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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-nine adult patients with culture-positive thoracic empyema were seen at the University Hospital Kuala Lumpur from 1984 to 1988. Cough, fever, chest pain, dyspnoea and weight loss were the common presenting symptoms. The empyema in 16 patients was associated with primary bronchopulmonary infections, nine occurred following thoracentesis of culture-sterile pleural effusions, two occurred as post-thoracic surgery complications, one following a subdiaphragmatic abscess and one as a result of a stab wound. The most common culture isolates were Streptococcus milleri, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae. Closed tube thoracostomy, the most common form of drainage procedure employed, was able to effect a cure or control of the empyema in 11 out of 19 patients in whom it was used.
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PMID:Culture-positive thoracic empyema in adults. 215 22

Aspiration, or soiling of the tracheobronchial tree, can produce life-threatening pulmonary disease. Intermittent or persistent aspiration may cause symptoms including cough, intermittent fever, recurrent tracheobronchitis, atelectasis, pneumonia, and/or empyema. The pulmonary disease may be associated with weight loss, cachexia, and dehydration. In many cases the aspiration is caused by laryngeal dysfunction, allowing pulmonary contamination by swallowed material. In other cases the aspiration is caused by a dysfunction of the oral, pharyngeal, or esophageal phases of swallowing. In some cases the aspiration is caused by a combination of laryngeal and swallowing dysfunction. Geriatric patients are more likely to experience aspiration, since muscle weakness causing mechanical disability and neurologic impairment are more common in this age group. Therefore, with the ever-increasing aging of our population, these disabilities will be on the rise, with an associated increase in pulmonary disease and death. The approach to evaluation and management of these disorders must be based on an understanding of the underlying functional impairment.
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PMID:Approaches to the patient with aspiration and swallowing disabilities. 224 88

Forty-one cases of empyema thoracis admitted in hospital during April, 1985 to August, 1987 were studied. Majority were males (65.9%) and were of less than 2 years of age (70.7%). Right side (60.9%) was predominantly involved. Abdominal distension (43.9%) was very characteristic, with other usual features like fever, cough and respiratory distress. A large majority of them were victims of malnutrition (73.2%) and anaemia (53.7%) with haemoglobin level ranging from 5-9 g/dl. Mortality was high (17.1%). Therapy with parenteral cloxacillin and gentamicin and continuous intercostal tube drainage accounted for loss of 15.8 bed days (average period of hospitalisation). Staph aureus was the principal aetiopathogen (68.3%). No anaerobe could be isolated. Strains of staphylococci were mostly resistant to penicillin and ampicillin but sensitive to gentamicin, cloxacillin and erythromycin.
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PMID:Clinicobacteriological study of empyema thoracis in infants and children. 226 63

Between 1976 and 1986 one hundred and ten children with pulmonary hydatid disease were treated surgically. Sixty five of the patients were males and 45 were females. We diagnosed hydatid cyst in 36 cases submitted in our clinic with hemoptysis. Thirty of the patients had cough, 16 had chest pain and dyspnea, 12 had purulent sputum and 8 cases had fever and anaphylactic phenomena. In most of the patients hydatid cysts were localised in the right lung. However, they had affinity for the lower lobes of both lungs, rather than the upper lobes. The radiological examination was found to be the most reliable diagnostic method. In the majority of our cases we performed thoracotomy + cystotomy + capitonnage, while in some cases we performed resection, like cystectomy, wedge resection and lobectomy. We did not encounter any serious operative and postoperative complications, except for one pleural empyema and a single case of mortality.
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PMID:The hydatid cyst of the lung in children and results of surgical treatment. 230 29

Sixty-five cases of pleural empyema (50 boys and 15 girls) were seen between January 1983 and June 1986. Fifty-three of these 65 children were below 10 years of age. Pulmonary infection was the commonest underlying cause. Cough with or without expectoration (98%) and fever (95%) were the commonest symptoms followed by breathlessness (85%) and chest pain (83%). Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from pus and blood in 61% and 18% of cases, respectively, while pseudomonas was grown in 8% and 3%. Most of the children (88%) were treated with antibiotics and tube thoracostomy drainage. Decortication was needed in 12% of cases. There were four deaths in this study. The overall success rate was 94%.
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PMID:Management of Empyema thoracis in children--a study of 65 cases. 244 45

The antibiotic era has changed the incidence, causal factors, and gravity of empyema. Between 1977 and 1988, 27 children with empyema were surgically managed. Ten cases occurred after an operation (8 esophageal and 2 abdominal). There were 15 girls and 12 boys. The age range was newborn to 12 years. Symptoms included fever, cough, tube drainage postoperatively, anorexia, weight loss, chest pain, tachypnea, and lymphadenitis. Multiple aerobic and anaerobic organisms were cultured. Treatment included thoracentesis and antibiotics, tube thoracostomy, tube thoracostomy and bronchoscopy, decortication, or decortication with lobectomy. The total hospital stay averaged 28.3 days, and after decortication, 11.6 days. Empyemas in children frequently have multiple organisms and should be treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics while awaiting culture results. Thoracentesis and tube thoracostomy are often ineffective in curing the disease. Decortication can abbreviate hospital stay if performed promptly for persistent pleural sepsis.
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PMID:Management of empyema in children. 258 99

