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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of new cases of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
has remained constant, despite the decline in new cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis. This might be due to a delay in recognition, and particularly a lack of consideration of tuberculosis when the presenting symptoms are other than respiratory.
Extrapulmonary tuberculosis
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of bone, joint, genitourinary tract and central nervous system (CNS) diseases. To determine factors that might delay recognition and identification, 62 patients having
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
during 1969-1972 at the Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center were studied.Three quarters of these patients had had CNS, skeletal or genitourinary tuberculosis in equal distribution or 25 percent each. CNS involvement was seen frequently in the disseminated form. Presenting symptoms were protean and not specific, such as fever, anorexia, weight loss,
cough
, lymphadenopathy and neurologic abnormalities. Roentgenograms of the chest were abnormal in most. When a roentgenogram of the chest suggests pulmonary tuberculosis, signs and symptoms in other body systems should suggest
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. If no abnormalities are seen on a roentgenogram of the chest, however, this does not preclude the diagnosis of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. Neither does a negative tuberculin skin test exclude the condition. Abnormal laboratory findings are common, especially in disseminated tuberculosis. These include various anemias, bone marrow disorders, hyponatremia due to inappropriate antidiuretic hormone syndrome. Analyses of pleural, peritoneal, pericardial and joint fluid usually show an exudate high in lymphocytes and occasionally low in glucose. Similar findings are seen in spinal fluid. The histological features of caseous or noncaseous granulomas are suggestive of but not specific for tuberculosis. Only culture of mycobacteria from sputum, urine, spinal fluid, pleural and other effusions and tissue biopsy specimens will yield a definitive diagnosis. Physicians must have a high index of suspicion to diagnose
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, as it can resemble any disease in any organ system. Immediate therapy in the disseminated variety, sometimes even before a definite diagnosis can be made, may be lifesaving.
...
PMID:The spectrum of extrapulmonary tuberculosis. 85 17
A retrospective study was conducted at the Childrens Hospital Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, FL, to evaluate the natural history of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in nine children with vertically acquired human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. The patients' ages ranged from 6 months to 7 years (median age, 42 months). Common presenting symptoms included prolonged fever,
cough
and anorexia. Only one patient had a positive tuberculin test. Five patients evidenced only pulmonary disease, three patients had pulmonary and extrapulmonary disease and one patient developed
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(mastoiditis) and pulmonary interstitial disease that could not be attributed to mycobacterial infection because of lack of information. Organisms isolated before January, 1989, were susceptible to isoniazid and rifampin whereas isolates from three patients cultured after that time were resistant to multiple antituberculosis drugs. The median survival time after M. tuberculosis diagnosis for all children was 20 months. Our study suggests that children with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection who have tuberculosis have an increased risk for extrapulmonary disease. A high index of suspicion for the diagnosis of M. tuberculosis should be maintained in human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected children with prolonged fever and respiratory symptoms. In areas of high endemicity of multidrug-resistant organisms, therapy with a broader panel of drugs may need to be instituted until susceptibility testing becomes available.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium tuberculosis in children with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection. 145 38
In our experience tuberculin skin anergy (negative response to 10 TU Mantoux) occurs in 8% of patients with tuberculosis. In this study we compare 81 patients with skin anergy and proven tuberculosis with a background reactive population of patients with tuberculosis. Patients with skin anergy and tuberculosis were older and had fewer symptoms--less
cough
, less sputum production, less haemoptysis, less malaise, less chest pain--than patients with skin reactivity. There was no difference with respect to male/female ratio, marital status, smoking habits, coexistent major illness, prescribed medications at diagnosis, nor the proportion of patients with
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, previous history of BCG vaccination or past history of tuberculosis. Comparison of chest radiographs showed more advanced, more bilateral and more miliary disease in the anergic patients. Pyrexia and elevated ESR at diagnosis were also more common in this group. Fewer of the anergic group of patients were consistently culture negative after 1 month's treatment compared to the background population. Mortality was higher in the anergic group, but this excess mortality occurred from causes other than tuberculosis. Repeat Mantoux testing was performed in 20 of the 81 anergic patients, after a minimum of 3 months of antituberculous chemotherapy, and 14 had become tuberculin positive, suggesting that tuberculin skin anergy may be a temporary phenomenon.
