or antibiotics. A provocation test consisting of silage handling elicited recurrence of his symptoms, a decrease in diffusing capacity, and hypoxia. A definitive diagnosis of
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
(HP) was made from these findings. Samplings from the silage revealed a gross growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A serum-precipitating antibody gave a positive reaction for an extract of S. cerevisiae. These results suggested that repetitive exposure to S. cerevisiae had led to sensitization through the patient's occupational environment, resulting in the development of HP.
...
PMID:[Saccharomyces-induced hypersensitivity pneumonitis in a dairy farmer: a case report]. 1232 33
A 65-yr-old female developed
cough
, fever and dyspnoea following repeated exposure to a home ultrasonic humidifier. High-resolution computed tomography showed ground-glass opacity in both lung fields. Arterial blood gas analysis gave an oxygen tension of 8.38 kPa (63 Torr). Pulmonary function testing revealed restrictive ventilatory impairment with a reduction in the diffusing capacity. The diagnosis of
extrinsic allergic alveolitis
(
EAA
) was confirmed by radiographic findings, pathological evidence of alveolitis and reproductive development by a provocation test to the humidifier water. The yeast Debaryomyces Hansenii was the only microorganism cultured from the water of the humidifier. The double diffusion precipitating test and lymphocyte proliferative response was positive for an extract of D. Hansenii, providing evidence to incriminate this fungus. This is the first described case of
EAA
caused by D. Hansenii.
...
PMID:Extrinsic allergic alveolitis induced by the yeast Debaryomyces hansenii. 1244 92
Respiratory diseases have long been recognized in association with work in farming. Overall, only a small proportion of the population is employed in agriculture, so respiratory disease in farmers is not a major public health issue. However, farmers are known to have high morbidity and mortality from certain respiratory diseases, as shown by routinely collected statistics. Despite this, knowledge of the frequency, nature and risk factors for some respiratory disorders in agricultural workers is incomplete. Multiple exposures are common and some exposures can give rise to more than one specific disease. Moreover, the most common respiratory symptoms reported by farm workers (wheeze, dyspnoea and
cough
) are relatively non-specific and can be associated with several occupational respiratory disorders. This review describes the main occupational respiratory illnesses in farming and summarizes the current literature about epidemiology and prevention. The most important diseases are rhinitis and asthma, which, although common, are not usually fatal. Some non-allergic conditions, e.g. asthma-like syndrome and organic toxic dust syndrome, are not yet fully understood, but appear to be common among farm workers. The most serious respiratory diseases are
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
and respiratory infections, but these are rare. Most importantly, respiratory diseases are preventable by controlling harmful exposures to organic dust, toxic gases and chemicals on farms through improvements in animal rearing techniques, ventilation of animal accommodation, careful drying and storage of animal feed-stuffs, crops and other products, and use of personal protective equipment.
...
PMID:Respiratory illness in agricultural workers. 1248 15
A 56-year-old man was admitted with
cough
, fever, myalgia, and arthralgia. Chest computed tomography demonstrated bilateral diffuse ground-glass opacities predominantly in the upper lungs. Subpleural non-segmental consolidation was observed in the late phase.
Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
was suspected, and an environmental provocation test with the incidental use of a home ultrasonic humidifier was positive. Unlike typical
hypersensitivity pneumonitis
, serum KL-6 levels were normal. Although several microorganisms were isolated from the humidifier water, there was no evidence for immune sensitization. We detected high amounts of endotoxin in the humidifier water, which may have contributed to the lung injury of this patient.
...
PMID:Humidifier lung: possible contribution of endotoxin-induced lung injury. 1252 Dec 11
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