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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Upper respiratory and pulmonary complications of cocaine addiction have been increasingly reported in recent years, with most of the patients being intravenous addicts, users of freebase, or smokers of "crack." The toxicity of cocaine is complex and is exerted via multiple central and peripheral pathways. Recurrent snorting of cocaine may result in ischemia, necrosis, and infections of the nasal mucosa, sinuses, and adjacent structures. Pulmonary complications of cocaine toxicity include pulmonary edema, pulmonary hemorrhages, pulmonary barotrauma, foreign body granulomas, cocaine related pulmonary infection, obliterative bronchiolitis, asthma, and persistent gas-exchange abnormalities. Respiratory manifestations are nonspecific and include shortness of breath,
cough
, wheezing, hemoptysis, and chest pains. Severe respiratory difficulties have been reported in neonates of abusing mothers. In the absence of a cocaine-abuse history, it may be difficult to recognize the etiological role of cocaine, especially in the absence of needle tracks pointing to previous
intravenous drug abuse
and/or negative toxicology.
...
PMID:Respiratory complications of cocaine abuse. 158 7
We determined the prevalence of respiratory symptoms and lung dysfunction in a large sample of habitual smokers of freebase cocaine ("crack") alone and in combination with tobacco and/or marijuana. In addition, we compared these findings with those in an age- and race-matched sample of nonusers of crack who did or did not smoke tobacco and/or marijuana. A detailed respiratory and drug use questionnaire and a battery of lung function tests were administered to (1) a convenience sample of 202 habitual smokers of cocaine (cases) who denied
intravenous drug abuse
and (2) a reference sample of 99 nonusers of cocaine (control subjects). The cocaine smokers (85% black) included the following: 68 never-smokers of marijuana, of whom 43 currently smoked tobacco and 25 did not, and 134 ever-smokers of marijuana (42 current and 92 former), of whom 92 currently smoked tobacco and 42 did not. The control subjects (96% black) included the following: 69 never-smokers of marijuana, of whom 26 currently smoked tobacco and 43 did not, and 30 ever-smokers of marijuana (18 current and 12 former), of whom 21 currently smoked tobacco and 9 did not. Cases smoked an average of 6.5 g cocaine per week for a mean of 53 months. The median time of the most recent use of crack prior to study was 19 days (range less than 1 to 180 days). After controlling for the use of other smoked substances, frequent crack use was associated with: (1) a high prevalence of at least occasional occurrences of acute cardiorespiratory symptoms within 1 to 12 h after smoking cocaine (
cough
productive of black sputum [43.7%], hemoptysis [5.7%], chest pain [38.5%], usually worse with deep breathing, and cardiac palpitations [52.6%]) and (2) a mild but significant impairment in the diffusing capacity of the lung.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pulmonary status of habitual cocaine smokers. 173 5
Use of cocaine by smoking its alkaline precursor ("freebasing") has become increasingly prevalent. Recent studies of small numbers of cocaine users suggest that freebasing frequently causes
cough
, dyspnea, and abnormalities in diffusing capacity (DCO), although these findings could have been due to concomitant use of other drugs. We therefore evaluated the relationship between cocaine use by freebasing and chronic respiratory symptoms and lung dysfunction in a large sample of habitual smokers of marijuana with or without tobacco who denied
intravenous drug abuse
. The findings suggested that, among habitual marijuana smokers, "moderate" cocaine smoking damaged both large and small airways, as reflected by functional changes that were independent of concomitant marijuana use and appeared to be synergistic with the effects of tobacco. On the other hand, no adverse influence of cocaine smoking on the pulmonary microcirculation was demonstrated in our sample of freebase users.
...
PMID:Respiratory effects of cocaine "freebasing" among habitual users of marijuana with or without tobacco. 365 49
Previous data suggest that regular tobacco smoking may lead to nonspecific airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) independent of airway obstruction, possibly because of effects on bronchial inflammation or mucosal permeability. Little is known concerning the effects on AHR of other widely smoked substances besides tobacco such as marijuana or cocaine. The smoke of both marijuana and cocaine contains respiratory irritants that elicit
cough
and produce abnormalities in airway dynamics and bronchial mucosal histopathology in habitual smokers. Therefore, regular smoking of one or both of these illicit substances could cause AHR or augment the AHR associated with tobacco smoking. The present study examined the influence of habitual smoking of marijuana, cocaine, and/or tobacco on nonspecific AHR in 542 (456 male) healthy participants (mean age, 34.8 +/- 6.8 SD yr) in an ongoing cohort study of the pulmonary effects of habitual smoking of illicit substances. Subjects with a history of
intravenous drug abuse
, significant occupational exposures, asthma, or recent upper respiratory tract infection were excluded. Inhalation challenge studies were performed using solutions of diluent and methacholine chloride (1.25 to 25 mg/ml) aerosolized by a DeVilbiss no. 646 nebulizer attached to a breath-activated dosimeter inhaled by three to five inspiratory capacity breaths. Positive responses to methacholine were defined by > or = 20% or > or = 10% declines in FEV1 from the postdiluent control value after inhalation of each concentration of methacholine. Participants were categorized by smoking status (nonsmoking and smoking of marijuana, cocaine, and/or tobacco alone and in combination); most analyses were performed in men and women separately.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of smoked substance abuse on nonspecific airway hyperresponsiveness. 842 Apr 40
This study is based on a retrospective logistic regression analysis of all human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients with Staphylococcus aureus pneumonia (SAP) admitted to the Department of Infectious Diseases, Catholic University, Rome, Italy between January 1986 and December 1994. Nineteen patients with 24 episodes of SAP were enrolled in the study. A control group of 38 HIV-infected patients without pneumonia was included. The attack rate of SAP was 8.31/1000 HIV-related hospital admissions and the frequency, out of the total number of bacterial pneumonia observed in the study period, was 16% (24 of 154 patients). The large majority of SAP was community acquired. On the univariate analysis,
intravenous drug abuse
(
IVDA
) (P = 0.02), history of previous Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) (P = 0.03) and cirrhosis (P = 0.03) were significant risk factors for SAP. In addition,
IVDA
and previous PCP were independent risk factors on multivariate analysis. All patients presented with fever associated with
cough
(74%), chest pain (26%) or shortness of breath (37%). Chest X-ray documented lobar pneumonia (78%), predominantly in the lower lobes, consolidation with cavitation (11%), and interstitial-nodular infiltrates (11%). Pleural effusion was present in 31% of patients. The response to therapy was favourable in 79% of patients. Recurrence occurred in 26% and death occurred in 21% of patients. Death was significantly associated with the low level (< 50 mm-3) of circulating T CD4+ cells (P = 0.03) and the recurrence of pneumonia (P = 0.03). In conclusion, the present study indicates that S. aureus is an important aetiologic agent of bacterial pneumonia in HIV-infected patients, especially if they are drug abusers with previous PCP.
