Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Expiratory stenosis of the trachea and the main bronchi is caused first of all by slackening of the pars membranacea in rarer cases by
tracheomalacia
or tracheomegalia. Often it is associated with other respiratory diseases above all tracheobronchitis, emphysema and pneumosclerosis. Predominant clinical symptoms are dyspnoea, barking
cough
and attacks of suffocation. X-ray-pictures in several diameters and levels and bronchological examinations are crucial for securiting the diagnosis. Among 95 patients of all age groups 14 were operated on predominantly according to the method of NISSEN. Operation is contradicted in stages of severe emphysema with respiratory insufficiency of bilateral pulmonary tuberculosis or of chronic bronchitis. In 10 patients a good result was achieved by the operation.
...
PMID:[Surgery of expiratory stenosis of the thoracic part of the trachea and main bronchi (author's transl)]. 79 6
In a series of 2150 patients subjected to bronchoscopy 94 (4.5%) were found to have tracheobronchomalacia.
Tracheomalacia
alone was diagnosed in 21 patients (22%), tracheobronchomalacia in 59 (63%) and bronchomalacia alone in 14 (15%). Mild malacic changes were noted in 44 patients (47%), moderate in 38 (40.5%) and severe in 12 (12.5%). The main symptoms were dyspnoea (63%), chronic cough with expectoration (49%) and haemoptysis (33%), and the most frequent concurrent diseases chronic bronchitis (53%), bronchial cancer (27.5%) and pulmonary tuberculosis (19%). Bronchoscopy performed under local anaesthesia enabled the dynamics of the tracea and bronchi to be observed during spontaneous breathing and during
coughing
, and it is the best available diagnostic procedure. Histologically the number of longitudinal elastic fibres in the pars membranacea was clearly reduced throughout the whole tracheal area in one patient with
tracheomalacia
but no differences were found in the amount of collagen, mucopolysaccharides and elastin in the cartilages of trachea and bronchi. This disease seems to be associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases such as chronic bronchitis, and it apparently shares the same aetiological factors.
...
PMID:Acquired tracheobronchomalacia. 88 58
We report our recent findings on the diagnosis, incidence, appearance of the trachea at autopsy, and surgical treatment of acquired trachobronchomalacia. In the diagnosis of this disease, continuous dynamic CT scanning (1 slice/0.6 second) from inspiration to deep expiration was better than X-ray cine recording. It is difficult to observe the most collapsed airway on
coughing
using bronchofiberscopic recording, because its duration time was estimated to be 1/10 second by X-ray cine recording, whereas the findings at one instant were easily recorded by video-bronchoscopy on
coughing
. The degree of severity of this disease was classified into three groups. 1st degree 0-50% narrowing of airway caliber, 2nd degree 50-75%; and 3rd degree 75-100%. Severity of 2nd or 3rd degree was present in 542 (12.7%) of 4283 patients suffering from chest disease who underwent bronchoscopy. Seventy-two percent of patients were aged 50 to 80 years. Third degree
tracheomalacia
was found in 131 patients with an incidence of 3.1%, which increased from 2.2% at 50 years to 6.2% at 80 years. The autopsy findings of the trachea consisted of fragmentation of the tracheal cartilage and extension of the membranous portion. The pathogenesis may be varied with different types of collapse of the airway, including the saber sheath type and the crescent type. Surgical treatment consists of prevention of the airway collapse by wrapping the airway with Marlex mesh and bonding Lyodura (lyophilized dura mata) with fibrin glue, which is more reliable than the span plasty proposed by Nissen.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis, incidence, clinicopathology and surgical treatment of acquired tracheobronchomalacia]. 150 76
Although rarely considered in series of lower airway foreign bodies, endobronchial sutures can cause chronic cough or hemoptysis years after thoracic surgery. Eight endobronchial sutures were found in six patients who had undergone surgery four to 30 years prior to admission. Symptoms began two to 25 years after surgery and lasted from two to six years prior to diagnosis.
