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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the role of adults in the transmission of pertussis during an epidemic, persons presenting with unexplained
cough
to ambulatory care clinics were evaluated for evidence of pertussis infection. Nasopharyngeal specimens for culture and serum samples for IgG and IgA antibodies to filamentous hemagglutinin and pertussis toxin antigens of
Bordetella
pertussis were obtained. Thirty-eight adults were enrolled in the study; 10 (26%) had serologic evidence of B. pertussis infection. Clinical findings were not significantly different among persons with and without evidence of pertussis infection. Pertussis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of persistent cough in all age groups. Future use of new acellular pertussis vaccines in adults may substantially impact the control of the infection.
...
PMID:Pertussis infection among adults during the 1993 outbreak in Chicago. 776 11
Whooping cough
can be caused by either
Bordetella
pertussis or
Bordetella
parapertussis. Although the two species share an almost complete DNA identity,
Bordetella
parapertussis does not produce pertussis toxin, which is thought to be the main virulence factor of
Bordetella
pertussis. In order to elucidate the role of pertussis toxin in causing the typical symptoms of
whooping cough
, clinical information from 33 patients with culture-positive
Bordetella
parapertussis infection was collected and compared to that from 331 patients with infection caused by
Bordetella
pertussis. Isolated strains of
Bordetella
parapertussis lacked pertussis toxin expression, as was demonstrated by negative tests for histamine sensitization. This was further substantiated in vivo by a significantly lower leukocyte count in the parapertussis group as compared to the pertussis group. Frequencies of typical symptoms of
whooping cough
, such as paroxysmal
coughing
, whooping and vomiting, were almost identical in the two groups. Nocturnal
coughing
and contact anamnesis were noted more often in the
Bordetella
pertussis group. Children in the parapertussis group were significantly more often vaccinated with whole-cell pertussis vaccine than children infected with
Bordetella
pertussis. The results indicate that pertussis toxin may not play a decisive role in causing the typical symptoms of
whooping cough
, such as paroxysmal
coughing
, whooping and vomiting.
...
PMID:Role of pertussis toxin in causing symptoms of Bordetella parapertussis infection. 795 64
In conjunction with a pertussis vaccine efficacy trial in Germany, nasopharyngeal specimens were collected from May, 1992, to March, 1993, from patients with
cough
illnesses. Clinical data were obtained by initial and follow-up questionnaires.
Bordetella
parapertussis was isolated from 38 patients (mean age, 3.5 years; 68% girls). Clinical characteristics in these cases were compared with those of 76 patients (matched by age and sex) with illness caused by
Bordetella
pertussis during the same period. Findings were: (B. pertussis/B. parapertussis):
cough
> 4 weeks 57%/37% (P = 0.06); whoop 80%/59% (P = 0.07); whoop > 2 weeks 26%/18% (P = 0.05); paroxysms 90%/83% (P = 0.5); body temperature > or = 38 degrees C 9%/0% (P = 0.17); vomiting 47%/42% (P = 0.69); and mean leukocyte and lymphocyte counts 12,500/mm3 and 7600/mm3 (P < 0.0001) and 7800/mm3 and 3500/mm3 (P < 0.0001), respectively. Illness caused by B. parapertussis was typical of pertussis but less severe than that caused by B. pertussis. In contrast with B. pertussis infection, lymphocytosis is not a characteristic of B. parapertussis infection. This is most likely a result of the lack of production of lymphocytosis-promoting factor toxin by B. parapertussis.
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of illness caused by Bordetella parapertussis compared with illness caused by Bordetella pertussis. 803 48
A pertussis outbreak was studied prospectively in an elementary school with 39 pupils. All had been immunized with at least three doses of Finnish diphtheria-tetanus toxoid-pertussis vaccine. Diagnosis of pertussis was based on culture, polymerase chain reaction results, and EIA serology using filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), pertussis toxin, and 69-kDa outer membrane protein as antigens. At the first sampling, 21 children had symptoms suggestive of pertussis, and 18 were healthy. Of the latter, 8 remained healthy without any antibiotic treatment and 9 developed clinical pertussis 1-22 days later. One child developed
cough
later, but this symptom did not meet criteria for pertussis. The mean levels of IgG, IgM, and IgA antibodies to FHA were significantly higher in 8 healthy children than in 9 children who developed pertussis after the first sampling (P < .001, P = .027, and P = .011, respectively). The results show that antibodies to FHA of
Bordetella
pertussis in immunized schoolchildren correlate with protection against pertussis.
