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)

A case of pemphigus vulgaris in a six-year-old Japanese girl is presented. She first developed vesicles and ulcerations in oral and laryngeal mucous membranes, showing a hoarse voice and fits of coughing with excessive slavering. She had skin blisters six months later. Biopsy of the skin lesion demonstrated the intraepidermal blister in a suprabasal location. Direct immunofluorescence (IF) of the skin lesion revealed deposits of IgG and C3. Indirect IF showed serum anti-ICS antibody titer at 1:640. She was diagnosed as having pemphigus vulgaris. Treatment with oral prednisolone (1 mg/kg) proved effective. This is the first case of infantile pemphigus vulgaris in Japan.
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PMID:A case of pemphigus vulgaris in a six-year-old girl. 188 52

Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are a novel class of antihypertensive and anticongestive heart failure agents with wide patient and physician acceptability. By blocking the formation of angiotensin II in blood and tissue, all ACE inhibitors significantly lower systemic vascular resistance, lower blood pressure, and improve cardiac function, while maintaining or enhancing perfusion of vital organs: kidneys, brain, and heart. Captopril is the first oral ACE inhibitor with an active sulfhydryl group. Enalapril and lisinopril are potent nonsulfhydryl inhibitors of ACE characterized by weak chelating properties. The side effects of skin rashes, pruritus, taste abnormalities, oral ulcers, pemphigus, and blood dyscrasias have been considered to be strongly characteristic of penicillaminelike drugs, including the sulfhydryl ACE inhibitors. The class effects of cough, angio-edema, hyperkalemia, nonoliguric functional renal insufficiency, and hypotension can occur with equal frequency with all ACE inhibitors. It is unclear whether the many yet investigational ACE inhibitors would have distinct advantages over captopril, enalapril, lisinopril, and enalaprilat. This paper reviews the comparative structure and clinical pharmacology of the three commercially available but chemically different oral ACE inhibitors.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors: comparative structure, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. 228 12

The author's cat started to develop the signs of pemphigus foliaceus one month after he returned home after six months absence. The initial signs included dry coughing and difficulty with purring and swallowing, followed by typical changes of the skin. The cat was treated by a combination of chrysotherapy and systemic glucocorticoid injections, and remained free of clinical signs for one and a half years. The cat then relapsed and showed the initial signs except that coughing was not observed. It was treated as before but after a second relapse and the same treatment it slowly developed a general weakness and was euthanased.
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PMID:Pemphigus foliaceus in a cat. 843 Apr 84

We report two cases of intrathoracic Castleman disease presenting with paraneoplastic syndrome. Patient 1 was a 10-year-old girl with short stature. She was found to have delayed bone age, slow growth velocity, and iron-deficiency anemia, which was refractory to treatment. Thrombocytosis and hypergammaglobulinemia were later detected. Chest X-ray revealed a hilar mass. Patient 2 was a 14-year-old boy who had severe cough, progressive mucocutaneous erosion, and dermatitis. Chest X-ray showed a mediastinal mass. Sections of skin biopsy showed findings consistent with pemphigus disease. In each case, the histological diagnosis of Castleman disease was made.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic syndrome and intrathoracic Castleman disease. 1604 66

A 34-year-old woman visited the hospital suffering from enanthema of the tongue, hair loss, and nonproductive cough. Corticosteroid administration slightly resolved the enanthema and hair loss, but not the nonproductive cough. She was transferred to another hospital for the resection of a retroperitoneal mass, which was histopathologically diagnosed as unicentric, hyaline vascular type Castleman's disease. She was then referred to our hospital due to progressive dyspnea and was diagnosed as having bronchiolitis obliterans based on computed tomography scan findings and a lung function test, while paraneoplastic pemphigus was clinically considered for her enanthema. After her death from respiratory failure in spite of corticosteroid administration, autopsy confirmed constrictive bronchiolitis in the lung. Mucocutaneous lesions, clinically considered as paraneoplastic pemphigus, were histologically different from pemphigus. The constrictive bronchiolitis and other pathological findings, including nonviral chronic hepatitis and interstitial nephritis, confirmed the diagnosis of paraneoplastic autoimmune multiorgan syndrome associated with the Castleman's disease.
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PMID:An autopsy case of unicentric Castleman's disease associated with bronchiolitis obliterans. 2547 83