Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Progress in the pharmacological control of transplant rejection must not blind us to the fact that the psychic integration of an implanted organ makes very great demands on the psychological capacity of the person involved. The authors describe the case of a female patient who had to undergo a combined heart-lung transplant as a result of an innate cardiac defect. Months after the successful operation she developed a set of symptoms--
coughing
, night-time anxiety, feelings of suffocation--that were not susceptible of explanation in terms of organic medicine. The secondary symptoms of
conversion neurosis
demonstrate how difficult the patient found it to accept the implanted organ, experienced as both exciting and repellent, as part of her own body.
...
PMID:["The three of us must hold together". Psychoanalytic considerations of experiences of heart-lung transplantation. A hermeneutic text reconstruction]. 827 22
Jessica, a 14-year-old girl with a history of asthma, went to her pediatrician's office because of a persistent cough. She had been
coughing
for at least 3 months with occasional
cough
-free periods of less than a few days. The
cough
was nonproductive and was not accompanied by fever, rhinorrhea, or facial or chest pain. Jessica and her mother observed that the
cough
increased with exercise and typically was not present during sleep. She has used two metered-dose inhalers--albuterol and cromolyn--without any change in the
cough
pattern. For the past 5 years, Jessica has had mild asthma responsive to albuterol. She enjoys running on the cross-country team, soccer, and dancing. She is an average student and denies any change in academic performance. She has never been hospitalized or had an emergency department visit for asthma or pneumonia. There has been no recent travel or exposure to a person with a chronic productive cough, tobacco smoke, or a live-in pet. Jessica lives with her mother and younger sister in a 10-year-old, carpeted apartment without any evidence of mold or recent renovation. In the process of taking the history, the pediatrician noticed that Jessica coughed intermittently, with two or three coughs during each episode. At times, the
cough
was harsh; at other times, it was a quiet
cough
, as if she were clearing her throat. She was cooperative, without overt anxiety or respiratory distress. After a complete physical examination with normal findings, the pediatrician interviewed Jessica and her mother alone. Jessica's parents had been divorced for the past 6 years. She lived with her mother but visited her father, and his new family with two young children, every weekend. She spoke about this arrangement comfortably and said that she loved her father and mother but didn't like the tension she experienced at her father's home. "I don't like adults arguing when kids are around." When asked why she thought the
cough
persisted so long, she commented in a neutral tone, "I don't know. It's never been like this before." Jessica's pediatrician prescribed an inhaled steroid with the albuterol. When the
cough
did not respond after 1 week, he ordered a chest radiograph (normal) and a tuberculin skin test (purified protein derivative-negative), and he added montelukast (a leukotriene inhibitor) and monitored airway resistance with a peak flow meter. The
cough
persisted, and the peak flow recording showed normal airway resistance. At this time, Jessica's pediatrician suspected a
conversion reaction
and contemplated the next best therapeutic strategy.
...
PMID:Persistent cough in an adolescent. 1060 74
Objective
Conversion disorder
(CD) is a mental disorder in which patient displays neurological symptoms such as blindness, mutism, paralysis and seizure. It starts when our mind converts our mental stress into a physical symptom. A 15-year-old single white female with chronic cough, which had begun 5 months ago, was brought to our clinic. She had no history of hospitalization. His daily
cough
was without sputum production or fever, rhinorrhea and stopped during sleep. There was no recent exposure to tobacco smoke or a person with a chronic productive cough. Laboratory tests were normal. She had engaged 4 months ago. Doing sex during engagement is prohibited in her culture but and had anal sex, because of her spouse's trend. Psychotherapy was done and complete recovery was accomplished.
...
PMID:Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder: Mismanagement, Misdiagnosis, Chronic Cough Following Sexual Abuse: A Rare Case Report. 2724 90