Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 36-year-old man was admitted with cough and sputum. He had cafe-au-lait spots and multiple subcutaneous neurofibromas. Chest X-ray revealed multiple emphysematous bullae in bilateral upper lobes and a tumor in the bulla of the right upper lobe. Needle aspiration biopsy of the tumor showed small cell carcinoma. Although chemotherapy and radiation resulted in decrease in tumor size, it subsequently increased in size and he died 11 months after admission. Including this case there have been 7 reports of Recklinghausen's disease associated with multiple lung cysts and 8 reports with lung cancer in Japan. However, cases with lung cysts and cancer are very rare. The cancer of this case was considered to be associated with emphysematous bulla rather than Recklinghausen's diseases.
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PMID:[A case of Recklinghausen's disease associated with multiple emphysematous bullae and lung cancer]. 255 28

A 67 year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of cough and sputum. He smoke one pack of cigarettes a day for more than twenty years and the chest X-ray film revealed a mass in the left hilum and left sided pleural effusion. The diagnosis of small carcinoma of the lung (limited disease, T4N1MO, stage 3B) was made by trans-bronchial lung biopsy and radiographic studies. Both chemotherapy (nimustine (ACNU), cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and methotrexate) and radiation therapy was started, however, the chemotherapy was discontinued in July 1987 because of severe anemia. The diagnosis of refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB in T) was made by bone marrow aspiration and the patient was treated by transfusion (400-800 ml/week). In December 1987 transition to acute myeloblastic leukemia was confirmed by another bone marrow aspiration biopsy and the patient was given low dose cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C). The response was favorable in the beginning but in about two months pancytopenia became refractory and the patient died in June 1988. Clinically there was no sign of local or distal recurrences of lung cancer, and the complete remission of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) was confirmed by autopsy. Survival in SCLC remains poor, so that the choice of treatment is still the primary concern, however, development of other malignancies which include acute leukemia is another problem which should be taken into account when the treatment is extensive.
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PMID:[Acute myeloblastic leukemia development in a patient with small cell lung cancer in complete remission]. 256 Sep 98

A 47-year-old man was admitted with a cough on January 4, 1986. A chest X-ray film showed a mass shadow in the left lower lung, which was revealed to be a bronchogenic cyst by CT scanning and ultrasonography. Thoracotomy was performed on March 3, 1986 because cytologic tests on the fluid in the cyst suggested malignancy. A cyst, two tumors on the diaphragm and pleural thickening were revealed. Microscopic examination showed a benign bronchogenic cyst and a mixed-type malignant mesothelioma. In spite of chemotherapy (ADR, Cis-DPP, 5-fluorouracil) and immunotherapy (OK-432, PSK), the pleural thickening progressed, as was demonstrated by CT scanning and ultrasonography. Although cardiac tamponade due to invasion by the malignant mesothelioma developed, this was improved by cardiocentesis. The patient died of pneumonia on March 28, 1987. We studied the concentration of mineral fibers in lung and tumor tissues of this case by Energy Dispersive X-ray Analyser because asbestos or non-asbestos inorganic fibers might cause malignant mesothelioma. This case of malignant pleural mesothelioma accompanied by a bronchogenic cyst is very rare.
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PMID:[A case of malignant pleural mesothelioma with infectious bronchogenic cyst]. 258 7

Intraoperative analgesia is the purview of anesthesiologists whereas postoperative pain is traditionally managed by surgeons. This series reports 19 months experience of anesthesiologists using epidural opiate analgesia (EOA) or patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) to treat postoperative pain in 302 patients following surgery for pelvic malignancy. For the 244 (81%) patients who received EOA, a lumbar epidural catheter was placed just prior to surgery, injected with local anesthetic for intraoperative analgesia, and injected with preservative-free morphine at appropriate intervals postoperatively to relieve pain. Fifty-eight patients (19%) used PCA which consisted of small self-administered boluses of intravenous narcotics. All patients were seen daily to ensure adequate analgesia and to treat side effects. Utilizing a 0-10 verbal rating scale (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain imaginable), mean pain with EOA was 0.75 at rest and 2.6 with coughing. Mean pain ratings with PCA were 2.8 at rest and 5.0 during coughing. Side effects with EOA included nausea or vomiting (28%) and pruritus (20%). The only side effect of significance with PCA was nausea or vomiting (21%). All patients improved with treatment of side effects. Acceptance of these techniques is indicated by a steady increase in the number of gynecologic oncology surgical patients utilizing these modalities (50% at the outset to 87% currently).
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PMID:Postoperative pain management in gynecology oncology patients utilizing epidural opiate analgesia and patient-controlled analgesia. 259 69

