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)

To determine the long-term effects of farmer's lung disease and the factors influening the outcome, 141 patients with farmer's lung disease were evaluated. At the time of the last follow-up, 29 patients had died and 92 (mean age, 54 years) were studied clinically, physiologically, and radiologically. The mean length of disease was 14.8 years (range, 2.25 to 40 years). Symptoms at the time of the last follow-up included complaints of cough (33 per cent of the patients), breathlessness while walking on the level (20 per cent), breathlessness on minor exertion (14 per cent), and breathlessness while at rest (3 per cent). Twenty-eight per cent had chronic bronchitis. Thirty-nine per cent (36 of 92 patients) had some evidence of interstitial changes on roentgenogram. Abnormal vital capacity was present in 11 patients (12 per cent), abnormal total lung capacity in 11 (12 per cent), and abnormal CO difussing capacity in 27 (30 per cent). The ratio of one-sec forced expiratory volume to forced vital capacity was abnormal in 23 patients (25 per cent), and arterial PO2 was abnormal in 39 (40 per cent). Patients with a history of 5 or more symptomatic recurrences had significantly smaller values (P less than 0.05) for vital capacity, total lung capacity, and CO diffusing capacity than did those patients with less than 5 recurrences. There was no significant relation between continued farming or length of disease and lung function. On the basis of several measurements of airway function, 34 of the patients (58 per cent) were found to have some abnormality, It is concluded that symptomatic recurrences may be the most important factor in determining the danger of progressive disease. Persistently positive precipitins were correlated with decreased CO diffusing capacity. Moreover, airway disease is relatively uncommon but does occur, and in some cases it is a possible consequence of farmer's lung disease.
...
PMID:Farmer's lung disease: long-term clinical and physiologic outcome. 43 91

A 5-year-old child with classic farmer's lung disease is reported. The disease started after a flulike episode and progressed during 3 months to severe respiratory failure. The clinical features were fatigability, weight loss, recurrent fever, dry cough, pulmonary rales, and clubbing. Serologic studies for precipitins to Micropolyspora faeni were positive. The chest roentgenogram showed a ground-glass appearance with air bronchogram. The open lung biopsy material was typical for alveolitis, with minute interstitial granulomas and obliteration of lung parenchyma. The child's condition improved rapidly with prednisone therapy and avoidance of the allergen.
...
PMID:Farmer's lung in early childhood. 44 35

Organic dust toxic syndrome is a term recently coined to describe a noninfectious, febrile illness associated with chills, malaise, myalgia, a dry cough, dyspnea, headache and nausea which occurs after heavy organic dust exposure. Organic dust toxic syndrome shares many clinical features with acute farmer's lung and other forms of hypersensitivity pneumonitis, including the presence of increased numbers of neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage. However, organic dust toxic syndrome differs from acute hypersensitivity pneumonitis in several respects: the chest X-ray does not show infiltrates, severe hypoxemia does not occur, prior sensitization to antigens in the organic dust is not required and there are no known sequelae of physiological significance, such as the recurrent attacks and the pulmonary fibrosis which may be seen with chronic hypersensitivity pneumonitis. Organic dust toxic syndrome is thought to be much more common than farmer's lung. It is important for clinical and investigational purposes that organic dust toxic syndrome be distinguished from acute farmer's lung.
...
PMID:Organic dust toxic syndrome: an acute febrile reaction to organic dust exposure distinct from hypersensitivity pneumonitis. 226 97