Cough
had been attributed to chronic bronchitis or bronchiectasis in five patients and to tracheal narrowing secondary to surgical repair of
tracheomalacia
in the sixth. Bronchoscopy was diagnostic in all cases. Suture removal was performed with either forceps or endoscopic suture scissors to cut the suture followed by extraction with forceps. Symptoms resolved within three days and granulation tissue by two to four weeks after suture removal. This series suggests that endobronchial suture should be considered in patients with a history (even remote) of previous thoracic surgery who present with chronic, persistent cough unresponsive to specific therapy for any underlying pulmonary disease.
...
PMID:Endobronchial suture. A foreign body causing chronic cough. 142 24
We have developed a new surgical method for repairing tracheobronchomalacia. In experiments on dogs we tried external fixation of Marlex mesh (Bard Cardiosurgery Division, Bellerica, Mass.) on the trachea. We first made models of
tracheomalacia
by making fractures or resections in intrathoracic tracheal cartilages and then made an external fixation of Marlex mesh on the malacic segments of the trachea. In 11 dogs Marlex mesh was sutured onto the trachea with absorbable thread. The trachea was firmly supported after 2 to 6 months, compared with three controls in which no external fixation was made. However, mucosal defects associated with ischemia caused by the suture developed in four of the 11. In 13 more dogs Marlex mesh was bonded to the trachea with fibrin glue. After 3 to 8 months the supporting strength of the trachea increased up to the level of the normal trachea. There was no evidence of inflammation or of mucosal defects. Therefore Marlex mesh was applied to a 44-year-old-man who had experienced frequent attacks of
cough
syncope. After the operation the attacks of
cough
syncope and collapsing of his airway disappeared completely.
...
PMID:Development of a new surgical procedure for repairing tracheobronchomalacia. 221 35
A 60-pack-year smoker presented with
cough
, dyspnea and orthopnea of three months' duration. Spirometry revealed severe reduction in maximal expiratory flow; CT of the chest and bronchoscopy demonstrated expiratory collapse of a mid-tracheal segment, and a presumptive diagnosis of
tracheomalacia
was made. A right lateral thoracotomy was performed to resect the unstable segment and improve maximal expiratory flow. Diffuse major airway disease with absence of cartilaginous rings from the thoracic inlet to the mainstem bronchi was encountered. The trachea and mainstem bronchi were stented externally. A high resistance to airflow and absence of expiratory flow limitation were present, suggesting a fixed rather than variable intrathoracic obstruction of major airways. This case illustrates some potential pitfalls in preoperative assessment of patients with
tracheomalacia
. Recordings of airway pressure and flow during mechanical ventilation are useful in distinguishing between fixed and variable intrathoracic obstruction and may complement tests of airway anatomy.
...
PMID:The assessment of major airway function in a ventilator-dependent patient with tracheomalacia. 232 60
Structural tracheal stenoses have different functional effects according to degree, localization and extent of the stenosis. Further modifications are due to malacic components within the range of the stenosis or tracheal segments abutting on the stenosis. Nineteen patients with mainly cervical tracheal stenoses (12 patients) were investigated in order to examine if a functional X-ray-diagnostic procedure (X-ray-cinetracheobronchography--CTBG--of the central airways in several beam-directions during forced breathing,
cough
and Valsalva-maneuver after contrasting of the trachea and main-bronchi with powdered tantalum) yields an increase of findings in comparison with a static roentgenologic procedure (chest films p. a. and frontal; tomography) and an endoscopic examination. The judgement of the stenosis is made by measurement of the length and of the diameter compared with the normal trachea. Malacic components reveal themselves by changes of the stenosis-configuration during Valsalva-maneuver, forced breathing and strong
coughing
. In 11 of 19 patients there was evidence of a malacic stenosis-component and in 5 patients there was a mural weakness of abutting segments. In comparison with the endoscopic examination we found in 8 of 15 patients a diagnostic improvement by demonstration of unfixed stenotic compartments. Besides information about stenotic degree, configuration, localization and length, a CTBG offers the possibility of localizing and grading malacic stenotic components or of adjacent segments--provided that films are made in at least two planes. The application of CTBG in patients with tracheal stenosis is useful if there are signs of
tracheomalacia
or if the localization and the extent of the stenosis require a difficult reconstructive surgical intervention or if discrepancies between clinical aspect and stenosis-degree make it advisable to extend the field of diagnostic procedures.
...
