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)

Erdosteine is a thiol derivative developed for the treatment of chronic obstructive bronchitis, including acute infective exacerbation of chronic bronchitis. Erdosteine contains 2 blocked sulfhydryl groups which are released following first-pass metabolism. The 3 active metabolites exhibit mucolytic and free radical scavenging activity. Erdosteine modulates mucus production and viscosity and increases mucociliary transport, thereby improving expectoration. It also exhibits inhibitory activity against the effects of free radicals produced by cigarette smoke. Clinical studies in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease have demonstrated the efficacy and tolerability of erdosteine. Erdosteine 300mg twice daily reduced cough (both frequency and severity) and sputum viscosity more quickly and more effectively than placebo and reduced the adhesivity of sputum more effectively than ambroxol 30mg twice daily. Co-administration of erdosteine and amoxicillin in patients with acute infective exacerbation of chronic bronchitis resulted in higher concentrations of the antibiotic in the sputum, leading to earlier and more pronounced amelioration of clinical symptoms compared with placebo. Erdosteine is associated with a low incidence of adverse events, most of which are gastrointestinal and generally mild.
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PMID:Erdosteine. 895 58

Abdominal surgery, especially upper abdominal surgical procedures are known to adversely affect pulmonary function. Pulmonary complications are the most frequent cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality. This review article aimed to analyse the incidence and risk factors for postoperative pulmonary morbidity and their prevention. The most important means for preoperative assessment is the clinical examination; pulmonary function tests (spirometry) are not reliably predictive for postoperative pulmonary complications. Age, type of surgical procedure, smoking and nutritional state have all been identified as potential predictors for postoperative complications. However, usually there is not enough preoperative time available to obtain beneficial effects of stopping smoking and improvement of nutritional state. In patients with COPD, a preoperative multidisciplinary evaluation including the primary care physician, pulmonologist/intensivist, anesthesiologist and surgeon is required. Consensus as to preoperative physiologic state, therapeutic preparation, and postoperative management is essential. Simple spirometry and arterial blood gas analysis are indicated in patients exhibiting symptoms of obstructive airway disease. There are no values that contra-indicate an essential surgical procedure. Smoking should stop at least 8 weeks preoperatively. Preoperative therapy for elective surgery with antibiotics, beta2-agonist, or anticholinergic bronchodilator aerosols, as well as training in cough and lung expansion techniques should begin at least 24 to 48 hours preoperatively. Postoperative therapy should be continued for 3 to 5 days. Usually, anaesthesia is responsible for early complications, whereas surgical procedures are often associated with delayed morbidity. Laparoscopic procedures are recommended, as postoperative morbidity and hospital stay seem reduced in patients without COPD. Regional anaesthesia is given as having less adverse effects on pulmonary function than general anaesthesia. However, for unknown reasons these benefits are not associated with a decrease in postoperative respiratory complications. Moreover, the quality or the type of postoperative analgesia does not influence postoperative respiratory morbidity. Postoperatively, oxygen administration increases SaO2, but cannot abolish desaturation due to obstructive apnea. The various techniques of physiotherapy (chest physiotherapy, incentive spirometry, continuous positive airway pressure breathing) seem to be equivalent in efficacy; but intermittent positive pressure breathing has no advantages, compared with the other treatments and could even be deleterious. Chest physiotherapy and incentive spirometry are the most practical methods available for decreasing secretion contents of airways, whereas continuous positive airway pressure breathing is efficient on atelectasis. In stage II or III COPD patients, admission in a intensive therapy unit and prolonged mechanical ventilation may be required.
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PMID:[Prevention of respiratory complications after abdominal surgery]. 903 57

This study analyzes patient demand in a regional public health pulmonology practice. The following data were recorded for all first-visit patients for a period of two years: age, sex, referral source, initial diagnosis by the referring physician, final diagnosis by the pulmonologist, and destination. The service studied 1,486 patients (men/women: 1.5). Most (71%) were between 40 and 80 years old. Referrals were from the family doctor (60%), health center (9%), emergency service (10%), hospital (12%), other specialists (6%), and others (3%). The most frequent reasons for remission were upper airway disease (UAD) (36%), specifically chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma, and the presentation of symptoms (28%) such as dyspnea, cough, hemoptysis and chest pain. Analysis of the final diagnoses for the patients presenting with symptoms showed that no disease could be detected in one third of those with dyspnea and hemoptysis or in half of those who complained of chest pain; acute respiratory infection was diagnosed in 45% of those complaining of persistent cough. UAD was the most frequent cause of symptoms. The index of doctor's visit/inhabitant was 0.97% for patients referred by family doctors and 0.38% for those from health centers, but the initial and final diagnosis profiles of these patients were not statistically different. Patients referred by emergency services had significantly more (p < 0.001) in number of radiological findings and hemoptysis. Those sent from hospitals more often suffered pneumonia. In conclusion, this profile of a regional public health pulmonology practice shows that: 1) UAD and clinical symptoms are the most frequent reasons for patient remission; 2) family doctors generate three times mor demand for services than do health centers, and 3) 14% of patients can be considered normal.
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PMID:[Profile of a pneumology regional health service]. 906 82

