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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cases of otitis media in infants under 12 weeks of age were reviewed to delineate the frequency, clinical features, and etiologic agents involved. Tympanocentesis was performed in 42 infants, 0 to 5 weeks of age, and in 17, from 6 to 11 weeks of age. The most common symptoms were irritability/lethargy (69%), fever (52%),
cough
(36%), vomiting (21%), diarrhea (20%), tachypnea (20%), and
anorexia
(18%). Associated illnesses were present in 33 (54%) of the patients, the most common being pneumonia (9), bronchiolitis (7), meningitis (6), conjunctivitis (4), and omphalitis (4). No peripartum infections or severe perinatal problems were found. Common respiratory pathogens were the predominant etiologic organisms, but coliform organisms were identified in 18% of the infants under 6 weeks of age. Cultures were sterile or grew organisms of questionable pathogenicity ("nonpathogens") in 39% of specimens. Since the signs and symptoms of otitis media in children less than 12 weeks of age are nonspecific and frequently associated with other major illnesses, the physician caring for these infants needs to be more aware of this disease and the therapeutic problems it presents.
...
PMID:Otitis media in children less than 12 weeks of age. 1 93
St Christophers' Hospice near London is now internationally known as a special centre for the care of terminally ill patients. In these cases, the relief of symptoms is paramount, and prominent among those symptoms is pain. Such pain can almost always be relieved without euphoria or lessening of consciousness. More than 60% of patients admitted to St Christopher's complain of pain, and the scheme of management outlined below results in substantial or complete relief of pain in all of them. Addiction does not occur when control of the patient's pain is part of the pattern of total care. The author considers management of pain of varying severity, together with associated symptoms such as vomiting,
anorexia
, dry mouth and hiccup, dyspnoea,
cough
, anxiety and depression, insomnia, constipation and diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Drug control of common symptoms in the terminally ill patient. 6 49
Squirrel monkeys were inoculated by the intratracheal inoculation of 700 Klebsiella pneumoniae organisms and developed lobar pneumonia in about 24 h. Characteristic clinical findings were fever,
anorexia
, and
coughing
. Laboratory findings included leukocytosis or leukopenia (with the latter more prominent in ultimately fatal infections), bacteremia, and shedding of bacteria into the pharynx. Infected monkeys showed increased plasma lysozyme activity as well as increased plasma ceruloplasmin, haptoglobin and alpha1-antitrypsin. The mortality rate was 60%, and the mean time of death was 50.5 h. Pathologically, the disease spread by means of Kohn's pores and other pathways that generally did not involve airways as a means of dissemination until about 30 h. Squirrel monkeys seem to be better models for human respiratory K. pneumoniae infection than rats or mice.
...
PMID:Nonhuman primate model for the study of respiratory Klebsiella pneumoniae infection. 10 26
Twenty patients with pathologically proved non-resectable bronchogenic carcinoma were treated with 100 aerosolized BCG (Tice strain) doses in addition to conventional treatment. The procedure is based on findings that, generally BCG must be closely associated with neoplastic cells to be effective as an immunotherapeutic agent. Bronchogenic malignancy, usually of mucosal origin, is logically treated in this manner. We report here the findings and developments of 10 patients who were treated at least five times each (for a total of 81 treatments) and pertinent experience relating to these and another 10 patients treated a total of 19 times. Local and systemic reactions were frequent and consisted of fever,
cough
, dyspnea, nausea, vomiting,
anorexia
, and malaise. Four of the 20 patients (20%) had reactions with the first treatment; by the fourth treatment 6 of 6 (100%) were affected. Prednisone given prophylactically reduced the intensity and the frequency of reactions. There were no severe side effects, obvious BCG infections, or significant changes in pulmonary or liver functions or hematologic values. No patient acquired purified protein derivative sensitivity, although 3 persons converted other skin tests to positive. There was no improvement in actuarial survival time.
...
PMID:Aerosolized BCG (Tice strain) treatment of bronchogenic carcinoma: phase I study. 16 70
Intranasal and intraperitoneal exposure of English ferrets (Mustela putorius furo L) to infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus caused acute and chronic infections of the respiratory tract. The clinical syndrome was characterized by sneezing,
coughing
, and
anorexia
from postexposure days (PED) 3 to 7. Mucopurulent exudate was observed in the posterior nares and pharyngeal area of ferrets euthanatized on PED 4 and 8. The virus was readily recovered from the turbinates, respiratory tract epithelium of the pharynx, retropharyngeal lymph nodes, trachea, lungs, and spleen of animals euthanatized on PED 4, but only from the respiratory tract epithelium of the pharynx in ferrets euthanatized on PED 8 and 12. Results of histopathologic studies revealed an acute suppurative pharyngitis in animals euthanatized on PED 4 and 8. Recrudescence of chronic infection could be elicited by daily intraperitoneal injections of 4.0 mg of dexamethasone. However, daily administration of 2.0 mg of dexamethasone intraperitoneally did not cause more severe clinical disease. Results of serologic studies revealed serum antibody profiles comparable with those expected in experimentally exposed cattle.
...
