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 case of recurrent small-cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix, initially presenting with cardiac tamponade, is reported. After pericardiotomy, the patient was treated with an alternating combination of chemotherapy, which included cisplatin plus etoposide (CE) and cyclophosphamide, adriamycin plus vincristine (CAV). A partial response, with relief of a cough and diminishing metastatic pulmonary lesions, was noted from serial chest roentgenographs after the initial three cycles of chemotherapy. The patient did not receive any further treatment and the recurrent cough and dyspnea were noted two months later. In spite of the same chemotherapeutic regimen and chest radiotherapy, the patient died nine months after the initial diagnosis of metastasis.
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PMID:Cardiac tamponade resulting from recurrent small-cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix temporarily responding to CE/CAV chemotherapy: report of a case. 136 24

A case of tuberculous pericarditis successfully managed with medical treatment alone was reported. A 78-year-old male was admitted because of cough, dyspnea and fever. Chest X-P and echocardiogram revealed massive pericardial effusion. His clinical symptoms and signs suggested cardiac tamponade. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was detected from pericardial fluid. ADA activity in pericardial fluid was high. Thoracic CT scan showed tracheobronchial, pretracheal, paratracheal and superior mediastinal lymph-node swelling. The diagnosis of tuberculous pericarditis was confirmed. Anti-tuberculous therapy consisting of INH, RFP, EB in combination with prednisolone was started. One month later pericardial effusion was controlled and six months later he was in good clinical condition without surgical treatment.
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PMID:[A case of tuberculous pericarditis]. 231 58

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

In a patient with cancer, a diagnosis of cardiac tamponade should be considered when there is dyspnea, cough, thready pulse or pulsus paradoxus, low systolic blood pressure, engorged neck veins, an enlarged cardiac silhouette, and total or ventricular electrical alternans. Immediate pericardiocentesis is indicated in such patients to avoid the risk of sudden death. A pericardial window should be created for more prolonged palliation of cardiac tamponade. Cytologic examination of the pericardial fluid often reveals malignant or highly suspect cells. Metastatic carcinomas from the lung and breast are the most common tumors that involve the heart when they spread in a retrograde fashion through the cardiac lymphatic system. Total pericardiectomy for the treatment of cardiac tamponade that is due to cancer is not generally advisable. Radiation therapy in the cardiac area with or without systemic chemotherapy is effective in decreasing the amount and the recurrence of neoplastic pericardial effusion.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma of the lung presenting with pericardial tamponade: report of a case and review of the literature. 384 8

The finding of a cardiac tamponade (CT) as initial manifestation of lung cancer is rare, being its most frequent manifestations dyspnea, cough and edemas. The presence of alithiasic acute cholecystitis (AAC) as early manifestation of CT is extremely rare, despite this having being described related to other situations of low cardiac output. We present the case of a patient who underwent emergency surgery due to AAC as a form of presentation of CT, this being the initial manifestation of a pulmonary adenocarcinoma. The histopathological study of the liver and the vesicle were compatible with signs of short evolution venous stasis, and the diagnosis was established through pericardium biopsy and thoracic CAT.
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PMID:[Acute acalculous cholecystitis complicating the presentation of cardiac tamponade as the initial manifestation of a pulmonary carcinoma]. 774 16

A 1-year-old boy breathing via a T-piece system and recovering from meningococcal septicaemia in the intensive care unit suffered a severe bout of coughing and developed bilateral pneumothoraces and tension pneumopericardium resulting in electromechanical dissociation and asystole. Conventional cardiopulmonary resuscitation and adrenaline boluses were unsuccessful. Administration of 20 ml.kg-1 of colloid and 3 mmol.kg-1 of sodium bicarbonate solutions produced instantaneous return of cardiac, output. The deleterious effects of cardiac tamponade appeared to decrease with increasing cardiac filling pressures. The patient was managed conservatively and he made a full recovery with no signs of residual neurological deficit.
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PMID:Pneumopericardium: an unusual cause for cardiac arrest. 970 45

