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)

Thirty five cases of tuberculosis of bronchial endometrium proved by bronchoscopy and biopsy were reported. More than half of them are young patients below 35 years old. Chief complaints are cough and chest pain. 38.5% of them had atelectasis revealed by x-ray. Granuloma, congestion edema and narrowing of the lumen of the bronchi were characteristic features under the bronchoscopy, 29% of them were misdiagnosed as bronchogenic carcinoma before the bronchoscopy; therefore, the procedure is important in the diagnosis of tuberculosis of endometrium of bronchi.
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PMID:[Characteristics of endobronchial tuberculosis under fiberbronchoscopy]. 263 50

This study reviews the results of five clinical studies dealing with farmer's lung (FL). The total number of patients included was 107, with a mean age of 49 years. All patients were farmers with dairy cattle. The clinical symptoms, auscultatory findings, chest radiography, laboratory data, partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood at rest (PaO2), dynamic spirometry (FVC and FEV1) and lung diffusing capacity of carbon monoxide (DLco) were recorded at the first visit to the hospital and one, three, six and twelve months later during the follow-up and every six months after that. Half of the patients with FL reported insidious onset of the disease, and 28% reported acute onset. Dyspnoea was reported by all patients, coughing was almost as common. A considerable proportion of the patients reported muscle and joint pains. Diffuse opacities were detected in the chest radiograms of 99 patients (93%): the more severe the radiological change, the more impaired the DLco value. A normal chest radiogram was seen in eight of the 107 patients at the first evaluation. Half of the patients showed a restrictive type of impairment of ventilatory function at the first evaluation. Lung diffusing capacity was less than 80% of the predicted value in 89% of the patients. Ninety-nine patients were initially challenged with histamine and twenty-two of them (22%) showed increased bronchial responsiveness. Bronchial hyper-reactivity was transient in most of the patients and might also fluctuate with exacerbation of FL symptoms. Specimens of the airway epithelium of FL patients were taken by rigid bronchoscope from five patients for electronmicroscope studies. Extensive bronchial damage to the airway epithelium associated with the presence of spore-like fungi was observed. Aspiration biopsy of the spleen was carried out on ten FL patients during their first visit to the hospital. Granuloma-like reactions were detected in the aspiration biopsy material of five FL patients. The granulomatous changes in the spleen had disappeared when the procedure was repeated on two patients at an asymptomatic stage of the disease. Ninety-three patients were included in a follow-up study with a mean follow-up period of 18.6 months. The patients with clinically less severe disease were observed without medication. It appeared that corticosteroid medication was usually started if the DLco value was less than 65% of the predicted value. Fourteen patients with a DLco value less than 65% were observed without medication and served as a control group for those on medication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical aspects of farmer's lung: airway reactivity, treatment and prognosis. 642 96

