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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the 2-year period 1977 through 1979, 26 patients with Legionnaires' disease were seen at the Mayo Clinic and affiliated hospitals. The patients ranged in age from 17 to 81 years with a median of 51 years. Twelve (46%) were immunologically compromised. Most of the other patients had underlying chronic tobacco bronchitis. Hectic fever,
cough
, and diarrhea were common symptoms. Chest radiographs showed patchy perihilar infiltrates that often progressed to consolidation. Diagnosis was made by indirect fluorescent antibody testing in 15 patients (58%), but in no case was the test diagnostic during the first week of illness. In seven patients the diagnosis was established by positive direct flourescent antibody testing of lung tissue, in two cases by culture of lung tissue, and in one case each by direct fluorescent antibody positivity of sputum or bronchial washing. Of the 26 patients, 3 (12%) required hemodialysis for acute renal failure and 5 (19%) died. A favorable clinical response to therapy with erythromycin was noted. The differential diagnosis of Legionnaires' disease must include other bacterial pneumonias, as well as
mycoplasma
, psittacosis, Q fever, and viral pneumonia. For critically ill patients, open-lung biopsy may be necessary to provide a rapid diagnosis. Current evidence suggests that erythromycin alone or in combination with rifampin is the treatment of choice. A 3-week course of therapy is recommended in order to prevent relapse.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease: a review of the epidemiology and clinical manifestations of a newly recognized infection. 735 52
A 14-year-old girl with infectious mononucleosis and secondary immunosuppression had severe dyspnea and
cough
, spiking fever, rales, and diffuse bilateral pulmonary infiltrates. The pulmonary disease progressed rapidly, necessitating empiric trials of antimicrobial agents.
Mycoplasma
pneumoniae was isolated from a lung biopsy specimen, transtracheal aspirate, and expectorated sputum, but the relatively long period required to isolate the organism delayed the microbiologic diagnosis. Serologic study of acute and convalescent serum samples confirmed the M pneumoniae infection. Clinical improvement was gradual, and the immunosuppression was transient. The patient's illness appeared to represent microbial synergism, with severe M pneumoniae infection complicating transient immunosuppression induced by infectious mononucleosis.
...
PMID:Infectious mononucleosis complicated by severe Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. 740 10
Of 30,444 larynges from fattened cattle at three companies, 3,985 (13.1%) had contact ulcers or ulcer scars in the mucous membranes over the vocal processes and medial angles of the arytenoid cartilages. The incidence was higher in cattle fed during fall than in cattle fed during other seasons. We hypothesize: 1. that some feedlot cattle develop acute mucositis from mixed infections with species of Pasteurella, Haemophilus,
Mycoplasma
, and viruses in the nose, pharynx, and larynx; 2. that reflex
coughing
and swallowing accelerate the rate of larynx closure; and 3. that the closures erode the swollen membrane over the vocal processes and medial angles of the arytenoid cartilages and thus produce primary contact ulcers.
...
PMID:Laryngeal contact ulcers in feedlot cattle. 742 26
We studied methacholine bronchial inhalation challenge in 12 patients at 4th week and 12th week after recovered from Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia, compared with 12 healthy subjects as controls. The aerosolized methacholine was produced by an atomized nebulizer of the Provocationtest I, Pari-Starnberg, Germany and the aerosol was kept into a reservoir bag. Then, it was inhaled slowly by a subject. Increasing concentration of methacholine solutions (0, 0.5, 1, 5, 10, and 25 mg/ml) were used. The results revealed that 67% of the patients had bronchial reactivity to methacholine at the first time of challenge with a mean concentration of methacholine producing a fall in FEV1 of 20% from baseline (PC20) of 12.3 +/- 6.44 mg/ml. Fifty percent of the patients were still positive to the test on the second time of challenge with a mean PC20 of 20.1 +/- 6.89 mg/ml. None of the healthy subjects had bronchial hyperreactivity (PC20 > 25 mg/ml). Two patients experienced wheezing and asthmatic attacks requiring bronchodilator therapy during acute phase pneumonia. They were also diagnosed as having bronchial asthma for the first time. Many patients had prolonged
coughing
during the recovery phase lasting more than 4 weeks. This prolonged
coughing
seemed to have a correlation with the development of bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR). We concluded that M. pneumoniae could induce BHR which may be transient or persistent. The effect of
mycoplasma
respiratory tract infection may result in airway inflammations and asthmatic attacks.
