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

Twenty-seven main bronchial resections (19 left, 8 right) were performed without pulmonary resection between 1975 and 1991. The patients were 17 men and 9 women with an average age of 35 years (range, 20 to 65 years). Tumors comprised 55% of the lesions, including 9 carcinoid tumors (33%), 2 mucoepidermoid tumors, 2 fibrous histiocytomas, 1 hemangiopericytoma, and 1 large cell carcinoma. Scarring and stenosis secondary to multiple causes occurred in 10 patients (37%). Two patients had miscellaneous lesions. Presenting symptoms included dyspnea (52%), wheezing or stridor (44%), cough (41%), hemoptysis (37%), and pneumonia (18%). Preoperative chest roentgenogram was abnormal in 60% of patients, whereas tomograms delineated the lesion in 94%. All patients had bronchoscopy for lesion evaluation. Anesthesia was accomplished through a long single-lumen endotracheal tube in 19 cases and a double-lumen tube in 8 cases. Mobilization and exposure techniques to create a tension-free anastomosis were critical for left main bronchial resections and included pretracheal mobilization (100%), neck flexion (100%), tracheal and main bronchial retraction (85%), aortic and pulmonary artery retraction (44%), and intrapericardial hilar release (33%). All resections were for cure; there was no operative mortality. Morbidity in 4 patients (15%) included an anastomotic stenosis (successfully reresected), prolonged air leak and pneumonia, transient recurrent nerve palsy, and atelectasis. Median 5-year follow-up revealed 92% of patients alive, with only one of two late deaths being disease-related. Main bronchial resection is an ideal technique for selected benign and malignant lesions, allowing complete pulmonary parenchymal preservation.
...
PMID:Main bronchial sleeve resection with pulmonary conservation. 175 80

The shikonin mixture was used for 19 cases of later-stage lung cancer who were not the candidates for operation, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. The clinical observation showed that shikonin mixture could inhibit the growth of lung cancer and improve the immune function of the body. The tumors were reduced over 25% in diameter. The effective rate was 63.3%, remission rate 36.9%, survival rate of one year 47.3%. The intermedium survival period was about 10 months, including adenocarcinoma 10 months, squamous carcinoma 12 months. After treatment the life quality of patients were greatly improved. The patients got better appetite and their body weights were increased. They could manage themselves in daily life. The Karnofsky scores were enhanced by 20. The authors also observed that shikonin mixture could relieve such symptoms as cough, bloody sputum and chest pain caused by lung cancer. The levels of cells and interleukin-2 were increased (P less than 0.001). It had no harmful effects on peripheral blood picture, heart, kidney and liver. Shikonin mixture is safe and effective for later-stage cancer.
...
PMID:[Clinical trial on the effects of shikonin mixture on later stage lung cancer]. 180 5

A 8-year-old boy was admitted to our hospital with complaint of cough and abnormal shadow on chest X-ray. Bronchoscopy and biopsy revealed a bronchial mucoepidermoid carcinoma, which obstructed right main bronchus. Right upper sleeve lobectomy was performed. The histological examination revealed a low grade malignant mucoepidermoid carcinoma. There were no metastases in the mediastinal lymph nodes. He has been healthy with no evidence of recurrence during 4 years after operation.
...
PMID:[A case of bronchial mucoepidermoid carcinoma in a 8-year-old child treated with right upper sleeve lobectomy]. 189 80

Occult (silent) gastroesophageal reflux disease (GER, GERD) is believed to be an important etiologic factor in the development of many inflammatory and neoplastic disorders of the upper aerodigestive tract. In order ot test this hypothesis, a human study and an animal study were performed. The human study consisted primarily of applying a new diagnostic technique (double-probe pH monitoring) to a population of otolaryngology patients with GERD to determine the incidence of overt and occult GERD. The animal study consisted of experiments to evaluate the potential damaging effects of intermittent GER on the larynx. Two hundred twenty-five consecutive patients with otolaryngologic disorders having suspected GERD evaluated from 1985 through 1988 are reported. Ambulatory 24-hour intraesophageal pH monitoring was performed in 197; of those, 81% underwent double-probe pH monitoring, with the second pH probe being placed in the hypopharynx at the laryngeal inlet. Seventy percent of the patients also underwent barium esophagography with videofluoroscopy. The patient population was divided into seven diagnostic subgroups: carcinoma of the larynx (n = 31), laryngeal and tracheal stenosis (n = 33), reflux laryngitis (n = 61), globus pharyngeus (n = 27), dysphagia (n = 25), chronic cough (n = 30), and a group with miscellaneous disorders (n = 18). The most common symptoms were hoarseness (71%), cough (51%), globus (47%), and throat clearing (42%). Only 43% of the patients had gastrointestinal symptoms (heartburn or acid regurgitation). Thus, by traditional symptomatology, GER was occult or silent in the majority of the study population. Twenty-eight patients (12%) refused or could not tolerate pH monitoring. Of the patients undergoing diagnostic pH monitoring, 62% had abnormal esophageal pH studies, and 30% demonstrated reflux into the pharynx. The results of diagnostic pH monitoring for each of the subgroups were as follows (percentage with abnormal studies): carcinoma (71%), stenosis (78%), reflux laryngitis (60%), globus (58%), dysphagia (45%), chronic cough (52%), and miscellaneous (13%). The highest yield of abnormal pharyngeal reflux was in the carcinoma group and the stenosis group (58% and 56%, respectively). By comparison, the diagnostic barium esophagogram with videofluoroscopy was frequently negative. The results were as follows: esophagitis (18%), reflux (9%), esophageal dysmotility (12%), and stricture (3%). All of the study patients were treated with antireflux therapy. Follow-up was available on 68% of the patients and the mean follow-up period was 11.6 +/- 12.7 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The otolaryngologic manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD): a clinical investigation of 225 patients using ambulatory 24-hour pH monitoring and an experimental investigation of the role of acid and pepsin in the development of laryngeal injury. 189 64