PMID:Experimental infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus infections of English ferrets (Mustela putorius furo L). 21 85
Clinical signs in three young dogs with primary lung neoplasms included
cough
, weight loss and
anorexia
. Chest radiographs taken in the terminal stages of the disease showed nodular and diffuse consolidation of the lungs typical of primary neoplasms. Macroscopically the lungs were infiltrated by firm, pale tissue; similar tissue replaced the enlarged bronchial lymph nodes. In two dogs similar deposits were found also in the liver and spleen. The infiltrates were composed of atypical, polymorphous lymphoreticular cells. Invasion of pulmonary blood vessels and of bronchi and bronchioles was striking. The lesions closely resembled those of lymphomatoid granulomatosis, a rare human disease of unknown cause.
...
PMID:A lymphomatoid granulomatosis of the lungs in young dogs. 45 14
The clinical aspects of Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection in 103 children under 12 years admitted to hospital over an eight-year period were reviewed retrospectively. Respiratory illnesses occurred in 87 (85%) cases. The prevalence of lower respiratory tract involvement was similar in both pre-school and school children.
Cough
was the commonest symptom at all ages. Coryzal symptoms and wheeze were common in pre-school children. Most infants had signs of pharyngitis or otitis media. Non-specific symptoms--fever, lethargy, malaise,
anorexia
and vomiting--were common accompaniments in children older than one year of age. Non-respiratory illnesses in 16 (15%) patients included gastroenteritis, convulsions, non-specific skin rashes and limb pains. The duration of stay in hospital ranged from two to 30 days (median five days) with apparent clinical recovery and resolution of chest X-ray abnormalities within three months in 78 (76%) patients seen for review.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. A retrospective review of 103 hospitalised children. 53 6
Examined was material taken from five sheep (ewes) and two weaned lambs having naturally contracted Qu rickettsiosis. Described are the clinical symptoms of the disease and the morphologic changes. The diseased animals showed rise in temperature (39.5--40.5 degrees C),
loss of appetite
, and depression. Some of the weaned lambs manifested slight
cough
and digestive troubles. Part of the animals showed nervous symptoms--tic movements of the head and limbs. Morphologically, the liver was edematired, of lower compactness, and the spleen was enlarged, the meninges being hyperemic and peppered with pinpointed hemorrhages. Histologically, a strong diffuse activation and proliferation of the liver capillary endothelium was established along with necrobiosis of the liver epithelial cells and a diffuse leukocyte infiltration. Established was also hyperplasia of the reticular cells and the lymph follicles of the spleen and the bronchial lymph nodes. The epithelial cells of the kidney tubules were involved in vacuolar dystrophy, and in the medular section there were fibroblastic proliferations with hyperemia. Inflammatory changes in the brain were also found.
...
PMID:[Histopathology of Q rickettsiosis in sheep]. 60 54
Parasite-free pony foals (n = 10) were infected orally with 1000,000 Parascaris equorum embryonated eggs. One pony foal each was euthanatized on days 1, 3, 5, 7, 11, 16, 23, 27, 42, or 80 after infection. Foals infected for more than 7 days showed signs of
coughing
,
anorexia
, rough coat, and weight loss. Cellular changes in the blood were mild anemia, marked eosinophilia, and leukopenia. Gross postmortem lesions included hemorrhage, edema, and white-to-yellow necrotic foci (0.5 to 1.00 mm) in lungs, liver, and bronchial and hepatic lymph nodes. Microscopically, the liver was hemorrhagic and had focal necrosis and eosinophilic granulomas. Eosinophilic lymphadenitis with edema was in the hepatic and bronchial lymph nodes. The lungs had focal areas of necrosis with hemorrhage and interstitial pneumonia with hyalinization of the alveolar walls. Larvae were first seen in the liver at postinfection hour 24 and in the lungs on postinfection day (PID) 11. Average length of larvae in the liver was 1 mm and 2.5 mm in the lungs. Larvae were not found in the liver after PID 11 or in the lungs after PID 42. The migratory pathway of P equorum was similar to that of Ascaris lumbricoides because the larvae migrated via lymph and blood vessels to the liver and then to the lungs. After migrating through the lungs, the larvae were coughed up and swallowed and then developed in the small intestine.
...
PMID:Pathologic changes and pathogenesis of Parascaris equorum infection in parasite-free pony foals. 67 34
Twenty-four cases of Legionnaires' disease were diagnosed at the Wadsworth Veterans Administration Hospital during a 5-month period. All cases occurred in persons exposed to the hospital environment during the usual incubation period of Legionnaires' disease. The clinical illness was quite characteristic. All patients complained of weakness, malaise,
anorexia
, and
cough
. Rigors, diarrhea, and pleuritic pain were frequent symptoms. All patients had a maximum temperature of greater than or equal to 39.4 degrees C. Thirteen of 22 patients had relative bradycardia. Chest roentgenograms documented pneumonia in all patients. Leukocytosis, hyponatremia, hypophosphatemia, and abnormal liver-function test results were typical. Diagnosis was made by serologic criteria in 20 patients, postmortem examination of tissue in two, and both serology and tissue examination in two. Four patients in whom the disease was not suspected died of Legionnaires' disease. One patient died of unrelated causes. Fifteen of 19 survivors received erythromycin therapy. The presentation of Legionnaires' disease was characteristic enough to allow early, specific therapy.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease: clinical features of 24 cases. 68 39
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