...
PMID:Skin anergy and tuberculosis. 147 Jul 4
Tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are two important linked public health problems in the world of today. Tuberculosis in HIV infected patients is frequently atypical in its clinical and radiological findings and commonly has an extrapulmonary dissemination. Atypical mycobacteriosis have also been reported in patients with HIV infection. We review here all the patients admitted from 1986 to 1991 with definitive diagnosis of tuberculosis and HIV infection at the National Institute of Respiratory Diseases in Mexico City. Out of 220 patients with HIV infection and pulmonary complications, 19 had proven tuberculosis. Their mean age was 34 +/- 8 years and seven were homosexual males. In 16 patients (84%), respiratory symptoms (
cough
with sputum) and fever were the first manifestations of the HIV infection. Only two patients had the typical cavitary lesions but also coexisting with miliary tuberculosis. The rest had several types of non cavitated pulmonary opacities or other thoracic or pleural alterations. Eleven patients (58%) had, in addition,
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. Mycobacterium tuberculosis was cultured in 11 of 12 patients but no atypical mycobacteria were isolated. Only seven of the 19 patients completed at least six months of treatment and two of them relapsed. Three patients died in their first admission; the rest were lost in the follow up. Our results show that the clinical features of tuberculosis associated to HIV infection are similar to those described in other countries.
...
PMID:[Tuberculosis associated with HIV infection]. 789 38
In Malawi, it has been the practice for several years to obtain sputum for smear microscopy of acid-fast bacilli (AFB) from all patients with
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
(EPTB). We audited this practice, and determined in patients aged > or = 15 years (i) the proportion of EPTB patients who had sputum smears examined, (ii) the number of sputum smears examined per patient, and (iii) the proportion of patients with EPTB who had sputum samples smear positive for AFB. Forty-one hospitals (3 central, 22 district and 16 mission) performing smear microscopy and registering EPTB patients were visited in 1998 and 1999, and a retrospective and prospective study was carried out using TB registers and laboratory sputum registers. In the retrospective study, 1124 (69%) of the 1637 patients with EPTB had sputum smears examined; 988 (88%) of the 1124 submitted 3 sputum specimens. In the prospective study, 2026 (84%) of the 2411 patients with EPTB had sputum smears examined: 94% of the 2026 submitted 3 sputum specimens. In both studies, high rates of sputum submission were found in patients with pleural effusion, miliary TB, lymphadenopathy and pericardial effusion. In the prospective study, only 34 (1.7%) EPTB patients submitting sputum were smear positive, and the proportion who were smear positive exceeded 3% only in patients with lymphadenopathy, miliary TB and TB meningitis. As a result of this study, the Malawi TB Control Programme has changed its policy, and now only insists on sputum-smear examination if patients with EPTB have a
cough
for > 3 weeks. These policy changes will be audited by further operational research.
...
PMID:Sputum-smear examination in patients with extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Malawi. 1112 42
A female term neonate with congenital tuberculosis presented with clinical manifestations of
cough
, respiratory distress and bilateral reticulonodular infiltration on chest radiograph. Her Indonesian mother had
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. The neonate's tuberculosis symptoms were characterized by multi-organ involvement including lung, liver, gall bladder and kidneys, suggesting a spreading hematogenous transmission. Pathology of the liver biopsy revealed scattered miliary granuloma. After anti-tuberculosis treatment, significant improvement was seen on chest radiogram and in her clinical condition. Congenital tuberculosis should be suspected in infants who are unresponsive to empirical antibiotics. Transcutaneous liver biopsy may help confirm its prenatal origin.