Ultrasonography revealed a renal tumour (4 x 4 cm) in a 67-year-old man with right-sided lumbar pain and macrohematuria. In addition he had marked nocturnal dyspnoea with dry cough. He had lost about 10 kg in weight. On admission he had atrial fibrillation with an irregular ventricular rate (140 beats/min) and engorgement of the neck veins. Two-dimensional echocardiography, undertaken because of signs of increasing heart failure and a fall of systolic blood pressure to below 100 mm Hg, demonstrated a space-occupying lesion in the right ventricle, 4 x 2 x 1 cm, indicating an intracardiac thrombus or solid tumour. The heart failure continued to worsen, despite treatment with cardiac glycosides, verapamil and diuretics. Hence an exploratory thoracotomy was performed. This revealed an intracardiac tumour which had markedly displaced the right ventricular inflow tract and infiltrated the entire myocardium, but not the tricuspid valve. As much of the tumour as possible was resected, but the patient died postoperatively of heart failure. The intracardiac tumour proved to be a metastasis from the papillary carcinoma of the kidney. This had infiltrated the renal capsule and pelvis and invaded the branches of the right renal vein.
...
PMID:[Cardiac metastasis as cause of therapy-resistant heart failure]. 193 45

We would like to report on a case of thymic carcinoma that could be completely resected supported by extracorporeal circulation. A 53-year-old female complaining of severe coughing and hoarseness was admitted to our hospital. Her chest X-ray film revealed an abnormal shadow in the upper mediastinum and an elevation of the left diaphragm. Chest CT and MRI showed an anterior mediastinal mass that invaded the main pulmonary artery. The preoperative histological diagnosis of thymoma was made by mediastinoscopic specimen. After 50 Gy irradiation, surgery was performed. During the operation, after resection of the left brachiocephalic vein and a part of the upper lobe of the left lung, the tumor was detached from the wall of the aorta and resected with the invaded part of the pulmonary artery supported by cardiopulmonary bypass. Reconstruction of the pulmonary wall defect was accomplished with Xenomedica. The final pathological diagnosis was thymic adenosquamous carcinoma. The postoperative course has been uneventful 24 months after surgery. Extracorporeal circulation is a useful technique in operations involving malignant diseases when complete resection is able to be accomplished.
...
PMID:[Complete resection of thymic carcinoma supported by cardiopulmonary bypass]. 194 May 23

The exact incidence of gastroesophageal reflux (GER) is unknown, although it is estimated that at least 25% of patients with GER have head and neck symptoms alone. These symptoms may consist of one or more of the following: excess salivation, hoarseness, "post-nasal drip," voice change, persistent coughing, food sticking in the throat, globus hystericus, otalgia, throat clearing, neck pain, sore throats, the sensation of a lump in the throat, choking spells, and bronchospasm. Carcinoma of the larynx and upper aerodigestive tract may be a consequence of chronic reflux. GER, especially when the classic symptoms of reflux are absent, is frequently overlooked as a cause of these problems. This article reviews the symptoms and pathophysiology of these conditions. The diagnostic and therapeutic modalities available to us in managing these patients are also discussed.
...
PMID:Otolaryngologic manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux. 205 16

The 26-year-old man experienced symptoms of chronic airway obstruction with shortness of breath, cough and wheezing, which primarily led to a diagnosis of asthma bronchiale. Absence of adequate response to antiasthmatic treatment and development of hemoptysis and weight loss led to the tentative diagnosis of upper airway obstruction by tumor. Bronchoscopy revealed adenoid cystic carcinoma of the distal trachea.
...
PMID:[Cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis]. 215 42

An autopsy case of an 18-year-old boy with adenocarcinoma of the lung is reported. He experienced dyspnea and hemosputum in July 1988. Chest radiographs showed a diffuse bilateral streaky shadow, bilateral pleural effusion and cardiac enlargement. The diagnosis of adenocarcinoma was made by transbronchial biopsy at another hospital. He visited the National Cancer Center Hospital on October 7, 1988. The diagnosis of lung cancer was strongly suggested by positive immunohistochemical staining for pulmonary surfactant apoprotein in biopsy specimens from supraclavicular lymph nodes. Intensive systemic survey demonstrated no other primary site than the lung. The patient was treated with cisplatin, adriamycin and etoposide and his subjective symptoms such as cough and dyspnea significantly improved over the next three months. Tumor shadows in the lung increased steadily, however after February, 1989. A significant lymphangitic spread of the carcinoma and marked obsteoblastic bone metastases were revealed at autopsy.
...
PMID:Primary lung cancer in an 18-year-old boy: case report. 219 88

A 67-year-old female was admitted to our hospital, because of high fever and dry cough. She had undergone semiradical hysterectomy and radiation therapy for carcinoma of the uterine cervix one year previously. Her chest roentgenograms on admission showed lobar consolidation of the left upper lobe. Antibiotics were administered but her general condition and pulmonary consolidation did not improve. As Legionellosis was highly suspected, we performed bronchoscopic examinations. Bronchial mucosa was almost normal with no secretion, and Legionella was isolated from the specimen obtained bronchoscopically. Six days later, L. pneumophila serogroup 2 was isolated and identified from an intratracheal aspiration, and serological diagnosis was made by indirect immunofluorescence antibody. We could also detect the bacteria in the BALF by immunofluorescence microscopy and in the tissue of the TBLB specimen with the ABC method.
...
PMID:[Second serogroup of Legionella pneumophila isolated from a patient with fulminant pneumonia]. 221 93


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>