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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 75-year-old male was admitted to our hospital with complaints of fever and
cough
. Chest X-ray showed infiltrative shadows with cavity, and sputum smears were positive for acid-fast bacilli. About 2 months after the initiation of anti-tuberculous chemotherapy, suddenly generalized
convulsion
occurred. CT of the brain showed the solitary mass with the ring enhancement in the left subcortical area. About 4 weeks later, brain aspiration drainage was performed and pus was aspirated. He was diagnosed as intracranial tuberculous abscess. After the drainage, neurological symptoms disappeared completely and there were no recurrence of abscess. Attention should be called to the complication of intracranial tuberculosis, especially in cases worsened during anti-tuberculous chemotherapy.
...
PMID:[A case of pulmonary tuberculosis complicated with intracranial tuberculous abscess]. 961 52
We report the unrecognized accidental intratracheal insertion of a nasogastric tube, following endotracheal intubation in a patient scheduled to undergo right lower lobectomy for carcinoma. After surgery, which had an unremarkable course, the trachea was extubated. However, the gastric tube was entrapped and attempts to withdraw it elicited
fits
of
coughing
. A chest X-ray showed the tube malpositioned in the right bronchus. A fibreoptic bronchoscopy did not permit removal of the tube extremity which was embedded in the bronchial suture. Finally an additional thoracotomy was required to withdraw the tube securely. The manifestations of the intratracheal position of a nasogastric tube as well as the preventive and diagnostic measures of such a complication are considered.
...
PMID:[Nasogastric tube: intratracheal malposition and entrapment in a bronchial suture]. 1042 1
Four infants, three girls aged 4 weeks, 2.5 months and 3 months, and a boy aged 2 months, were hospitalized because of severe respiratory distress. Apnoea spells with bradycardia and hypoxia were seen in two of the patients, one showing
convulsions
as well, and bronchopneumonia in the other two, of whom one eventually died. All suffered from pertussis. During outbreaks of pertussis, infants less than 6 months of age are at highest risk for severe disease. In this age group, however, the clinical signs of pertussis are often atypical. Classical symptoms such as paroxysms of
cough
and loud whoops may be absent while feeding problems, apnoea, cyanosis and bradycardia may be present. For infants younger than 6 months with signs indicating pertussis hospitalization is indicated. In the current vaccination schedule in the Netherlands infants are vaccinated at 3, 4, 5 and 11 months of age. Starting in 1999 the first vaccination will be administered at the age of 2 months.
...
PMID:[Pertussis in young infants]. 1006 19
Early-onset benign childhood occipital seizures (EBOS) described by Panayiotopoulos constitute the commoner after the rolandic phenotype of a childhood seizure susceptibility syndrome. EBOS are the clinical representative of occipital spikes. Their cardinal features are infrequent (often single) partial seizures manifested with deviation of the eyes and vomiting, frequently evolving to hemi- or generalized
convulsions
. Ictal behavioral changes, irritability, pallor, and rarely cyanosis, and eyes wide open are frequent. Retching,
coughing
, aphemia, oropharyngolaryngeal movements, and incontinence may occur. Consciousness is usually impaired or lost, either from the onset or the course of the
fits
, but in a few children, it may be preserved. Duration varies from a few minutes to hours (partial status epilepticus). Seizures are usually nocturnal, but semiology is similar in nocturnal or diurnal
fits
. Onset is between 1 and 12 years with a peak at 5 years. One third of children have a single seizure, the median total number of
fits
is two to three, and the prognosis is invariably excellent, with remission usually occurring within 1 year from onset. A few children may later develop rolandic or other benign partial seizures. The likelihood to have seizures after age 12 years is exceptional and rarer than that of febrile convulsions. EEG shows occipital paroxysms demonstrating fixation-off sensitivity, but random occipital spikes, occipital spikes in sleep EEG alone, or normal EEG may occur. Centrotemporal and other spike foci may appear in the same or more frequently in subsequent EEGs. The EEG does not reflect clinical course and severity.
...
PMID:Early-onset benign childhood occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome: a syndrome to recognize. 1038 32
In February 1998, an outbreak of acute febrile illness was reported from the Kapalata military camp in Kisangani, the Democratic Republic of Congo. The illness was characterized by an acute onset of fever associated with severe headache, arthralgia, backache, neurologic signs, abdominal pain, and
coughing
. In 1 individual, hemorrhagic manifestations were observed. The neurologic signs included an altered level of consciousness,
convulsions
, and coma. Malaria was initially suspected, but the patients showed negative blood films and failed to respond to antimicrobial drugs. A total of 35 sera collected from the military patients in the acute phase were tested for the presence of IgM against vector-borne agents. Serum IgM antibodies against West Nile fever virus were found in 23 patients (66%), against Chikungunya virus in 12 patients (34%), against dengue virus in 1 patient (3%), and against Rickettsia typhi in 1 patient (3%). All sera were negative for IgM antibody against Rift Valley fever virus, Crimean Congo hemorrhagic fever virus, and Sindbis virus. These data suggest that infections with West Nile fever virus have been the main cause of the outbreak.