...
PMID:Congenital tuberculosis proven by percutaneous liver biopsy: report of a case. 1244 8
There is little information on a country-wide basis in sub-Saharan Africa about how the diagnosis of
extra-pulmonary tuberculosis
(EPTB) is made. A country-wide cross-sectional study was carried out in 40 non-private hospitals in Malawi which register and treat (TB) patients in order to assess diagnostic practices in adults registered with EPTB. All patients aged 15 years and above in hospital on treatment for EPTB were reviewed usingTB registers, case note files and clinical assessment. There were 244 patients, 132 men and 112 women whose mean age was 36 years. In 138 (57%) patients, all appropriate procedures and investigations, commensurate with hospital resources, had been carried out. Of 171 EPTB patients with
cough
for 3 weeks or longer, 138 (81%) submitted sputum specimens for smear microscopy of acid-fast bacilli (AFB). A confirmed diagnosis ofTB was made in 15 (6%) patients based on finding AFB or caseating granulomas in specimens. In 157 (64%) patients, the diagnosis of EPTB was considered to be correct. In 46 (19%) patients the diagnosis was considered to be TB, although different from the type of EPTB with which the patient was registered. In 39 (16%) patients an alternative non-TB diagnosis was made and in two (1%) patients it was not possible to make a decision. Diagnostic practices need to be improved, and ways of doing this are discussed.
...
PMID:The diagnosis of extrapulmonary tuberculosis in Malawi. 1462 Apr 44
In this retrospective study, we investigated 263 foreign patients who were diagnosed as having tuberculosis at the National Tuberculosis Center (NTBC) from January 2001 to December 2002. The age range was 14-72 years, with a mean of 33.3 +/- 9.95 years. The study subjects were predominantly males (60%) and females comprised 40%, where the greater impact of tuberculosis was observed in the young and active ones (up to 34 years of age), than middle-age (up to 54). A significantly higher percentage of these patients were from the Southeast Asian countries (87%) and particularly occurred in single male (47.5%) and married female (71.4%) patients (p<0.05). We also found that tuberculosis was significantly higher in female (50.5%) and male (64%) with smoking laborers (p<0.05). Fever (70%),
cough
(90.5%) and BCG vaccination status showed a significantly higher percentage in male patients (p<0.05), whereas lymphadenopathy (22%) was found in a significantly higher percentage in females (p<0.05). Overall, pulmonary disease (94.3%) occurred more commonly in males and the pleura (3.2%) was the most common site of disseminated tuberculosis. By contrast, the lymph node (11.4%) and miliary (4.8%) forms were the more common
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
in females. More males had higher percentage of treatment completed at > or = 6 (38%) and > or = 9 (13.3%) months in pulmonary tuberculosis, whilst, more females showed higher percentage of treatment completed (8.7%) in
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
. Surprisingly, more women showed non-compliance to the anti-tubercular therapy than their counterpart in this study.
...
PMID:Clinical analysis of foreign-born patients with tuberculosis found in Malaysia. 1612 44
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.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis in HIV/AIDS patients: a Malaysian experience. 1629 50
Although the overall incidence of tuberculosis has been declining in the United States, it remains an important public health concern, particularly among immigrants, homeless persons, and persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Patients who present with symptoms of active tuberculosis (e.g.,
cough
, weight loss, or malaise with known exposure to the disease) should be evaluated. Three induced sputum samples for acid-fast bacillus smear and culture should be obtained from patients with findings of tuberculosis or suspicion for active disease. If the patient has manifestations of
extrapulmonary tuberculosis
, smears and cultures should be obtained from these sites. Most patients with active tuberculosis should be treated initially with isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol for eight weeks, followed by 18 weeks of treatment with isoniazid and rifampin if needed. Repeat cultures should be performed after the initial eight-week treatment.
...
PMID:Management of active tuberculosis. 1688 21
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