Granuloma formation is a chronic inflammatory reaction where macrophage system and other inflammatory cells are involved. After some antigen exposure and processing, T cells, macrophages, epithelioid cells, and giant cell are activated, and granulomas are formed. Granuloma is considered as a defense mechanism against antigens, which stay in the organs without inactivation. Granulomas including fibroblasts extra-cellular matrix surround and isolate the antigens. Granulomas are classified to noninfectious granulomas and infectious granulomas. However recent studies revealed pathogenic microorganism are suspected to be a cause of granuloma in non-inflammatory diseases. Balance between pathogenic microorganisms and defense mechanisms of the host might be important in the special immunologic reaction. In some cases, it is hard to clearly classify infectious and noninfectious granulomas. Recently, Eishi et al. reported that latent infection of Propionibacterium acnes might be cause of sarcoidosis. Several hypersensitivity pneumonias are considered to be caused by exogenous microorganisms. The symposium was organized to know and clarify the new mechanisms of non-infectious granulomatous lung diseases and pathogenic microorganisms. This report is a summary of a symposium entitled "Granulomatous Diseases and Pathogenic Microorganism", organized in the 82nd Japanese Society for Tuberculosis (president Dr. Mitsunori Sakatani, M.D.). 1. Imaging of Granulomatous Lung Diseases: Masanori AKIRA (Department of Radiology, National Hospital Organization Kinki-chuo Chest Medical Center) High-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) is a useful tool in the evaluation of parenchymal changes in patients with a granulomatous lung disease. In sarcoidosis, the HRCT findings include small, well-defined nodules in relation to lymphatic roots, lymph node enlargement, and middle or upper lobe predominance. The appearances of subacute hypersensitivity pneumonitis include ill-defined centrilobular nodules, ground-glass opacity, and air trapping especially on expiratory CT scan. Those of Langerhans cell histiocytosis include bizarre thin-walled lung cysts, centrilobular nodules and upper lobe predominance. Each of granulomatous lung disease has some characteristic HRCT appearances, but they all are non-specific for diagnosis. HRCT is also useful for grading of parenchymal changes in granulomatous lung diseases. 2. Histopathology of granulomatous lung diseases with special reference to differential diagnosis of infectious disease: Tamiko TAKEMURA (Department of Pathology, Japanese Red Cross Medical Center) The lung is commonly involved by various granulomatous diseases of various etiology. It is difficult to pathologically differentiate these granuloumatous diseases to conduct appropriate therapy, because of morphological similarity of epithelioid cell granuloma, variable etiology, and difficulty of identification of causative agents. Granulomatous diseases generally are divided into infectious and non-infectious ones for treatment. Although infectious granulomas usually reveal necrosis and abscess, non-infectious ones occasionally also reveal necrosis. In cases with granulomas in the lung, it is necessary to explore the etiologic agents including environmental ones. 3. Sarcoidosis and Propionibacterium acnes: Yoshinobu EISHI (Department of Pathology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University) P. acnes can cause latent infection in peripheral lung tissue and the mediastinal lymph nodes and persist intracellularly in a cell-wall-deficient form. This dormant form of P. acnes can be activated endogenously under certain environmental conditions (hormones, stress, living habits, etc.) and proliferate in cells at the sites of latent infection. Granulomatous inflammation occurs in sarcoidosis patients with hypersensitivity to intracellular proliferation of the cell-wall-deficient bacteria, which can infect other cells or organs when spread via the lymphatic or blood streams. The timely use of antibiotics may not only kill the bacteria proliferating at the site of disease activity, but also prevent endogenous activation of P. acnes. If long term administration of antibiotics eradicates dormant forms of the bacteria persistent in organs, it may lead to complete remission of sarcoidosis. 4. Farmer's lung and thermophilic actinomycetes: Takashi MOURI (Pulmonary Division, Iwate Prefectural Kitakami Hospital), Kohei YAMAUCHI, Hiroshi INOUE (Third Department of Internal Medicine, Iwate Medical University, School of Medicine), Kazuki KONISHI (Morioka Tsunagi Onsen Hospital) Farmer's lung is caused by the allergic reaction to inhalation of thermophilic actinomycetes. Acute symptoms are chill, fever, cough and dyspnea. Fine crackles is characteristic. Pathologically, alveolitis with lymphocytes infiltration and epithelioid cell granuloma and Masson's body are characteristics. Bronchoalveolar lavage analysis shows elevated lymphocytes and diverse CD4/8 ratio (high in average). Isolation from the environment improves the symptoms. Sometimes patients need steroid therapy, 0.5 to 1.0 mg/kg of predonisolone. Pulse therapy can be applied for severe cases. SLX analogue can prevent lymphocytes infiltration and granuloma formation in mice model. Some of acute farmer's lung show poor long term prognosis, showing emphysematous, fine granular or small nodules in chest CT. These chronic farmer's lung might be diagnosed as IIPs. 5. Hot tub lung: Takashi OGURA (Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center) Hot Tub Lung (HTL) is a disorder caused by exposure to Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) organisms contaminating hot tub water. Whether this disease represents true infection or hypersensitivity pneumonitis is contoroversial. Recent reports support the theory that this disease represents a hypersensitivity pneumonitis rather than infection. The physicians should suspect a hypersensitivity pneumonitis reaction to MAC in the investigation of patients with hypersensitivity pneumonitis of unknown cause.
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PMID:[Granulomatous diseases and pathogenic microorganism]. 1832 39

Pulmonary hyalinising granulomas are rare, noninfectious fibrosclerosing lesions of the lung which can mimic metastatic disease. It was first described in literature by Engleman et al in the year 1977. Its etiology is unknown but they may be caused by an exaggerated immune response. The patient typically presents with cough, chest pain. dyspnoea or haemoptysis in association with multiple bilateral parenchymal nodules. We report the case of a 20 years old male who presented with a 12-month history of worsening dry cough. His plain chest radiograph and subsequent CT scan revealed bilateral pulmonary nodules. A CT guided biopsy of the pulmonary lesions was consistent with Pulmonary Hyalinising Granuloma [PHG].
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PMID:Pulmonary hyalinising granuloma: a rare pulmonary disorder. 2275 17

Nivolumab, a monoclonal antibody targeting the PD-1, has recently been used as a standard treatment for lung cancer, melanoma and renal cell carcinoma. We herein report the case of a patient undergoing treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who developed interstitial pneumonia which featured nivolumab-induced granuloma formation. An 82-year-old male patient with NSCLC was initially treated with radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Five years later, however, he developed metastatic carcinoma in a hilar lymph node accompanied by ground glass opacity (GGO), suggesting tumor cell invasion. Treatment with nivolumab was initiated. At 21 days after the first dose of nivolumab, he complained of cough and dyspnea. Chest computed tomography scans demonstrated tumor progression and newly formed GGO in the area surrounding the primary tumor. Fibrosing active alveolitis with granuloma formation and organizing pneumonia findings were observed in the pathological examination of a transbronchial lung biopsy (TBLB) specimen. No malignant cells were found in TBLB. A bacteriological analysis of cultures, a PCR, and special staining did not reveal any infections. The patient's pneumonitis improved after treatment with systemic corticosteroids. Granuloma-forming interstitial pneumonia may be a feature of nivolumab-associated pneumonitis.
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PMID:Granuloma-forming interstitial pneumonia induced by nivolumab: a possible immune-related adverse event of the lung. 3114 87