Between 1974 and 1987, 14 patients (10 male and 4 female) underwent thoracotomy for treatment of pulmonary mycosis. They were studied on their clinical findings and surgical treatment. The median age was 48 years (range 19 to 71 years). Fourteen cases consisted of 9 aspergillosis and 5 cryptococcosis. None of them was either debilitated or immunosuppressed before falling ill. Five of the 14 patients had other pulmonary disease and 11 had symptoms; i.e. hemoptysis or bloody sputum in 4 cases, chest pain in 3, fever in 3, cough and sputum in 2. Nine aspergillosis consisted of 4 aspergilloma, 3 aspergillus pneumonia and 2 aspergillus empyema. Three cases of aspergillosis occurred in preexisting cavity. Five cryptococcosis consisted of 3 pseudotumorous, 1 disseminated small nodular, and 1 infiltrative types. Preoperative diagnosis was as follows; pulmonary mycosis 5, pulmonary tuberculosis 4, lung cancer 3, empyema 1 and hydropneumothorax 1. Four patients underwent partial resection, 8 lobectomy, 1 pneumonectomy, 1 muscle prombage and thoracoplasty. The prognosis is satisfactory. All patients are alive and has no recurrence. On histopathological examination, in aspergilloma cases, invasion of aspergillus to surrounding lung tissue was not seen. In addition to well-known fact that blood-borne dissemination hardly occurred in aspergilloma in contrast to cryptococcosis. These findings suggest that aspergilloma and solitary lesion of cryptococcosis should be resected, and adjuvant chemotherapy should be accompanied for cryptococcosis.
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PMID:[A study on clinical findings and surgical treatment of pulmonary mycosis]. 260 Apr 62

Seventeen adult patients in whom small-diameter, flexible-tipped feeding tubes had been inadvertently placed in the lung were identified during a 22-month period. In nine patients pneumothorax developed, all cases due to transpleural passage of small-diameter (2.7-mm) feeding tubes. In one of these patients, hydropneumothorax and subsequent empyema developed. Placement of larger diameter (4.3-mm) feeding tubes did not lead to pneumothorax, but pneumonitis developed in one patient after intrapulmonary instillation of antacid solution. Of the 17 patients, 15 had impaired mental status or diminished gag, cough, or swallowing reflexes; the remaining two were pharmacologically sedated during the procedure. Radiographic confirmation of feeding tube placement is essential to avoid these complications, with particular attention paid to the course of the tube.
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PMID:Inadvertent tracheobronchial placement of feeding tubes. 312 Feb 38

Respiratory infections of 10 subjects with underlying respiratory diseases were treated with cefmetazole (CMZ) and its clinical effects were studied. Five subjects of them were respiratory tract infection, 3 subjects were pneumonia and 2 subjects were pneumonia followed by empyema. The underlying diseases were chronic pulmonary emphysema in 4 subjects, diffuse panbronchiolitis in 3, chronic bronchitis in 2 and bronchial asthma in 1. The doses of CMZ were 4 to 8 grams per day and the durations of administration ranged 3 to 39 days. The clinical effects were judged from the changes of fever, cough, amount of sputum, dyspnea, rale, chest X-ray, white blood cell counts, erythrocyte sedimentation rates, sputum culture and PaO2. The clinical effects of 6 subjects were evaluated as good, those of 3 were fair and that of 1 was poor. In 3 subjects H. influenzae in the sputum was eliminated and in 1 subject both H. aphrophilus and alpha-Streptococcus found in the pleural effusion were eliminated. In 1 subject Klebsiella in the sputum was eliminated and replaced by Enterobacter. No side effects were observed. We conclude that CMZ is considerably useful in the treatment of respiratory infections of the patients with underlying respiratory diseases.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of the efficacy of cefmetazole in respiratory tract infections of patients with underlying respiratory diseases]. 658 38

During the period 1966-1976, 32 children from 6-16 years of age were admitted to the surgical service of Nemazee Hospital for hydatid disease. There were 16 males and 16 females. Eighteen patients had cysts of the liver, 13 had cysts of the lungs and 1 had a cyst of the orbit. Sixteen patients each had multiple cysts and 16 each had a single cyst. The location of multiple cysts were: liver in 10 patients, liver and kidney in 1, liver and cul-de-sac in 1, lungs in 3, lung and spine in 1 patient. Six patients had the disease in the right lobe of the liver, one in the left lobe and 11 had the disease in both lobes or the central part of the liver. There were 10 infected cysts: 7 in the lungs und 3 in the liver. Except for one recurrent cyst of the liver, all cysts were primaries. The incidence of hydatid disease in children compared to the incidence in the adult in the same period was 1 child to 12 adults (8.3%). The symptoms during the symptomatic period included abdominal mass, hepatomegaly, pain and jaundice in cysts of the liver; chest pain, cough and hemoptysis in cysts of the lung and chills and fever in both. Surgical management consisted of evacuation of the contents and resection of that part of the pericyst that was not covered by normal tissue. The pericyst was totally resected only when it was heavily fibrotic and resection was safely feasible, or when the pericyst was calcified. Two patients died, one following operation for hydatid cyst of the liver; the other died before the operation due to rupture of infected cyst of the lung into the bronchus and consequent respiratory arrest. Postoperative complications were prolonged bile drainage in two patients, in which both patients ceased their bile drainage spontaneously; one abdominal wound infection and one empyema occurred after operations for an infected cyst of the liver and an infected cyst of the lung respectively. The abdominal wound healed secondarily and empyema resolved after drainage. Enucleation of the endocyst or evacuation of the contents and parital excision of the pericyst were the safest management. The least-encountered complication of total excision was excessive blood loss.
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PMID:A ten-year survey of hydatid disease (Echinococcus granulosus) in children. 714 53


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