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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five case of intestinal cryptosporidiosis with pulmonary involvement in patients with AIDS are reported. The diagnosis was based on the recognition of acid-fast oocysts in sputum or aspirated bronchial material and stool specimens.
Coughing
and excess secretions were present in all cases. Four patients had other associated pulmonary pathogens: two
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, one
Mycobacterium
fortuitum and one Cytomegalovirus + Pneumocystis carinii; all of them had a previous (three cases) or simultaneous (one case) diagnosis of intestinal cryptosporidiosis, presenting with diarrhoea and vomiting. In the fifth patient Cryptosporidium was the only pulmonary pathogen found in a bronchial aspirate, and the onset of diarrhoea was 1 month after respiratory detection. Fifty-seven cases of respiratory cryptosporidiosis have been reported since 1980. In 17 of them, no other pathogen was found. Diarrhoea was present in 77% of the patients,
cough
in 77%, dyspnea in 58%, expectoration in 54%, fever in 45%, thoracic pain in 33%.
...
PMID:Respiratory cryptosporidiosis: case series and review of the literature. 892 43
A 46-year old man was admitted to a hospital because of
cough
and dyspnea. He was diagnosed as interstitial pneumonia and was treated with prednisolone (PSL) and antibiotics. The symptoms improved temporarily but he soon developed acute respiratory failure and was transferred to our hospital. Chest X-ray and CT revealed ground-glass opacities in both lung fields. He was treated with methyl PSL, antibiotics, and antimycobacterial drugs but he died on the fourth hospital day. Retrospectively, hematologic laboratory examinations revealed that CD4+ cell count was 0/microliter and serological tests for HIV were positive by both EIA and Western blot methods. The culture of the bone marrow specimens was positive for mycobacteria other than M. tuberculosis, and the bacilli were identified as
Mycobacterium
avium. Thus, his disease was eventually diagnosed as disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection. In the past reports, the diagnosis of disseminated MAC infection was most often made by blood cultures, however, the isolation of MAC from bone marrow is another sensitive and specific method for the diagnosis of this infection. In some cases, bone marrow examination would be useful to diagnose disseminated MAC infection.
...
PMID:[A case of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome with disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex infection in which M. avium was isolated from bone marrow]. 907 Oct 89
Primary endobronchial localization of tuberculosis without change on chest X-ray is a rare clinical entity, and bronchoscopic examination is most appropriate to reveal such an occurrence. A 38-year-old man and a 52-year-old woman underwent fibre-optic bronchoscopy many months after the onset of
cough
with poor sputum and dyspnoea on exercise, chest X-ray being normal. In both cases, a widespread granulomatous involvement of the tracheo-bronchial tree was found and cultures of bronchial wash grew
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. Patients recovered after 6 months of combined anti-tuberculous and steroid therapy; the granulomatous lesions disappeared but stenoses were found in the trachea and/or main bronchi. In one case, CO2 laser therapy was performed with no improvement.
...
PMID:Airway stenosis after tracheo-bronchial tuberculosis. 912 9
In the past 8 years, we have experienced 58 cases of tuberculosis at Tsukuba University Hospital. Retrospective analysis of these patients was made to clarify the circumstances of tuberculosis in hospitals where no special isolated ward for tuberculosis patients is prepared. The half were above 60 years old and a fourth were under 40 years old. Approximately two thirds of the patients had underlying diseases and malignancy was the most common. Most of the patients complained of
cough
, sputum, and/or fever. Thirty-one patients were diagnosed as pulmonary tuberculosis, 18 were extra-pulmonary, and 9 were complicated with both. Extra-pulmonary cases or patients who had underlying diseases showed unusual symptoms, and early diagnosis was difficult in several cases.
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis was detected in over 80% of the patients, and polymerase chain reaction procedure seemed to be useful for definite and rapid diagnosis of tuberculosis. There are no special isolated wards for tuberculosis patients in our hospital, but some patients could not be transferred because of their severe condition or complicated diseases. To prevent nosocomial infections of tuberculosis including occupational infection in the medical staff, early diagnosis, management of high risk staff, isolation rooms for patients who have potential risk of causative sauce of infection are needed.
...