...
PMID:Antibodies to filamentous hemagglutinin of Bordetella pertussis and protection against whooping cough in schoolchildren. 807 34
Adult Sprague-Dawley rats infected intrabronchially with
Bordetella
pertussis strain 18-323 encased in agarose beads (BP-beads), developed a paroxysmal
cough
and leucocytosis, both of which peaked at around day 10. When animals were exposed to ether for 2 min after delivery of the beads, there was an enhancement of the number of subsequent
coughing
episodes. Inclusion of carrageenan in the beads also enhanced
coughing
. Control rats, given sterile beads or left untreated, showed only a low level of
coughing
or no
coughing
, depending upon their source. Rats challenged by the same route with heat-killed B. pertussis in beads, or with live organisms in suspension (without beads) showed no
cough
induction or leucocytosis. However, intranasal delivery of B. pertussis suspension gave rise to a moderate amount of
coughing
and leucocytosis. Serum IgG responses to B. pertussis antigens were greatest in rats infected with BP-beads and antibodies against both pertussis toxin and filamentous haemagglutinin were detected. Since the rat is the only conveniently accessible laboratory animal species in which B. pertussis induces an intermittent paroxysmal
cough
, as in man, it merits further study for determining the mechanisms of pathogenesis and immunity in pertussis.
...
PMID:Cough production, leucocytosis and serology of rats infected intrabronchially with Bordetella pertussis. 811 72
One hundred forty-five infants were vaccinated with 25 micrograms of pertussis toxoid (NICHD-Ptxd) at 3, 5 and 7 or at 3, 5 and 12 months of age. One month after the third vaccination all had high serum IgG and neutralizing antibodies (antitoxin) against pertussis toxin. Vaccination at 3, 5 and 12 months resulted in higher antibody titers than vaccination at 3, 5 and 7 months. Sera obtained from 109 children at 3 years of age showed a decline of antibodies, but all had detectable antibodies. Adverse reactions were confined to local redness and swelling, which exceeded 2 cm after 17% of all injections. When the children were 3 years old, a comparison was made of the incidence of clinical pertussis in 142 of the 145 vaccinated children and in 284 age-matched controls living in the same areas. Information on symptoms of pertussis was obtained from the parents during telephone interviews. None of the vaccinated children had clinical pertussis, defined as a 6-week course of paroxysmal
cough
with whooping attacks or vomiting, whereas 57 controls (20%) had experienced these symptoms. Sixteen vaccinated children were exposed to pertussis in the household. Two of them had laboratory-verified
Bordetella
pertussis infections with
cough
of 2 and 4 weeks, respectively, without whooping attacks or vomiting, whereas 14 did not develop a
cough
. The study shows that NICHD-Ptxd is immunogenic in infants and that it most likely confers a high degree of protection against pertussis.
...
PMID:Safety, immunogenicity and an open, retrospective study of efficacy of a monocomponent pertussis toxoid vaccine in infants. 817 Jul 28
Phase I strains 18-323, Tohama and L-84 of
Bordetella
pertussis produced paroxysmal
coughing
when encased in agarose beads and administered intrabronchially to adult Sprague-Dawley rats. In contrast, the Phase IV variant of strain L-84 was inactive in
cough
induction, as was strain BP 357, a transposon-insertion mutant which is deficient only in pertussis toxin (PT). Strain BPM 1809, which lacks only the heat-labile toxin, was similar to the unmodified Phase I strains for
cough
induction, indicating that this toxin is not needed to induce
coughing
. B. parapertussis also was inactive as a
cough
inducer. These results indicate that PT, present in Phase I strains of B. pertussis, and absent from Phase IV strains, strain BP 357 and B. parapertussis, is essential for the induction of paroxysmal
coughing
in this rat model of
whooping cough
. Prior injection of DTP (whole-cell) vaccine greatly reduced the incidence of
coughing
in rats challenged subsequently with Phase I B. pertussis. Serological responses were monitored after intrabronchial infection with the various bacterial strains and after vaccination and challenge. The PT-positive or -negative status of the strains in vivo was confirmed by the appropriate presence or absence of anti-PT IgG in the convalescent sera.
...