The purpose of this study was to ascertain the immunological abnormality of hypersensitivity pneumonitis. The relationship between T cell subsets of lymphocytes in transbronchial lung biopsy (TBLB) specimens and in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were studied in 3 cases of farmer's lung disease (FLD). The lung specimens were examined by immunoperoxidase staining (ABC method) and the cells in BALF by the immunofluorescence method on the flowcytometry. All cases of FLD were diagnosed according to the following criteria: 1) history of exposure to FLD antigen, 2) clinical symptoms (cough, fever, breathlessness), 3) radiologic feature (diffuse small nodular pattern) and functional pattern of interstitial lung disease and 4) evidence of antibodies against Micropolyspora faeni. Histologically, granulomatous interstitial pneumonitis was revealed in all cases. Immunohistochemically, the number of positive lymphocytes was as follows: for Leu 4 (pan T cell) 8.6 cells/15.6 x 10(-3) mm2; Leu 3a (helper/inducer T cell) 5.1 cells; Leu 2a(suppressor/cytotoxic T cell) 1.2 cells on average, respectively. The Leu 3a+ cells were larger in number than the Leu 2a+ cells and the Leu 3a+/Leu 2a+ ratio was 4.76. In the BALF, the percentage of OKT3+ cells (pan T cell) was increased. The percentage of OKT4+ cells (helper/inducer T cell) was higher than that of OKT8+ cells (suppressor/cytotoxic T cell). The OKT4+/OKT8+ ratio was 6.65 in the BALF. The result of this study revealed the close relationship between the numerical distribution of T cell subsets in the lung tissue and in the BALF. It is suggested that the immuno-reaction in the lung tissue of patients with FLD is a type of helper-T cell alveolitis.
...
PMID:[Immunohistochemical study of T cell subsets in lung tissue and in BALF of patients with farmer's lung disease]. 258 84

Four hundred and forty five of 888 dairy farmers studied in an epidemiological survey four years previously were restudied to determine change in precipitins and in clinical features. Subjects answered the same questionnaire, which was filled in by the same nurse in the same winter months, and had blood withdrawn for precipitin analysis (double diffusion technique). Of the 445 subjects retested, 48 (10.8%) had been precipitin positive at the first study; of these, 34 remained positive four years later and 14 had reverted to negative. Twenty eight subjects previously negative for precipitins had become positive, so that 62 subjects in all were precipitin positive when restudied (13.9%). Of the 445 farmers, 369 were precipitin negative at both studies. The prevalence of symptoms, including cough, sputum production, wheezing, dyspnoea, and fever and chills, was similar for subjects who were consistently negative for precipitins and consistently positive and for those who changed from one to the other. Only one subject developed farmer's lung; he had precipitins in both studies. This study shows a fluctuation in the precipitin state of dairy farmers, suggesting that more farmers have precipitins at least once in their lifetime than are identified by screening at a single point in time. Relatively few develop farmer's lung or other respiratory symptoms. The presence of precipitins in a symptomless farmer appears to have no clinical importance.
...
PMID:The fluctuant nature of precipitating antibodies in dairy farmers. 276 56

In 1981 to 1982, we reported that many (19/43) asymptomatic dairy farmers, especially those with positive serum precipitins, had a lymphocytic alveolitis. We reevaluated, six and seven years later, 33 of the initial 43 farmers to verify their outcome. The restudied group included 31 men and 2 women between 24 and 67 years of age. In both studies, 24 were nonsmokers and 9 were exsmokers. Each farmer answered a questionnaire, had a physical examination, blood withdrawal for precipitin analysis, a chest roentgenogram, and pulmonary function tests (forced expiratory flows and diffusion capacity). At restudy, one subject had developed symptoms suggestive of sub-acute farmer's lung and now had inspiratory crackles; six had chronic morning cough and sputum production. Serum precipitins were positive in 10 subjects, whereas 16 had been positive at the initial study. Precipitins reverted from positive to negative in eight subjects and from negative to positive in six. Chest roentgenograms were normal in 23 subjects, while discrete interstitial abnormalities were noted in nine. One subject had significant pulmonary infiltrates. Results of current pulmonary function tests were (% predicted, mean +/- SEM) DL(CO) 114.8 +/- 3.0, FEV1 108.1 +/- 2.4, FVC 105.4 +/- 1.1. No correlations were found between these data and the lymphocytes or mast cells found in the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) at the initial study of 1981 and 1982. We conclude that bronchoalveolar lavage cell counts of asymptomatic farmers have no long-term clinical significance.
...
PMID:Predictive value of bronchoalveolar lavage cells and serum precipitins in asymptomatic dairy farmers. 281 2