PMID:[Analysis of 58 cases of tuberculosis experienced in the recent 8 years at Tsukuba University Hospital]. 913 25
In a recently published German multicenter study, 25% of the patients with witnessed cardiac arrest outside the hospital were resuscitated successfully and discharged from the hospital. Approximately 100,000 people suffer a fatal cardiac arrest in Germany annually, which is approximately tenfold the number of deaths from motor vehicle accidents. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) performed by bystanders is an important part of the chain of survival to minimize the time interval without artificial circulation and ventilation in a cardiac arrest victim. This is especially important in areas with long response times of the emergency medical service (EMS). Early examples of ventilation have been described throughout history. References to mouth-to-mouth ventilation (MTMV) are found in the Bible, in a description of the resuscitation of a coal miner in 1744, and in an experiment in 1796 demonstrating that exhaled gas was safe for breathing. In 1954, Elam and colleagues described artificial respiration with the exhaled gas of a rescuer using a mouth-to-mask ventilation method. The modern CPR era started with the combination of MTMV and chest compressions 35 years ago. However, the value of MTMV is currently under discussion because of a widespread fear of transmission of infectious diseases. Healthcare professionals have stated in several studies that they may withhold MTMV when confronted with a cardiac arrest in a stranger. Although an infection with
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis is more likely than one with HIV via MTMV, the fear of the public is understandable. An expert committee of the American Heart Association stated that MTMV may be omitted in the initial phase of cardiac arrest, and considered recommending chest compressions only if the EMS will arrive rapidly. In paralyzed volunteers, however, ventilation induced by chest compressions was not able to provide sufficient gas exchange, especially when the airway was not protected. Laboratory investigations studying ventilation during CPR showed controversial results; in one animal model of cardiac arrest with muscle paralysis, chest compressions were not sufficient for adequate gas exchange, but active compression-decompression CPR achieved reasonable ventilation. Animal models that prevented gasping during cardiac arrest required ventilation during CPR, whereas gasping animals seemed to be satisfactorily ventilated with chest compressions alone. The question whether spontaneous gasping after cardiac arrest in humans may be sufficient for oxygenation and carbon dioxide elimination is debatable and remains unanswered at this time. When cardiac arrest is monitored, frequent
coughing
by the patient may maintain artificial ventilation and circulation for 30 s. The strategy to compress the thorax first and then maintain the airway and perform ventilation may only have an advantage for the first 30 s of CPR. Therefore, MTMV remains the therapy of choice to ventilate the victim of cardiac arrest. If a rescuer chooses to not perform MTMV, at least chest compressions should be administered. During ventilation with an unprotected airway, tidal volumes of 0.5 l instead 0.8-1.2 l may have an advantage. This strategy would decrease the inspiratory flow rate and, therefore, peak airway inflation pressure, which is associated with stomach inflation. Animal models indicate that lower esophageal sphincter pressure may decrease rapidly to 5 cm H2O during cardiac arrest, which may further increase the importance of a low peak airway pressure during ventilation with an unprotected airway. Gastric inflation may cause, besides regurgitation, aspiration, and pneumonia, an increased intragastric pressure, which may push up the diaphragm, decrease lung compliance, and induce a vicious circle of hypoventilation and stomach inflation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:[Ventilation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). A literature study and analysis of ventilation strategies]. 913 75
The aetiology and outcome of hospitalized patients with moderate to severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) were evaluated in 60 adult patients (38 male 22 female, mean age 68.4 years). They were randomized for treatment with either ceftazidime or imipenem/cilastatin intravenously for 7 days. Bacteriological diagnoses were made in 25 cases (41.6%): Streptococcus pneumoniae (5), Haemophilus influenzae (5), Pseudomonas spp. in particular Pseudomonas aeruginosa (8), Staphylococcus aureus (4), Chlamydia spp. (2),
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (2) and Moraxella catarrhalis (3); mixed organisms were found in 4 patients. Forty-two patients (70%) responded satisfactorily to the regimens with improvement in sputum purulence
cough
and dyspnoea scores; there was no difference in response between the two groups. Sixteen patients (26.6%) underwent bronchoscopy on day 4 because of inadequate response to the antibiotics regimens, and 9 of them (15%) required a modification of the initial treatment with addition of erythromycin in 5 patients vancomycin in 1 cloxacillin in 1 and antituberculous drugs in 2. Three out of the 60 patients (5%) died of pulmonary sepsis: the aetiological agents were M. tuberculosis in one, Pseudomonas spp./methicillin-resistant S. aureus in another, but were not identified in the third. We conclude that treatment with either ceftazidime or imipenem/cilastatin was efficacious for moderate to severe CAP in Hong Kong.
...