We reviewed 223 localized fibrous tumors of the pleura and divided them histologically into 141 benign and 82 malignant neoplasms. The criteria used for a judgement of malignancy were high cellularity and mitotic activity (more than four mitotic figures per 10 high-power fields), pleomorphism, hemorrhage, and necrosis. The tumors occurred equally in both sexes, most commonly in the sixth to seventh decades of life. Presenting symptoms included chest pain, dyspnea, and cough; they were observed in three-fourths of patients with a malignant tumor. One in every four of these patients had hypoglycemia, clubbed digits, or pleural effusion. Two-thirds of the tumors were attached to visceral pleura, often by a pedicle. The rest arose from the parietal pleura of the chest wall, diaphragm, or mediastinum. Neoplasms in these atypical sites, together with fissural lesions and tumors "inverted" into peripheral lung, were more often malignant. Most neoplasms measured 5-10 cm and weighed 100-400 g. Microscopically, the "patternless pattern," or hemangiopericytic type, was seen in the majority of cases, and mixed patterns were seen in nearly 40% of tumors. Of the 169 tumors where follow-up was available, all of the benign and 45% of the malignant tumors were cured by simple excision. Patients surgically cured of a malignant neoplasm had pedunculated or well-circumscribed lesions. However, 55% of patients with malignant tumors succumbed to their disease secondary to invasion, recurrence, or metastasis. Resectability is the single most important indicator of clinical outcome. No tumor expressed epithelial differentiation, either immunohistochemically or ultrastructurally; therefore, we favor the term "localized fibrous tumor" of pleura instead of "localized mesothelioma."
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PMID:Localized benign and malignant fibrous tumors of the pleura. A clinicopathologic review of 223 cases. 266 34

Methotrexate is used to treat a growing number of malignancies, severe rheumatoid arthritis, and refractory psoriatic arthritis. Pneumonitis induced by the drug occurs in a small percentage of patients and is usually associated with fever, cough, dyspnea, and restrictive pulmonary disease. Severe reactions may progress to respiratory failure. Early recognition of the toxicity is important, and discontinuation of the drug and therapy with corticosteroids usually lead to dramatic improvement.
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PMID:Methotrexate pneumonitis: a case report and summary of the literature. 267 17

Pulmonary fungal infections complicating hematological malignancies are difficult to diagnose antemortem because clinical findings are actually considered to be not specific. From December 1984 to June 1986 we documented the clinical findings in sixteen patients, 9 with ANLL, 6 with ALL and 1 with CML + BC; all patients were diagnosed as pulmonary fungal infection and treated for this complication. Pulmonary infiltrates occurred after severe aplasia (range 5-90 days) or during bone marrow relapse. We studied pulmonary signs and symptoms (pleuritic pain, cough, hemoptysis, shortness of breath, rales, rub, bronchial murmur) both at the beginning and during the management of this infectious complication and we related them to chest x-ray findings, the duration of granulocytopenia, and fever. Our purpose was to identify clinical characteristics for these episodes and establish roentgenological criteria for prognosis. These findings should improve the possibilities for an early diagnosis and prompt treatment.
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PMID:[Pulmonary mycosis as a complication of acute leukemia in the adult. Diagnostic study]. 274 May 98

This case report presents a 48-year-old woman who had been suffering from cough and fever for 5 years. A large mass in the right lung was pointed out. Even after various examinations, we couldn't resolve the difficult diagnostic problems involved, but it was clear that there were no signs of a malignant tumor. We suspected a large benign tumor or pulmonary sequestration. Right lower lobectomy was performed and histological examinations of the resected tumor revealed lymphoproliferative disorder. Microscopic examinations of the specimen disclosed monotonous lymphoid cells proliferation (small to medium size) without definite lymph follicles or germinal centers. Lymph follicles were clearly demonstrated with the immunoperoxidase method. These findings were interpreted to be consistent with what has been recently called pseudolymphoma of the lung and prompted discussions on the reasonableness of criteria for the diagnosis of various pseudolymphoma and effective immunological examinations for the clarification of the etiology.
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PMID:[A case of pseudolymphoma of the lung with cough and fever]. 274 64

We studied characteristics of past smokers according to the duration of cessation of smoking based on data from a population-based survey. Lifestyle, prevalences of various symptoms and diseases and other factors were compared among current smokers (8507 males and 2012 females), past smokers (4423 males and 684 females) and non-smokers (2431 males and 12,859 females) aged 40 years and over. Compared to current smokers, past smokers consumed more bread, milk, vegetables, fruit and black tea, and less rice, pickles, instant noodles, coffee and alcohol, had lower prevalences of cough, sputum and anorexia, participated more in cancer screening tests, weighed more, included more professional and administrative workers and had more non-smoking spouses. These characteristics resembled those of non-smokers. But past smokers had high prevalences of several cardiovascular and respiratory diseases compared to current smokers. Daily intake of coffee was inversely associated and daily intakes of fruit and milk were positively associated with the duration of abstinence from smoking after adjusting for other factors in both sexes. These results suggest that lifestyle of past smokers may contribute to risk reduction for several diseases.
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PMID:Characteristics of past smokers. 278 28

Data from a case-control study on lung cancer were used to evaluate how changes in cigarette habits, mainly smoking cessation, switch from non-filter to filter brands, from dark to light tobacco, or from handrolled to manufactured cigarettes, and reduction in daily consumption influence lung cancer risk. The results presented concern all males, exclusive cigarette smokers, involved in the study, i.e. 1,057 histologically confirmed lung cancer and 1,503 matched controls. The general decrease in lung cancer risk with the years since cessation was also found in each subgroup of cigarette exposure defined by duration of smoking, daily consumption and type of cigarettes smoked. Among smokers who had given up smoking from less than 10 years earlier, the lung cancer risks were two-fold higher for those who had stopped smoking for coughing or health reasons than for those who had stopped smoking for reasons other than health problems. A decrease in lung cancer risk, although not significant, was found in people who switched from non-filter brands to filter brands and from dark to light tobacco and in smokers who reduced their daily consumption of cigarettes by more than 25% as compared to smokers who had not changed habits.
Br J Cancer 1989 Oct
PMID:Changes in patterns of cigarette smoking and lung cancer risk: results of a case-control study. 280 31


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