PMID:[Comparative cinematographic, endoscopic and functional studies of the preoperative estimation of the severity of tracheal stenoses]. 275 27
Tracheomalacia
was created by removing the posterior 50% of the circumference of eight cartilage rings (5-6 cm in length) from the intrathoracic trachea in each of 12 piglets while leaving the mucosa intact. In 6 animals an autologous, free tibial periosteal graft was applied over the defect (graft group). The remaining 6 piglets served as the control group. In all animals, a silastic stent was left in the trachea for 2 weeks to prevent immediate tracheal collapse. The presence of
tracheomalacia
was assessed 6-8 weeks after surgery. At bronchoscopy total tracheal collapse during
coughing
occurred only in the controls. As the animals went from quiet breathing to
coughing
, mean intrathoracic pressure increased from 5 to 80 cm H2O in both groups, and average sagittal tracheal diameter decreased by 10% in the graft group and 71% in the controls. During
coughing
, mean resistance to airflow across the defect increased by 0.005 +/- 0.002 cm H2O/liter/min in the graft group, by 0.083 +/- 0.96 cm H2O/liter/min in the controls (P less than 0.005), and by 0.027 cm H2O/liter/min at the same tracheal level in two normal pigs. At sacrifice 12 weeks postoperatively, bone and collagenized fibrous tissue had been produced by all grafts, without evidence of stricture. This study shows that experimentally induced
tracheomalacia
can be treated successfully by the application of an autologous periosteal tibial graft, which becomes incorporated into the weakened tracheal wall.
...
PMID:Tracheomalacia: an experimental animal model for a new surgical approach. 358 29
The long-term functional results of splinting a collapsing major airway with a silastic Marlex mesh prosthesis were assessed. Six patients in whom follow-up has been longer than 4 years (mean 5.3 years) were studied. The prosthetic semirigid splints had been implanted in five children with
tracheomalacia
and one with bronchomalacia. Mean age at the time of airway splinting was 4 years (range 6 months to 8 years). At their last clinical evaluation, all six children were leading normal active lives. Three had mild respiratory symptoms not related to the splinting. The only long-term complication was a serous effusion that developed around the splint and compressed the trachea in one child 2 years postoperatively. Tracheal fluoroscopy, barium swallow, and computed tomography scans of the trachea in five patients demonstrated satisfactory tracheal caliber without airway collapse during expiration and
coughing
. Pulmonary function testing showed a mild increase in airway resistance in one child who had had a tracheostomy. These results demonstrate that the application of composite synthetic graft to a segment of a malacic airway in young patients can provide long-term relief from airway collapse without compromising airway growth.
...
PMID:Long-term functional results of prosthetic airway splinting in tracheomalacia and bronchomalacia. 381 91
The healing of tracheostomy and cuff-induced tracheal injury was followed up in 48 tracheostomized patients (44 men and 4 women). The patients were studied by means of tracheoscopy, fluoroscopy and tracheography, with a positive contrast medium. At extubation, tracheoscopy revealed 12 mild, 23 moderate and 13 severe injuries at the cuff level. Three months after extubation, the stoma had closed in 89% of the patients studied. In 85% of the patients, the side wall of the stoma was found to have collapsed inwards and in 71% scars were observed at the cuff level. No significant changes took place after the follow-up study at 3 months. At tracheography it was found that narrowing of the tracheal diameter at the stomal level was of only mild or moderate degree (i.e. 0-33%). There was not a single instance of severe stenosis. At the cuff level, a slight inward collapse of the side wall was observed in one patient, and in all the other patients the lumen was normal. Fluoroscopy did not reveal severe
tracheomalacia
in any patient. Increased mobility of the stomal scar, especially in connection with
coughing
was seen in some patients. One tracheo-innominate artery erosion and one bleeding granulation tissue at the stoma were confirmed during follow-up. Surgical trauma to the trachea at the stoma seems to be a more potent cause of subsequent narrowing of the trachea than the cuff. Even though severe injuries may also heal with few sequelae, the use of tracheostomy tubes with large, low-pressure cuffs, which have been shown to cause less damage to the trachea, is indicated.
...
PMID:Healing of lesions caused by cuffed tracheostomy tubes and their late sequelae; a follow-up study. 744 32
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>