PMID:Responses to Bordetella pertussis mutant strains and to vaccination in the coughing rat model of pertussis. 817 18
Four eight-week-old cats, shown to be free from feline calicivirus, feline herpesvirus and Chlamydia psittaci were challenged with an aerosol of
Bordetella
bronchiseptica. Within five days the cats developed signs of respiratory disease, characterised by nasal discharge, sneezing, spontaneous or induced
coughing
and dry or wet rales at auscultation. These signs were present for about 10 days, after which they began to resolve. To test the protective capacity of an experimental fimbrial antigen-based subunit vaccine, 10 kittens were vaccinated twice, with two weeks between the vaccinations, and five kittens were left unvaccinated. Two weeks after the booster the 15 kittens were challenged with an aerosol of B bronchiseptica as the sole pathogen. On the day of challenge the vaccinated kittens had a mean bordetella antibody titre of 2(9.5) whereas the control cats remained seronegative (titre < 2(2)). The control cats developed signs of respiratory disease after challenge, whereas the vaccinated cats were almost completely protected. The degrees of protection against rhinitis, sneezing, spontaneous or induced
coughing
, and dry or wet rales at auscultation were 100 per cent, 95 per cent, 95 per cent and 100 per cent, respectively. Furthermore, the vaccinated kittens cleared the challenge bacteria more quickly than the controls, resulting in a reduction of 80 per cent on days 15 and 18 after challenge and a reduction of 99 per cent on days 22 and 29 after challenge. The results show that B bronchiseptica can act as a primary pathogen in cats and that a vaccine containing the fimbrial antigen induces a protective immune response.
...
PMID:Feline bordetellosis: challenge and vaccine studies. 823 48
Undifferentiated distal respiratory tract disease (nasal discharge,
cough
, pneumonia) in foals (1 to 8 months old) is a burdensome economic problem on breeding farms; yet, the infective agents associated with these episodes have not been well described. Possible causes of these episodes of illness were investigated by culturing specimens of proximal and distal airways of clinically diseased foals (n = 101), prior to any treatment, for aerobic and anaerobic bacteria and viruses (rhinoviruses, equine arteritis virus, equine herpesvirus subtype 1 [EHV-1], influenza virus, and adenovirus). Pairs of sera (n = 47) were examined for antibodies to influenza A virus, equine subtypes 1 and 2, EHV-1, and adenovirus antigens, and sera obtained from foals during acute infection were examined for antibodies (by agar gel immunodiffusion [AGID]) to equi factor antigens of Rhodococcus equi. Viruses were not isolated from the proximal (swab) or distal (bronchial lavage) airway specimens in foals, and only 2 of 47 randomly selected foals seroconverted to EHV-1. Serotiters to the other viruses were low and frequently decreasing between samples, which was compatible with maternally derived antibody. Streptococcus zooepidemicus was the predominant isolate from bronchial lavage specimens (88/101 cases), accompanied by alpha-hemolytic streptococci (8 cases),
Bordetella
bronchiseptica (13 cases), Staphylococcus epidermidis (9 cases), and other organisms in lesser frequency. Only Str zooepidemicus was recovered significantly (P < 0.05) more often in cases than in controls. The AGID test was found useful to detect foals with presumed exposure to R equi, but positive tests results did not correspond well with bacterial culture results; positive AGID results were recorded in 34% of culture-negative foals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Association of microbiologic flora with clinical, endoscopic, and pulmonary cytologic findings in foals with distal respiratory tract infection. 825 Mar 86
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the pertussis toxin promoter region was used to detect
Bordetella
pertussis infection in nasopharyngeal aspirates collected from 24 infants and children infected with pertussis and 13 adult contacts during an epidemiological study. The sensitivity of this PCR assay was approximately one bacterium, and the assay was specific for B. pertussis in tests with other
Bordetella
species and other respiratory pathogens. The pertussis case definition required a
cough
with a duration of more than 21 days for infants and children and laboratory confirmation by serology as the primary detection method for infants, children, and adults. The sensitivity of PCR and culture on Bordet-Gengou agar medium was assessed with regard to the case definitions. In the group of infants and children (index cases), the sensitivities of the culture and the PCR were 54.1% (13 of 24) and 95.8% (23 of 24), respectively. In the adult group (household contacts), the sensitivities of the two methods were 15.4% (2 of 13) and 61.5% (8 of 13), respectively. PCR combined with pertussis-specific serology appears to be a useful tool for diagnosis of pertussis especially in epidemiological studies.
...
PMID:Comparison of polymerase chain reaction, culture, and western immunoblot serology for diagnosis of Bordetella pertussis infection. 825 76
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