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 disorder caused by congenital ciliary dysfunction occurs in dogs. Most of the clinical signs are directly or indirectly attributable to immotile or dyskinetic cilia and spermflagella. Due to severely impaired mucociliary clearance, a continuous mucoid nasal discharge and intermittent sneezing and coughing are typically observed during the neonatal period. Recurrent bacterial rhinosinusitis and bronchopneumonia usually start within a few weeks of birth. Hypoplastic nasal sinuses and atresia of the frontal sinuses are variable features of the disease that may be caused by neonatal colonization of these structures by specific bacteria. Bronchiectasis is an acquired lesion resulting from chronic inflammation and obstruction of airways. A secretory otitis media is caused by dysfunction of the cilia in the middle ear, and is manifested in some dogs by sclerotic tympanic bullae. Male infertility is caused by live, but immotile to hypomotile spermatozoa; however, unexplained oligospermia and azoospermia have been reported. Hydrocephalus and situs inversus are common but variable features of the disease; the genesis of these lesions has not yet been determined. The probable mode of inheritance is autosomal recessive, but dominant mutations cannot be excluded. The diagnosis can be confirmed by demonstrating the absence or near absence of nasal or tracheal mucociliary clearance and the presence of a specific ultrastructural lesion in a large percentage of cilia from multiple sites (airways, middle ear, or oviduct). The ultrastructure of sperm flagella should mirror that of the cilia. Not all dogs have ultrastructural ciliary lesions, and in these cases, results of in vitro analysis of ciliary activity may be highly suggestive, if not diagnostic. In dogs without mucociliary clearance in which structural and functional analysis of cilia are not diagnostic, confirmation of congenital ciliary dysfunction can be established only by ruling out other diseases with similar signs (e.g., congenital immunodeficiency syndromes). The clinical course in an longevity of affected dogs are highly variable. Appropriate antibiotic treatment and pulmonary physical therapy may result in prolonged survival, although cor pulmonale and reactive systemic amyloidosis are potential sequelae of chronic hypoxia and chronic bacterial infection of the airways, respectively.
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PMID:Primary ciliary dyskinesia in the dog. 164 16

A 32yr-old nonsmoking male, diagnosed as having X-linked agamma-globulinemia, presented with fever, cough with purulent sputum, a very intense back pain and a mass of 10 centimetres in lower left lobe. Diagnostic evaluation revealed a squamous cell carcinoma with very aggressive metastases at L3. Malignancies are the second leading cause of death in children and adults with congenital immunodeficiency disorders, mostly non-Hodgkin lymphomas and gastric and colon adenocarcinomas, but this is the first report of lung cancer in a patient with X-linked agammaglobulinemia. Lung cancer incidence has been reported to be higher in patients with other diseases of the lung, however, there is no clear evidence of the role of bronchiectasis in developing lung cancer. It is possible that a longer survival for patients with X-LA recently diagnosed, and an association of chronic bronchial infection, could favour the development of pulmonary neoplasm.
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PMID:X-linked agammaglobulinaemia and squamous lung cancer. 1140 38