...
PMID:Predictors of Staphylococcus aureus pneumonia associated with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 898 27
Although the lungs are the portal of entry of the infection, respiratory manifestations of AIDS related cryptococcosis have not been very well studied. The lack of typical findings in clinical and roentgenographic studies and the difficulties in the interpretation of the isolation of Cryptococcus neoformans from bronchial secretions, is probably the explanation for the lack of interest on this subject. The clinical and microbiological findings of 22 HIV positive patients, who presented C. neoformans in their respiratory tract clinical samples, are presented. Seventeen were males and 5 females, their age average was 30.8 years (21-50 years) and the following risk factors for HIV infection were detected:
intravenous drug abuse
18, heterosexuals with several sexual partners two, one female prostitute and 1 homosexual man. All patients, except three, showed less than 100 CD4+ cells per microl. The following symptoms were observed: fever,
cough
, mucoid expectoration and chest ache. Roengenographic studies presented diffuse infiltrative patches in eleven cases, pulmonary cavities in three, pseudotumoral nodules in two, pneumonic infiltration in two and pleural effusion in four patients. C. neoformans was observed and/or isolated from sputum in nine patients, from bronchoalveolar lavage in seven, from lung biopsy in one and from pleural effusion in four cases. Blood cultures for C. neoformans were positive in 13 cases, urine cultures in 10 and in 11 patients C. neoformans was isolated from C.S.F. The latex agglutination tests for C. neoformans capsular polysaccharide rendered positive results in serum samples from 19 patients and from C.S.F. in 14 cases. Seven cases also presented active tuberculosis. According to these findings, it seems that the isolation of C. neoformans from bronchial secretion of HIV positive patients is a signal of disseminated cryptococcosis. It is important to isolate C. neoformans or detect its capsular antigen from other clinical samples in order to confirm the diagnosis of disseminated cryptococcosis. As observed in other studies, pleuropulmonary cryptococcosis does not present a typical clinical pattern.
...
PMID:[Respiratory cryptococcosis in HIV positive patients.]. 1847 58
Pulmonary talcosis is a rare but debilitating variant of pneumoconiosis often presenting with isolated non-specific symptoms of progressive exertional dyspnoea or
cough
. Occupational exposure to talc dust and
intravenous drug abuse
are well-recognised aetiological factors with only a few cases related to cosmetic talc exposure being reported to date. The authors report a case of a young woman in whom a mere 4 month ritual of inhaling cosmetic talcum powder led to full-blown pulmonary talcosis being diagnosed 10 years later. The importance of a taking a pertinent history relating to environmental exposures in all patients presenting with respiratory symptoms is re-established here.
...
PMID:Pulmonary talcosis 10 years after brief teenage exposure to cosmetic talcum powder. 2267 60
BACKGROUND Pneumonia is one of the most common causes of death from infectious disease in the United States (US). Although most cases of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) are secondary to bacterial infection, up to one-third of cases are secondary to viral infection, most commonly due to rhinovirus and influenza virus. Pneumonia due to herpes simplex virus (HSV) is rare, and there is limited knowledge of the pathogenesis and clinical complications. This report is of a fatal case of HSV pneumonia associated with bilateral pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum. CASE REPORT A 36-year-old homeless male Hispanic patient, who was a chronic smoker, with a history of
intravenous drug abuse
and a medical history of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, not on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), was admitted to hospital as an emergency with a seven-day history of productive purulent
cough
. The patient was admitted to the medical intensive care unit (MICU) with a diagnosis of CAP, with intubation and mechanical ventilation. Broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) was performed and was positive for HSV. The patient developed bilateral pneumothorax with pneumomediastinum, which was fatal, despite aggressive clinical management. CONCLUSIONS Pneumonia due to HSV infection is uncommon but has a high mortality. Although HSV pneumonia has been described in immunocompromised patients, further studies are required to determine the pathogenesis, early detection, identification of patients who are at risk and to determine the most effective approaches to prophylaxis and treatment for HSV pneumonia.
...
PMID:Pneumomediastinum and Pneumothorax Associated with Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) Pneumonia. 2937 4