An acute febrile illness associated with unloading silos occurs more frequently than any other farm associated respiratory illness in mid state New York. This report describes 29 cases of organic dust toxic syndrome (also known as pulmonary mycotoxicosis) occurring in 24 men and one woman with a mean age of 29 years. In 16 instances more than one worker was exposed to the dust, and in 12 of these shared exposures more than one worker became ill. Patients presented 5.3 (SD 3.3) hours after inhalation of organic dust and mould with fever (79%), myalgia (76%), chest tightness (72%), cough (66%), and headache (59%). The mean temperature was 38.7 degrees C and the mean white blood cell count 13.2 X 10(9)/l. In contrast to patients with allergic alveolitis, nearly all these patients had normal breath sounds, chest radiographs, and arterial oxygen saturation. Tests for precipitating antibodies to farmer's lung disease antigens gave negative results in all 26 episodes in which they were done; of these, 10 had no evidence of precipitating antibodies to an aqueous extract of the silage associated with their own illness. Organic dust toxic syndrome appears to be a common and substantial respiratory hazard to young farm workers. Despite being frequently mis-diagnosed as farmer's lung, organic dust toxic syndrome is clearly a distinctly different disease process.
...
PMID:Organic dust toxicity (pulmonary mycotoxicosis) associated with silo unloading. 359 53

A 33-year-old woman farmer developed an acute episode of fever, cough, and shaking chills with persistent shortness of breath. Her PaO2 was 51 with a restrictive pattern on pulmonary function. Her diffusion capacity was 36 percent of predicted. In spite of these abnormalities, she always had normal chest roentgenographic findings. Further studies, including a lung biopsy, led to the diagnosis of farmer's lung disease.
...
PMID:Severe hypoxemia in farmer's lung disease with normal findings on chest roentgenogram. 380 43

We present a case of Farmer's lung with antibodies to Thermoactinomyces vulgaris and Aspergillus fumigatus. A 56-year-old male patient with an atopic family medical history came to our hospital complaining of cough, dyspnea, fever, asthenia and anorexia. His condition worsened after being exposed to cereal powder, becoming symptomatic after 20 minutes or on occasion after 6 hours. Physical examination showed basal crepitant rales in lung auscultation. The radiograph of the thorax showed a bilateral interstitial reticulo-nodular pattern. An obstructive pattern was found on functional respiratory examination. There was also a slight restriction along with the decrease of the VC and a significant reversal of the M.M.E.F. with anticholinergics. The tests for intradermal cutaneous allergies were positive after 20 minutes and for Aspergillus fumigatus Niger and Terreus (Bencard) after 6 hours. With immunoelectrophoresis and double diffusion, precipitation bands in the presence of Aspergillus fumigatus and Thermoactinomyces, were detected. IgG and IgE were high-1570 mg% and 1000 U/ml respectively. The histological study of the transbronchial biopsy showed dilatation of the alveolar septum caused by a lymphocytic infiltration with fragments of collagenous fibres. In bronchoalveolar lavage there was a predominance of lymphocytes and histiocytes. After exertion, arterial blood gases showed desaturation with hypoxemia. The static lung volumes and the flow and diffusion of carbon monoxide (CO) showed a moderate decrease of vital capacity, with the total lung capacity being below normal. Diffusion was markedly attenuated. The provocation test by indirect bronchial inhalation using cereal powder (Alfalfa) was positive. After six hours dyspnea, cough and leukocytosis appeared with an outbreak of fever and an increase in the erythrocyte sedimentation rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Farmer's lung with antibodies against Thermoactinomyces vulgaris and Aspergillus fumigatus. Clinical course and treatment]. 390 94

We studied 41 subjects with a history of farmer's lung disease who had been free of acute episodes for at least one year. Twenty-six were still in daily contact with hay (group 1), and 15 had ceased all antigenic exposure (group 2). While the incidence of dyspnea was similar in both groups, coughing and sputum were more frequent in group 1. Inspiratory crackles were frequent in group 1 subjects (15 of 26) and absent in all group 2 subjects. In both groups, a high percentage of lymphocytes was demonstrated by bronchoalveolar lavage: 52.5% +/- 21.1% (mean +/- SD) and 26.3% +/- 18.7%, respectively. Lymphocytic alveolitis (greater than 22% lymphocytes) was more common in group 1 (23 of 26) than in group 2 (6 of 15). There was no relationship between functional abnormalities and the intensity of the alveolitis. We conclude that lymphocytic alveolitis may persist after an acute episode of farmer's lung disease, but the intensity of the alveolitis is not associated with functional alterations.
...
PMID:Relationship among antigen contact, alveolitis, and clinical status in farmer's lung disease. 394 47


1 2 3 Next >>