A 45-year-old man with dry cough and dyspnea was referred by a medical practitioner for evaluation of heart failure on February 10, 1996. Chest X-ray revealed increased cardiothoracic ratio, and ultrasonographic echocardiography disclosed massive pericardial effusion with right ventricular collapse. Cardiac tamponade was diagnosed and pericardiocentesis was performed. Ten days after admission, the pleural effusion had become more pronounced, and thoracocentesis was performed. Carcinoembryonic antigen level was elevated in both the pericardial and pleural effusion, and cytology implicated adenocarcinoma, which suggested malignant effusion. Endoscopic study disclosed gastric cancer in the posterior wall of the upper body, and the histopathological diagnosis was signet-ring cell carcinoma. The patient died of respiratory failure on May 2, 1996, and autopsy was performed. The final diagnosis was gastric cancer with pulmonary lymphangitis, pericarditis, and pleuritis carcinomatosa, accompanied by enlargement of mediastinal and paraaortic lymph nodes. Interestingly, the primary signet-ring cell carcinoma of the stomach was situated mostly in the mucosa. Deep in the submucosal region, there was prominent invasion of the intralymphatic vessels, without direct destruction of the mucosa muscularis.
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PMID:Cardiac tamponade originating from primary gastric signet ring cell carcinoma. 1962 74

The aim of the study was to determine the aetiology of large and symptomatic pericardial effusions and to review the management and subsequent outcome. A survey was done on a consecutive cases of patients who had undergone percutaneous pericardiocentesis over a 10 year period in a city centre general hospital serving a multiethnic catchment population. In all, 46 patients (24 male, 22 female; age range 16 to 90 years, mean 54 years) underwent a total of 51 pericardial drainage procedures (or attempted pericardiocentesis) between 1989 and 1998. Malignancy (44%), tuberculosis (26%), idiopathic (11%), and post-cardiac surgery (9%) were the most common causes of pericardial effusion. The most common presenting symptoms were breathlessness (90%), chest pain (74%), cough (70%), abdominal pain (61%) (presumed to be related to hepatic congestion), and unexplained fever (28%). In the 12 cases of tuberculous pericarditis, nine occurred in patients of Indo-Asian origin, and three in patients of Afro-Caribbean origin. Fever, night sweats, and weight loss were common among these patients, occurring in over 80% of cases of tuberculous pericarditis. Pulsus paradoxus was the most specific sign (100%) for the presence of echocardiographic features of tamponade, with strongest positive predictive value (100%). Although malignancy remains the most common cause in developed countries, tuberculous disease should be considered in patients from areas where tuberculosis is endemic. Percutaneous pericardiocentesis remains an effective measure for the immediate relief of symptoms in patients with cardiac tamponade, although its diagnostic yield in tuberculous pericarditis is relatively low.
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PMID:Management of pericardial effusion by drainage: a survey of 10 years' experience in a city centre general hospital serving a multiracial population. 1108 87

This article describe's a case of atypical Kawasaki disease (AKD) with lack of typical clinical signs and rapid fatal course in a 2-month-old infant, who 1 week before hospitalization demonstrated rhinitis, coughing without fever, and later conjunctival hyperemia and allergic exanthema on chest and arms. On admittance, labwork highlighted the following: leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, elevated sedimentation rate, and positive C-reactive protein. General conditions remained mediocre for 7 days until sudden death occurred. The autopsy confirmed death caused by cardiac tamponade caused by a ruptured inflammated aneurysm of the left anterior descending coronary artery. We believe that the currently accepted clinical diagnostics criteria for KD in infants 2 years of age or younger can cause missed in vita diagnosis of AKD. For such, any typical clinical sign of KD whenever associated with thrombocytosis and elevated indices of phlogosis, should led to suspicion of KD and permit cardiovascular examination, and thus early treatment.
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PMID:Sudden infant death caused by a ruptured coronary aneurysm during acute phase of atypical Kawasaki disease. 1177 78

A 61-year-old woman who was a New York City hospital employee developed fatal inhalational anthrax, but with an unknown source of anthrax exposure. The patient presented with shortness of breath, malaise, and cough that had developed 3 days prior to admission. Within hours of presentation, she developed respiratory failure and septic shock and required mechanical ventilation and vasopressor therapy. Spiral contrast-enhanced computed tomography of the chest demonstrated large bilateral pleural effusions and hemorrhagic mediastinitis. Blood cultures, as well as DNA amplification by polymerase chain reaction of the blood, bronchial washings, and pleural fluid specimens, were positive for Bacillus anthracis. The clinical course was complicated by liver failure, renal failure, severe metabolic acidosis, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy, and cardiac tamponade, and the patient died on the fourth hospital day. The cause of death was inhalational anthrax. Despite epidemiologic investigation, including environmental samples from the patient's residence and workplace, no mechanism for anthrax exposure has been identified.
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PMID:Fatal inhalational anthrax with unknown source of exposure in a 61-year-old woman in New York City. 1185 84


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