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)
We reported a case of
Addison's disease
, caused by adrenal tuberculosis. The patient was female, seventy four years old. She complained
cough
and body weight loss. She complained
cough
from June, 1989, but her home doctor didn't take care of her symptoms. September 1989, she felt appetite loss, and easy fatigue, so her home doctor suspected her disease as pulmonary tuberculosis, so he introduced our hospital, and she admitted. When she admitted, her chest roentogenogram revealed bIII2. Sputum smear examinations were negative. Laboratory data on admission, we observed slightly eosinophilia, severe iron deficiency anemia, and accenturation of blood sedimentation rate. Immediately after admission, she complained nausea, vomiting, coldness, and powerless. On 25 days after admission, she lost her senses suddenly, and her blood pressure fell 5 days after, she fell in shock state, too. We found out her blood sugar data was 29. After blood examinations, we found out that ACTH was high, cortisole, 17-KS, 17-OHCS were low. So we thought she got acute hypoadrenocorticism. We found her abdominal CT revealed calcification in her right adrenal gland. We diagnosed her disease as
Addison's disease
caused by adrenal tuberculosis so we began to give prednisolone, 7.5 mg per day. After giving, her state made better. We thought her disease as
Addison's disease
caused by adrenal tuberculosis, revealed acute hypoadrenocorticism.
...
PMID:[A case of Addison's disease caused by adrenal tuberculosis, and revealed acute hypoadrenocorticism]. 826 25
Five cases of spontaneous rectus sheath haematomas observed during one year are reported. The female to male ratio was four to one. The age range was 26-75 years. Precipitating factors were
cough
in three patients, physical exercise in one patient, and none in one patient. In three cases there were possible predisposing factors: anticoagulant therapy,
Addison's disease
with steroid treatment and abdominal scar. The localisations were three lower right quadrant, one lower left and one upper right. In three cases correct diagnoses were made based on clinical findings, confirmed by ultrasonography and treated conservatively. In two cases the diagnosis was not suspected clinically, and by ultrasonography the haematoma was overlooked in one case, and misinterpreted as an intraperitoneal tumour in the other; both cases underwent surgery. The incidence rate was estimated to 3.5 per 100,000 per year. The frequency was approximately 0.9% in patients admitted with "acute abdomen".
...
PMID:[Spontaneous rectal hematoma]. 865 Jul 99
The report presents a definition and causes of syncope in children. Syncope differs from other states with loss of consciousness by causes leading to decreased perfusion and resultant transient cerebral dysfunction with decreased muscle tone. The most common causes of syncope noted in almost 15% of children are neurocardiogenic. This group includes vasovagal, carotid sinus reflexive, situational (
coughing
, dysphagia, micturation and defecation disturbances) and post-exercise syncope. Another group is represented by orthostatic syncope that may be triggered by primary and secondary dis-autonomy, decreased blood volume (hemorrhage, diarrhea,
Addison's disease
), some medications and substances of abuse (alcohol). An important group, accounting for 2%-6% of all cases, are cardiogenic syncope, caused mainly by congenital/acquired obstructive cardiac sub- and valvar heart defects, various cardiomyopathies, some heart tumors (e.g. myxoma), exudative pericarditis, pulmonary embolus and hypertension, congenital and acquired coronary anomalies, various significant brady-tachyarrhythmias (sick sinus syndrome, supra- and ventricular tachycardias, congenital and acquired atrio-ventricular blocks). Subclavian steal syndrome as the cause of syncope is exceptional in children. Syncope does not include loss of consciousness due to neurological and metabolic (hypoglycemia) causes, hypoxia, hyperventilation with hypocapnia or CO intoxication. Differential diagnosis should also include pseudo-syncope (hysteria). Preliminary diagnostic management should include a detailed medical history, including family history, on the frequency and circumstances of syncope, sudden deaths, a physical exam with orthostatic assessment of peripheral blood pressure and standard ECG (heart rate, intraventricular and atrioventricular conduction defects, cardiac hypertrophy, arrhythmias, L-QT, changes in ST-T). Further specialist tests depend on preliminary findings.
...
PMID:[Syncope in children and adolescents]. 1843 21
A young Marshallese woman presented with the insidious development of fever,
cough
, fatigue, profound weakness, massive weight loss, cachexia, alopecia, amenorrhea, and periumbilical hyperpigmentation. Limited laboratory studies revealed anemia, leukocytosis, and hyponatremia. Imaging studies, as well as digital photographs, transmitted over the Internet, using the secure Pacific Island Health Care Project (PIHCP), store-and-forward telemedicine system, suggested the diagnosis of disseminated tuberculosis, and antimycobacterial antibiotics were begun. Sputum cultures eventually grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Based on the constellation of clinical signs and symptoms, the transmitted images, and limited laboratory data, adrenal tuberculosis (
Addison's disease
) with adrenal insufficiency was diagnosed and corticosteroids were initiated. The patient responded dramatically This case underscores the utility of telemedicine in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with unusual conditions, rarely seen today in the United States, from remote sites in the Developing World.
...
PMID:Adrenal insufficiency secondary to tuberculosis: the value of telemedicine in the remote diagnosis of Addison's disease in Ebeye, Republic of the Marshall Islands. 1936 22