...
PMID:An outbreak of West Nile fever among migrants in Kisangani, Democratic Republic of Congo. 1067 64
We prospectively followed 725 children under 2 years of age with laboratory-diagnosed Bordetella pertussis infection to investigate the hospitalization rate and complications. Diagnosis was made by culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from nasopharyngeal swabs in 11,016 children who presented with > or = 7 days of
cough
at 63 pediatric practices in Germany. Of these children, 33 (4.5%) were hospitalized at a mean age of 4.8 months (range, 17 days to 19.5 months). Complications occurred in 16 (48%) of the 33 patients. Pneumonia developed in two (6%) children and a
convulsion
was observed in one (3%). Intensive care monitoring was required for 23 (70%) children. Further complications were bradycardia (21%), apnea (12%), conjunctivitis (12%), loss of weight (12%), otitis media (6%), atelectasis (3%) and dehydration (3%). Children aged 6-24 months who had not received any dose of pertussis vaccine had a ten-fold increased risk of hospitalization compared to those who had been partially or fully immunized (p < 0.05). Pertussis immunization should be given at an early point in time and completely in order to prevent severe courses of pertussis and hospitalization in young children.
...
PMID:Hospitalization and complications in children under 2 years of age with Bordetella pertussis infection. 1078 97
The clinical characteristics of falciparum malaria were studied among 61 children, aged 0 to 14 treated at a reference center in Manaus, from October to December 1997. The symptoms observed were fever (98.4%), headache (80.3%), chills (68.9%), perspiration (65. 6%), myalgia (59.0%), nausea (54.1%), lumbar pain (49.2%), vomiting (49.2%),
cough
(45.9%), arthralgia (31.1%), diarrhea (34.4%), dyspnea (8.2%),
convulsions
(8.2%) and dizziness (4.9%). Pallor and anaemia were found more frequently in children under five years old. Anaemia was associated with high levels of parasitaemia. Fifty-eight (91.5%) patients had uncomplicated malaria, 3 (4.9%) had severe malaria and the lethality was 1.6%.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of falciparum malaria in children in Manaus, AM, Brazil]. 1088 Nov 32
From October 1996 to March 1997, 31 children with febrile convulsions were admitted to the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur. Human Herpesvirus 6 (HHV 6) was virologically and/or serologically confirmed to be the cause of the febrile episode in 5 of these children (16.1%). Age, sex and other associated clinical features (diarrhoea,
cough
, running nose and type of seizure) were not useful in differentiating cases of febrile
convulsion
due to HHV 6 from those of other aetiology. However, uvulo-palatoglossal junctional ulcers were noted in children in whom the cause of the seizure could be attributed to HHV 6 but not in the remaining cases in the study group. HHV 6 DNA was detected in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from all patients with febrile convulsions attributed to HHV6, and in patients shown serologically to have already been exposed to the virus by nested polymerase chain reaction amplification. Only genotype HHV 6B was detected from patients with seizure due to HHV 6 but both genotype 6A and 6B were detected in the remaining cases studied.
...
PMID:The incidence of human herpesvirus 6 infection in children with febrile convulsion admitted to the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur. 1096 10
A 54-year-old woman who was on anticoagulant treatment with acenocoumarol for a mitral prothesis developed a cervical spinal epidural hematoma, probably triggered by
coughing
fits
together with supratherapeutic anticoagulation. Because of the subacute evolution of the hematoma, it was not diagnosed until the patient was admitted to the hospital with profuse hemorrhages. Given the subacute nature of the hematoma, along with the favorable evolution, conservative treatment with dexamethasone was decided upon, and it was resolved with almost no sequelae. This unusual clinical entity definitely should be suspected in patients on anticoagulants who complain of severe localized neck pain, most often with radicular irradiation.
...
PMID:Spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma associated with oral anticoagulant therapy. 1129 96
Human herpesvirus oesophagitis in human immunodeficiency virus positive patients is caused by cytomegalovirus and herpes simplex virus; no cases of oesophagitis and oesophagobrochial fistula as a result of varicella zoster virus (VZV) have been reported to date. This report describes the case of a patient with a 2-3 mm deep oesophageal ulcer whose viral culture was positive for VZV. The patient was treated with acyclovir with resolution of the symptomatology. After the end of the induction treatment, because of the onset of fever and
fits
of
coughing
during eating, the patient underwent oesophagography, which showed an ulcer with an oesophagobronchial fistula in the middle and lower third of the oesophagus. This case report stresses the role of VZV infection as a possible cause of oesophagobronchial fistula, a rare but benign condition in patients with AIDS.
...
PMID:Oesophagobronchial fistula caused by varicella zoster virus in a patient with AIDS: a unique case. 1198 52
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