...
PMID:Methacholine inhalation challenge in patients with post-Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia. 748 45
Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia (BOOP) is increasingly recognized as an important cause of diffuse infiltrative lung disease. It is a diagnostic consideration in patients with a febrile flu-like illness of a few weeks' duration and a roentgenogram showing bilateral patchy infiltrates that are not responsive to a typical course of antibiotics. It is defined as granulated tissue plugs within lumens of small airways that extend into alveolar ducts and alveoli. Clinically, a flu-like illness,
cough
, and crackles are common. Pulmonary function studies of patients show a decreased vital capacity, normal flow rates (except in smokers), and a decreased diffusing capacity. It is generally idiopathic, but it may occur during the resolution of a viral or
mycoplasma
pneumonia. It is also associated with a variety of systemic illnesses and clinical settings. These include the connective tissue disorders, antineoplastic and other drugs, and immunological disorders, as well as bone marrow and lung transplantation. There are numerous related disorders, including human immunodeficiency virus infection, radiation therapy, thyroiditis, and alcoholic cirrhosis. In idiopathic BOOP, complete resolution occurs in 65% to 85% of patients treated with corticosteroid therapy. This type of therapy is often effective in patients with associated systemic disorders or in other clinical settings, but there may be limited or no response in patients with dermatomyositis, immunosuppression, or interstitial opacities at the lung bases. Respiratory failure leading to death may occur in 5% of patients. It is important to add BOOP to the differential diagnosis of febrile, noninfectious illnesses that are mimics of pneumonia.
...
PMID:Bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia. 756 1
A 3-yr-old girl was scheduled to undergo surgical repair of tetralogy of Fallot. She had no sign or data indicating an infectious disease, other than a slight dry
cough
for a few days prior to the proposed operation. During the induction of anesthesia with nitrous oxide, oxygen and sevoflurane, transient moist rale was noticed with a precordial stethoscope. Her trachea was intubated without any difficulty after the administration of pancuronium, followed by a chest auscultation, which revealed vesicular sound bilaterally but no rale. However, a chest X-ray taken after the right subclavian vein catheterization showed a massive hypoaeration in the upper left pulmonary region. The presence of the right-to-left intracardiac shunt made it impossible to detect the occurrence of atelectasis by a decrease in SpO2. Fiberoptic bronchoscopy showed no obstruction of the bronchus and no hypersecretion initially, but physical therapy and humidification made it possible to aspirate intratracheal sputum. Because there seemed to be an imbalance between the relatively uneventful induction of anesthesia and the relative resistance of atelectasis to authentic therapies, the operation was postponed, and the antibody to
mycoplasma
pneumoniae was titrated. The titer in the serum was 1:80, and increased to 1:560 6 days later. Chest X-rays revealed normal lung condition 3 days later, and she was given erythromycin, 800 mg.day-1 for 2 weeks. We conclude that we should be alert to possible asymptomatic
mycoplasma
infection, which potentially makes patients susceptible to atelectasis during the perioperative period.
...
PMID:[Mycoplasma pneumonia found by the occurrence of atelectasis during the induction of anesthesia in a child with tetralogy of Fallot]. 774 94
Concurrent outbreaks of illnesses that were manifested by
cough
and that were suspected to be due to Bordetella pertussis and
Mycoplasma
pneumoniae infection were investigated in a midwestern town in Illinois. Three studies were conducted: questionnaires on the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of illness were administered to patients; serological tests were performed to confirm the presence of each pathogen and to develop case definitions for each illness; and case definitions were applied to responses to a mail-in questionnaire for estimating the magnitude of both outbreaks. In 135 cases of suspected pertussis and 42 cases of suspected mycoplasmal infection, subjects had a
cough
for > or = 14 days (the pertussis outbreak case definition). Among 20 laboratory-confirmed cases, a
cough
for > or = 14 days had a specificity of 20% for pertussis, and a
cough
for > or = 28 days plus whoop and/or vomiting had a specificity of 90% for pertussis. Six hundred-seventeen pertussis cases per 100,000 population and 1,179 cases of M. pneumoniae infection per 100,000 population occurred. In this setting, the standard outbreak case definition for pertussis lacked adequate specificity to distinguish pertussis from mycoplasmal infection. The magnitude of each outbreak was greater than the number of reported cases suggested.