Patients with alpha 1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency, like those with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, usually present with dyspnea, wheeze, and cough. The similarity in presentation and unfamiliarity among clinicians with AAT deficiency account for much of the delay in diagnosis. Normally, AAT inhibits serine proteases, which cause alveolar destruction, and alters the function of cells that release mediators of inflammation. Diagnostic findings suggesting deficiency include irreversible airflow obstruction, a decreased diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide, bibasilar bullous disease on chest films, and a low serum level of AAT. Asthma is usually diagnosed on the basis of clinical findings and response to inhaled beta agonists. The presence of inflammation is believed to be necessary for development of clinically significant asthma. Inflammation added to a deficiency of antiprotease inhibitor activity significantly worsens bronchial hyperreactivity. This is only one mechanism by which AAT deficiency may potentiate allergic and bronchospastic responses. The prevalence of bronchial asthma in patients with AAT deficiency is unknown. Studies by the National Institutes of Health regarding the natural history of AAT deficiency and its response to therapy are under way. Perhaps more will be discovered about the relationship between the disorder and bronchial asthma.
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PMID:Alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency and asthma. The continuing search for the relationship. 912 9

Airways represent a serial and parallel branched system, through which the alveoli are connected with the external air. They participate in the mechanical and immune defense against noxious agents, regional flow regulation to optimize the perfusion/ventilation ratio and provide lung mechanical support. Functional exploration of central airways is based on resistance measurement, flow-volume curve or spirometry, while peripheral airways influence parameters as the upstream resistance, the slope of phase III nitrogen washout and the residual volume. Bronchodynamic tests supply important information on airway reversibility and nonspecific reactivity. Anatomopathologic alterations of obstructive chronic bronchitis, pulmonary emphysema and bronchial asthma account for their specific functional and bronchodynamic alterations. There is a growing interest for bronchiolitis in the clinical, radiologic and functional field. This type of lesion, always present in COPD, asthma and interstitial disease, becomes relevant when isolated or predominant. The most useful anatomofunctional classification separates the "constrictive" forms, the cause of obstruction and hyperinflation, from "proliferative" forms where an intraluminal proliferation more or less extended to alveolar air spaces as in BOOP (bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia) results in restrictive dysfunction. Constrictive bronchiolitis obliterans represents a severe and frequent complication of lung and bone marrow transplantation. Idiopathic BOOP may occur with cough or flue-like symptoms. In other cases, constrictive and proliferative forms may have a toxic (gases or drugs), postinfective or immune etiology (rheumatoid arthritis, LES, etc). Respiratory bronchiolitis or smokers' bronchiolitis, an often asymptomatic lesion, rarely associated to an interstitial lung disease, should be considered separately. The relationships between respiratory bronchiolitis, COPD and initial centriacinar emphysema is still to be elucidated. The diagnostic combination of the more sensitive functional tests with HRCT will allow a better understanding of the natural history of the various forms of bronchiolitis.
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PMID:Airway disease: anatomopathologic patterns and functional correlations. 914 18

We examined the sputum of 114 subjects by noninvasive methods (voluntary coughing or induced cough with hypertonic saline) to determine whether sputum examination could be used to separate patients with episodic wheezing, dyspnea or cough of unknown origin into different diagnostic categories. An increased percentage of sputum eosinophils was seen in 92% (48/52) of asthmatics, 36% (9/25) of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and 28% (7/25) of chronic coughers, but not in any of the 12 patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Eight patients with combined symptoms of COPD and asthma (mixed COPD subgroup) showed above average diurnal peak expiratory flow variation (10.3 +/- 2.1% vs 2.5 +/- 1.4%, p < 0.05) and an above average percentage of sputum eosinophils (19.8 +/- 9.1 vs 2.1 +/- 3.2, p < 0.01) than those in the pure COPD group. After therapeutic corticosteroid trial, all of the mixed COPD patients and six of the 17 pure COPD patients were steroid responders. Seven of the 25 chronic coughers had sputum eosinophilia, but no asthmatic symptoms. The cough symptoms subsided in five of these seven patients after steroid treatment but not in the other 18 chronic coughers. Further study is indicated to determine if simple eosinophilic bronchitis is an early stage of asthma. In conclusion, sputum differential cell counting is a useful noninvasive diagnostic tool in differentiating diseases with episodic wheezing or chronic cough.
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PMID:Importance of sputum differential cell counting in the diagnosis of airway diseases. 917 Aug 20

