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)

Seven hundred sixty-five patients, living in France and suffering from allergic rhinitis (eg, with positive skin tests to various antigens), agreed to self-rate (visual analog scales), four times daily, symptoms such as sneezing, stuffy or blocked nose, runny nose, itchy nose, itchy eyes, wheeze, or cough. Despite acute symptoms, patients did not take medications of any kind by any route during 36 hours. Several statistical methods (eg, Student's t test, analysis of variance, cosinor, chi-square, etc.) were used to validate both circadian and circannual rhythms of these symptoms in the group as a whole, as well as in subgroups related to age, sex, etc. Large-amplitude circadian rhythms with early morning peak times (eg, approximately 6 AM) were validated for sneezing, stuffy nose, and runny nose (with p less than 0.0001) but not for wheeze or cough. Such time-dependent changes were related neither to age (from 10 to 80 years) nor to sex. However, small differences were observed in subgroups sorted with regard to duration of disease (old versus new cases), smoking habits, and geographic location (north versus south France). Reanalysis of data taking into account interindividual differences revealed that the respective peak times of the three major symptoms occurred in the early morning in about 60% to 70% of the patients. Annual changes were validated as well with the annual peak time being January to April. The proposed interpretation of both circadian and circannual rhythms suggests taking into account endogenous component rhythms (eg, involving metabolic, immunologic, and endocrine systems), since they contribute to time-dependent changes in the human susceptibility to antigens. In addition, the elevated severity of symptoms in the morning experienced by 60% to 70% of patients should serve as a guide to individually optimize dosing time(s) of medications, such as antihistamines.
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PMID:Circadian and circannual rhythms of allergic rhinitis: an epidemiologic study involving chronobiologic methods. 333 91

This study was initiated to assess the safety of atmospheres containing maleic anhydride. Accordingly, rats (15/sex/group), hamsters (15/sex/group), and monkeys (3/sex/group) were treated 6 hr a day 5 days a week for 6 months. Atmospheres were generated by subliming maleic anhydride and were monitored using Tenax collection columns and gas chromatography to detect total maleic; i.e., maleic anhydride plus maleic acid. The mean analytical concentrations were 0, 1.1, 3.3, and 9.8 mg/m3 of total maleic. Dose-related signs of nasal and ocular irritation were observed at each test level in all three species; signs included discharge, sneezing, gasping, and coughing. No significant treatment-related mortality was observed in any species. While reduced weight gains were observed only in mid- and high-dose rats, their terminal body weights were greater than 90% of control values. No treatment-related effects were observed in hematology, clinical chemistry, urinalysis, and pulmonary function tests. Although microscopic evaluation of tissue revealed evidence of nasal irritation in all species, there was no evidence of systemic toxicity which was directly attributed to maleic anhydride. While the results of this study support the current ACGIH TLV and OSHA PEL of 1 mg/m3 regarding systemic toxicity, continuous exposure at this level during the day may produce some signs of irritation.
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PMID:A 6-month multispecies inhalation study with maleic anhydride. 337 89

Airborne Ptychodiscus brevis toxin (PBTX), produced by Ptychodiscus brevis (Florida red tide), induces cough, rhinorrhea, watery eyes, and sneezing in normal individuals and wheezing in subjects with asthma. The mechanism of PBTX-induced contractile response has been investigated by the authors in vitro in dog and rat tissue. PBTX stimulates neuronal sodium channels, resulting in activation of autonomic cholinergic and adrenergic nerve endings in canine upper and lower airway smooth muscle and in rat vas deferens, respectively. This article concerns the investigation of the effect and mechanism of action of PBTX on human airways in order to determine the unique role of the toxin in the pathogenesis of asthma. PBTX elicited contractions of isolated human airway smooth muscle with a threshold concentration of 0.1 micrograms/ml, very similar to values obtained in canine lower airways. Pharmacologic analysis demonstrated that atropine (10(-6) mol/L) blocked the response to both PBTX and acetylcholine; tetrodotoxin (10(-7) mol/L) blocked PBTX but not acetylcholine; and verapamil (10(-5) mol/L) attenuated but neostigmine (10(-8) mol/L) potentiated the response to PBTX. Other selected blockers did not affect the PBTX response. These data indicate that PBTX produces contraction of human lower airway smooth muscle via stimulation of cholinergic nerve fiber sodium channels. The concept that PBTX triggers asthma through this mechanism is strengthened by these results.
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PMID:In vitro red tide toxin effects on human bronchial smooth muscle. 337 31

Processing of green coffee before export, as carried out in Sri Lanka, is a very dusty process. Thirty-eight workers, who were exposed to coffee dust intermittently, were studied. They developed acute symptoms referrable to the eyes, nostrils and respiratory tract. Cough (84.2%), sputum (76.3%), sneezing (73.7%), difficulty in breathing (63.2%) and running nose (55.3%) were the commonest symptoms. Of the workers 10.5% had a wheeze. These symptoms lasted only during the hours that workers were exposed to the dust, and subsided on returning home after the day's work.
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PMID:Acute symptoms in coffee workers. 339 66

Seventy-three patients with mid-dorsal and/or unilateral chest pain seen consecutively in the rheumatology clinic by a single clinician over a three-year period were studied, after exclusion of visceral disease. The majority were young women. The pain was dull and continuous, was aggravated by coughing and sneezing and relieved by rest. There was frequently tenderness over the thoracic spine (T4-5) and an adjacent rib, and pain at extremes of thoracic spinal movement in one or two directions was invariable. Cutaneous hyperaesthesia in a radicular distribution was found in 16.4%, but there were no other neurological abnormalities. This clinical picture is probably the result of a thoracic disc prolapse, though confirmation by myelography was not thought to be ethically justified. The condition settled in most of the patients following manipulative treatment and advice on back care. No patient developed spinal cord compression. It is concluded that this is a common benign condition which deserves wider recognition.
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PMID:Benign thoracic pain. 361 61