PMID:Hospitalized patients with community-acquired pneumonia in Hong Kong: a randomized study comparing imipenem/cilastatin and ceftazidime. 915 75
We report the case of 17-year-old male adolescent immunocompetent patient with an operated transposition of the great arteries after the Mustard technique admitted to our hospital because of a
cough
and hemoptysis. Two nodules and an area of ground glass appearance located in the lower lobe of the left lung were diagnosed by ultrafast computed tomography (UF-CT) after ruling out cardiovascular complications. The gastric aspirate revealed acid-fast bacilli despite a repeatedly negative tuberculin skin test identified as
Mycobacterium
gordonae by the Gen-Probe Rapid Diagnostic Test. After an initial standard antimycobacterial therapy with isoniazid, rifampin and pyrazinamide the therapy was changed to clarithromycin and after a treatment course of 14 days, the UF-CT revealed a normal scan of both lungs. The case described suggests that one has to consider M. gordonae as a rare cause of infection even in immunocompetent patients.
...
PMID:Pulmonary infection due to Mycobacterium gordonae in an adolescent immunocompetent patient. 925 67
The patient was 71-year-old male with a history of sinobronchial syndrome since 8 years ago. He has been suffering from
cough
, sputum and upper abdominal discomfort since January 1994. He was diagnosed as an early gastric cancer by endoscopy, and his chest X-ray film showed an infiltrative shadow in the right upper lung field. A smear of the sputum specimen was positive for acid fast bacilli, which were later identified as
Mycobacterium
intracellulare. In this case, before the Mycobacterium intracellulare infection, it was confirmed that his mucociliary transport was severely impaired by using aerosol inhalation cine-scintigraphy. This case suggests that an impairment of the local defence mechanisms may play an important role in the pathogenesis of Mycobacterium intracellulare infection.
...
PMID:[A case of Mycobacterium intracellulare infection associated with sinobronchial syndrome]. 925 28
Alternative strategies for screening tuberculosis (TB) suspects are needed in sub-saharan Africa. Ambulatory adult TB suspects who were seen in the chronic cough room of Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi, were assessed with respect to appropriateness of referral. Appropriate referrals (patients with
cough
3 weeks or longer, weight loss and no antibiotic response) were screened by 3 sputum specimens for microscopy and culture of
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis and chest radiography (CXR). Hypothetical strategy A (screening by sputum smear examination followed by CXR in patients with negative sputum smears) was compared with strategy B (screening by CXR followed by sputum smear examination in patients with a CXR consistent with TB) in terms of diagnostic efficacy and cost. Of 1127 patients referred to the
cough
room, 402 (38%) were appropriate TB suspect referrals. Of these, 111 (28%) were sputum smear-positive, 213 (53%) were culture-positive, and 221 (55%) had smear and/or culture-positive evidence of TB. Routine CXR was consistent with pulmonary (P) TB in 230 patients (57%). With strategy A, 243 (60%) patients were diagnosed as PTB, but 40 (25%) of those not diagnosed as PTB had positive mycobacterial cultures. With strategy B, 230 patients (57%) were diagnosed as PTB, but 53 (31%) of those not diagnosed as PTB had positive mycobacterial cultures, including 13 with smear-positive sputum. The cost per diagnosed case of PTB was US$ 4.63 with strategy A and US$ 5.44 with strategy B. Screening patients with good criteria of TB has high diagnostic sensitivity, but screening by CXR is less effective and more costly than screening by sputum smear microscopy.
...
PMID:Screening pulmonary tuberculosis suspects in Malawi: testing different strategies. 937 37
If a respirator does not contain an exhalation value, and the respirator wearer sneezes or coughs, one may expect previously collected particles to be reaerosolized. This may be of special concern in environments contaminated with airborne microorganisms. The percentages of reaerosolization were measured in a test setup where the number of reaerosolized particles were registered by dynamic aerosol size spectrometry relative to the number of previously collected particles or bacteria. Experiments at low relative humidity have shown that the reaerosolization of particles below 1 micron, including
Mycobacterium
tuberculosis surrogate bacteria, does not exceed 0.025%, even if the re-entrainment air velocity is as high as 300 cm/sec (i.e., 37 times the air velocity through the respirator during breathing under heavy workload conditions). The reaerosolization of larger particles into dry air was significant at the highest re-entrainment velocity of 300 cm/sec, which simulates violent sneezing or
coughing
: 0.1% for 3 microns and about 6% for 5-micron test particles. No reaerosolization was detected at relative humidity levels exceeding 35% at these conditions. Thus, it is concluded that the reaerosolization of particles and bacteria, collected on the fibrous filters of N95 respirators, is insignificant at conditions encountered in respirator wear.
...
PMID:Performance of N95 respirators: reaerosolization of bacteria and solid particles. 942 48
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