A 59-year-old man with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), atrial fibrillation, and gout developed acute dyspnea, cough, and diffuse muscle aches and pains. He had commenced colchicine (0.6 mg b.i.d. p.o.), for the first time, one month earlier for recurrent gout attacks. Clinical examination revealed atrial fibrillation, an exacerbation of his pulmonary disease, tender muscles, especially calves, and diffuse muscle weakness. Laboratory results included creatinine phosphokinase 6961 U/l (1% MB), microscopic hematuria, myoglobinuria, elevated creatinine 1.6 mg/dl, and blood urea nitrogen 17 mg/dl. COPD and atrial fibrillation were treated and colchicine was discontinued. The patient made a full recovery. This 2nd reported case of colchicine induced rhabdomyolysis is the first reported in the treatment of gout.
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PMID:Colchicine induced rhabdomyolysis. 933 Sep 53

Daily marijuana smoking has been clearly shown to have adverse effects on pulmonary function and produce respiratory symptomatology (cough, wheeze, and sputum production) similar to that of tobacco smokers. Based on the tobacco experience, decrements in pulmonary function may be predictive of the future development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, in the absence of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, the habitual marijuana-only smoker would likely have to smoke 4-5 joints per day for a span of at least 30 yr in order to develop overt manifestations of COPD. The mutagenic/carcinogenic properties of marijuana smoke are also well-established. The potential for induction of laryngeal, oropharyngeal, and possibly bronchogenic carcinoma from marijuana has been documented by several case reports and observational series. Despite this, a relative risk ratio for the development of these tumors has not yet been quantified. Based on a higher frequency of case reports for upper airway cancer compared to bronchogenic carcinoma, marijuana smoking may have a more deleterious effect on the upper respiratory tract. However, this hypothesis remains speculative at best, pending confirmation by longitudinal studies.
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PMID:Marijuana. Respiratory tract effects. 935 87

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, especially among smokers. Many guidelines that have recently been issued emphasize that COPD is not inaccessible to therapeutic measures: although few interventions are capable of affecting its natural history (i.e. smoking cessation and, in patients with severe resting hypoxaemia, oxygen therapy), several others have a demonstrated effect on symptoms and, thereby, quality of life. The effects of inhaled corticosteroids, and alpha 1-antitrypsin replacement therapy in emphysema due to alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency are currently being studied. When there is a marked increase in mucus production, chest physiotherapy using controlled expiration and directed cough may be useful. Inhaled bronchodilators are frequently effective on dyspnoea, anticholinergic agents being more suitable for continuous symptoms. Rehabilitation, which includes education and psychosocial care, chest physiotherapy, nutritional care and exercise training, also improves quality of life. When there is persistent severe alveolar hypoventilation despite oxygen therapy, long-term mechanical ventilation may be considered. Surgical options in the treatment of emphysema include resection of giant bullae and lung volume reduction surgery. Lung transplantation should be proposed only in patients with end-stage disease, the difficulty here being to define what 'end-stage' means. Finally, all preventive and some therapeutic interventions are likely to be more effective early in the course of the disease. Thus, efforts should be made to detect airways obstruction early in subjects at risk, such as smokers.
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PMID:Current issues in the management of chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases. 940 Jun 84

Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in the elderly has a different clinical presentation than CAP in other age groups. Confusion, alteration of functional physical capacity, and decompensation of underlying illnesses may appear as unique manifestations. Malnutrition is also an associated feature of CAP in this population. We undertook a study to assess the clinical and nutritional aspects of CAP requiring hospitalization in elderly patients (over 65 yr of age). One hundred and one patients with pneumonia, consecutively admitted to a 1,000-bed teaching hospital over an 8-mo period, were studied (age: 78 +/- 8 yr, mean +/- SD). Nutritional aspects and the mental status of patients with pneumonia were compared with those of a control population (n = 101) matched for gender, age, and date of hospitalization. The main symptoms were dyspnea (n = 71), cough (n = 67), and fever (n = 64). The association of these symptoms with CAP was observed in only 32 patients. The most common associated conditions were cardiac disease (n = 38) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n = 30). Seventy-seven (76%) episodes of pneumonia were clinically classified as typical and 24 as atypical. There was no association between the type of isolated microorganism and the clinical presentation of CAP, except for pleuritic chest pain, which was more common in pneumonia episodes caused by classical microorganisms (p = 0.02). This was confirmed by a multivariate analysis (relative risk [RR] = 11; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.7 to 65; p = 0.0099). The prevalence of chronic dementia was similar in the pneumonia cohort (n = 25) and control group (n = 18) (p = 0.22). However, delirium or acute confusion were significantly more frequent in the pneumonia cohort than in controls (45 versus 29 episodes; p = 0.019). Only 16 patients with pneumonia were considered to be well nourished, as compared with 47 control patients (p = 0.001). Kwashiorkor-like malnutrition was the predominant type of malnutrition (n = 65; 70%) in the pneumonia patients as compared with the control patients (n = 31; 31%) (p = 0.001). The observed mortality was 26% (n = 26). Pleuritic chest pain is the only clinical symptom that can guide an empiric therapeutic strategy in CAP (typical versus atypical pneumonia). Both delirium and malnutrition were very common clinical manifestations of CAP in our study population.
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PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia in the elderly. Clinical and nutritional aspects. 941 74


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