The clinical records of 100 cases of headshaking in horses were reviewed. Possible causes of the abnormal behaviour were identified in 11 animals; these included ear mite infestation, otitis interna, cranial nerve dysfunction, cervical injury, ocular disease, guttural pouch mycosis, dental periapical osteitis and suspected vasomotor rhinitis. However, in only two of these could it be shown that correction of the abnormality led to elimination of the headshaking. The additional clinical signs exhibited by the other idiopathic cases of headshaking included evidence of nasal irritation, sneezing and snorting, nasal discharge, coughing and excessive lacrimation. Many of these horses also showed a marked seasonal pattern with respect to the onset of the disease and the recurrence of signs in subsequent years. The clinical presentation of idiopathic headshakers and the seasonal incidence of the signs closely resemble allergic rhinitis in man.
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PMID:Observations on headshaking in the horse. 362 62

This study reports the results of field research on a leprosy epidemic among the Kapingamarangi people, Polynesians living in two communities on Ponape Island and Kapingamarangi Atoll in the Federated States of Micronesia. The patterns of infection in the two communities are seen to replicate in detail patterns of personal mobility by age and gender and patterns of kinship and friendship relations that order people's social interactions in the communities. These patterns of demographic and social relationship form the context of infectious contact, enabling us to differentiate between more- and less-probable means by which Hansen's disease is spread. We compare coughing and sneezing with inoculation through the frayed fibers of pandanus leaf floor mats and sleeping mats as alternative ways of spreading leprosy infection. We find that frayed mats, because they are ubiquitous in the contexts in which people interact, are more likely to spread infection than coughing and sneezing. Finally, we find that demographic patterns of the communities are not identical with genealogical relationships such that people with close genealogical relationships often do not interact on a regular basis. Thus, genealogical distance and social distance are independent of each other in this community. This makes genetic assessment of inheritance of resistance and susceptibility to Mycobacterium leprae an enterprise unencumbered by a necessarily linked demographic variable.
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PMID:Social and demographic aspects of a leprosy epidemic on a Polynesian atoll: implications of pattern. 365 62

The ethmoidal nerve innervates the nasal mucosa and constitutes the afferent limb of several upper airway protective reflexes. Protective reflexes, such as sneezing, coughing, and apnea, are those reflexes that either expel foreign substances from the respiratory tract or stop them from gaining access to the lungs. The afferents for nasal receptors are thought to be a part of the trigeminal system rather than olfactory in nature. The objective of this study was to localize the cell bodies of these ethmoidal afferents and to trace the central projections of these neurons. Horseradish peroxidase was applied to the ethmoidal nerve in 11 adult cats. Following a survival period of 48-72 hours, the animals were killed and the tissue was processed according to the tetramethylbenzidine method. Reaction product was localized in cell bodies within the trigeminal ganglion, concentrated caudal to the entrance of the ophthalmic trunk of the trigeminal nerve. Transganglionic projections to the spinal trigeminal nucleus were localized primarily in the subnucleus interpolaris and in layers I and II of the subnucleus caudalis. There was also reaction product in cell bodies within the mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus. These results are in keeping with projections of other ophthalmic division receptor afferents, such as the cornea and the supraorbital nerve.
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PMID:Central projections of the ethmoidal nerve of the cat as determined by the horseradish peroxidase tracer technique. 371 74

Nasal deposition of allergen or histamine could cause bronchoconstriction in subjects with asthma by a reflex mechanism. To investigate this possibility, six atopic subjects with stable asthma and five normal control subjects were studied by nasal-challenge testing with saline, Bermuda grass-pollen allergen, and histamine on paper disks. Challenges were done on 3 separate days by use of a double-blind, randomized trial design. Fivefold serial dilutions were used to determine threshold doses for provocation of at least a twofold increase in the postsaline nasal airway resistance. No patient developed cough or wheezing or required treatment at the end of the nasal-challenge tests, even when persistent sneezing was provoked or in the subject who had a dual nasal response to nasal challenge. In spite of changes in nasal airway resistance that generally conformed to expectations, there were no significant effects of nasal challenge on lung function, including forced expiratory flow rates, vital capacity, residual volume, and partial expiratory flow-volume curves.
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PMID:Pulmonary response to nasal-challenge testing of atopic subjects with stable asthma. 372 33

An acute upper respiratory disease was observed in two broad-breasted white (BBW) turkey primary breeder flocks. Associated clinical signs included sneezing, depression, and a deep dry cough originating from large conducting airways. Morbidity reached approximately 15-20% of the hens in an affected house. None of the turkeys died, and total feed consumption was not affected. A minimal effect upon egg production was noticed. Sera from an acutely affected flock exhibited a marked rise in titer to Bordetella avium compared with preinfection sera samples. In Case 1, B. avium was isolated in pure culture from affected birds. In Case 2, B. avium was diagnosed by serological results and clinical signs; bacteriological examination was not attempted. The findings presented here are consistent with an acute clinical outbreak of B. avium-induced turkey rhinotracheitis (turkey coryza) in BBW turkey breeder hens.
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PMID:Clinical outbreak of Bordetella avium infection in two turkey breeder flocks. 372 68


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