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)

Inpatient and community-based care can be complementary in relation to the management of HIV disease. Medical records from 200 inpatients of Chikankata Hospital near Lusaka, Zambia and 200 home based patients were examined and compared for the common symptoms of presentation of HIV disease, associated opportunistic infections, and treatment protocols. Drug costs of both groups were also compared. The most common respiratory symptoms in the 2 groups are cough, chest pains, weight loss, and hemoptysis. Treatment employed for these symptoms were cortimoxazole, penicillin V, erthromycin, and tetracycline. Acetyl saliclic acid and paracetamol were used for pain relief in both groups. Gastointestinal system symptoms for both groups were diarrhea, weight loss, abdominal pain, and vomiting. Cotrimoxazole and metronidazole were used in treating diarrhea. Additional treatment protocol for the 2 patient samples included oral rehydration therapy for dehydration, antacid or bismuth subsalicylate for diarrhea and enteritis, and mycostatin for oral candidiasis. Central nervous system symptomatology included headache, dementia, neckace, and lethargy. Chloramphenicol was employed in treating bacterial meningitis. Diazepam and chlorpromazine were effective for restless patients. Genito-urinary system symptomatology for the 2 groups included dysuria, genital ulcers, hematuria, viral warts, and buboes. Antibodies were used for sexually transmitted diseases and infections. Skin symptomatology included rash and dermatitis, herpes zoster, abscess, kaposi's sarcoma, ulcers, furunculosis, and discharging anal sinus. In treating these symptoms, hospital based care and home based care were similar. Overall, it was found that hospital treatment protocols were detailed, expensive, and time consuming. Furthermore, hospital treatment for HIV positive patients is more expensive than HIV negative patients; hospital costs for 50 HIV negative patients totaled US$415.94 compared to US$1204.98 HIV positive/PTB negative patients and US$1705.62 for HIV positive/PTB positive patients. Drug cost/patient admission is increased by 469% if HIV positive. (author's modified).
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PMID:Clinical care as part of integrated AIDS management in a Zambian rural community. 248 94

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.
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PMID:Screening pulmonary tuberculosis suspects in Malawi: testing different strategies. 937 37

This retrospective study was conducted at the National Tuberculosis Center (NTBC) where 252 HIV-positive patients coexisting with tuberculosis (TB/HIV) were examined. We found that patients with pulmonary (PTB) and extrapulmonary tuberculosis (EPT) had similar mean age. A higher sex ratio between male to female (10.7:1) was observed in patients with PTB. The other characteristics of patients with pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis were not statistically different from each other. Cough (88%) and hemoptysis were the most common presenting symptoms, significantly related to patients with PTB. Lymphadenopathy (33.5%) was the most common sign in patients with EPT. The majority of patients with pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis had CD4 cell counts of less than 200 cells/mm3 (range 0-1,179 with a median of 57 cells/mm3). Lung (89%) and miliary (55.6%) forms were the most frequent disease locations in patients with PTB and EPT, respectively. A higher percentage of patients with PTB (42%) were treated successfully with short-course (6 months) therapy, whereas in patients with EPT (43%) needed a longer period (9 months) for successful treatment. Of the patients who defaulted treatment, a higher proportion (87%) had PTB. No MDR-TB or relapse cases were found in this study.
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PMID:Tuberculosis in HIV/AIDS patients: a Malaysian experience. 1629 50

The clinical study was conducted at the Out Patient Department of State TB Training and Demonstration Centre, S.R. Nagar, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India, during June 2003 to December 2004. A group of 60 patients of PTB were included in the study and were divided into two equal groups. Both the groups were on the Directly Observed Treatment Short - course chemotherapy (DOTS) regime. The test group was given DOTS + Bhringarajasava (30 ml thrice a day) and the control group was only on DOTS. The study was to evaluate whether the addition of Bhringarajasava as Naimittika Rasayana (complementary drug) is beneficial in providing faster and better relief or not. Both subjective and objective parameters were considered for the assessment of results. Among the specific symptomatology, Amsaparsabitapah (pain in costal and scapular region), Kasa (cough), Jwara (pyrexia), Swasa (dyspnoea) and Bhaktadwesha (anorexia) were the symptoms manifested by all the patients. Results of the present study indicate that better, safer, and faster relief provided by the addition of Bhringarajasava to DOTS. This is an effort to utilize drugs from the vast Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia as safe adjuvant to DOTS regime so that toxicity and associated side effects of the DOTS can be ameliorated. This process of using therapies from two disparate systems of medicine could potentially lead to further enhancements in the field of complementary medicine and create a symbiosis between the different systems, which may lead to Rasayana DOTS (R-DOTS) in future.
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PMID:Clinical efficacy of Bhringarajasava as Naimittika Rasayana in Rajayakshma with special reference to pulmonary tuberculosis. 2372 70