...
PMID:Concurrent outbreaks of pertussis and Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection: clinical and epidemiological characteristics of illnesses manifested by cough. 775 86
We report a study of 8 patients with acute
Mycoplasma
pneumoniae infection of the respiratory tract admitted to the Army Hospital Desgenettes over a 10 months period. Our clinical observations are compared with a review of the literature. We observed a seasonal outbreak in spring and autumn. This infection was encountered mainly in young people. The two most common clinical findings were
cough
and fever. Our report describes mild forms of this disease. Definitive etiological diagnosis is based on a four-fold or higher rise in titers. The macrolides or tetracyclines remain the most effective antibiotics.
...
PMID:[Mycoplasma pneumoniae respiratory infections in hospitalized patients]. 781 90
The effect of terdecamycin, a new antibiotic, was evaluated on experimentally induced
Mycoplasma
hyopneumoniae infection in pigs. Tylosin and josamycin were used as the positive control drugs. Five to 7-week-old pigs were inoculated intranasally with homogenate of pig lung lesions containing M. hyopneumoniae. In experiments 1 and 2, drugs were given in feed for 42 days, from 7 days before inoculation to 35 days after inoculation, and necropsy was carried out 35 days after inoculation. In experiment 3, drugs were given in feed for 10 days, from 3 days before inoculation to 7 days after inoculation and necropsy was carried out 28 days after inoculation. Drug efficacy was evaluated on the basis of clinical signs, lung lesions, (including percentage of gross lung lesion area), isolation of M. hyopneumoniae and growth performance data. The total number of days on which
coughing
was observed and the mean percentage of lung lesion area in pigs given feed containing terdecamycin at 50 ppm or above were lower than those in unmedicated control pigs. Average daily weight gain in terdecamycin-treated pigs was higher than that in unmedicated control pigs. Treatment with terdecamycin showed equal or better efficacy as compared with treatment with tylosin or josamycin.
...
PMID:Effect of terdecamycin on experimentally induced Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae-infection in pigs. 783 49
Lower respiratory disease is a major source of morbidity in military recruits, with hospitalization rates for pneumonia more than 30 times that of the non-recruit population. The etiologic agent remains unknown in over 75% of cases. This study prospectively examined the etiology of pneumonia among recruits at Naval Training Center, San Diego, California. Recruits presenting with
cough
, fever, or shortness of breath and pulmonary infiltrates on chest X-ray were eligible for enrollment. A standardized scoring form and focused physical exam were completed on each subject. Sputum specimens were obtained for Gram's stain and culture, DNA probing for Legionella and
Mycoplasma
species, and direct fluorescent antibody staining for Legionella. Acute and convalescent serologies were performed for adenovirus, influenza A and B,
Mycoplasma
pneumoniae, Chlamydia group, and respiratory syncytial virus. Of 110 eligible patients, 100 consented to enrollment and 75 patients completed the study. Etiologic diagnoses were obtained in 40 of the patients (53%). M. pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and viruses accounted for the majority of infections. Mixed infections were seen in six patients. Forty-seven percent of patients had no diagnosis established. Pneumonia in this series of military recruits was frequently caused by M. pneumoniae and H. influenzae. Fifty percent of cases were undiagnosed with routinely available laboratory methods. Further studies are warranted to more clearly define the etiologic agents of recruit pneumonia and the utility of prophylactic measures.
...
PMID:Pneumonia in military recruits. 787 Mar 17
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