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)

Purpose of the work was to investigate clinical-allergic peculiarities of allergic rhinitis, together with bronchial asthma in school-age children. There were studied random representative group of children, in total 3000 subjects from 6 to 17. According to the results of epidemiological research in school-age children's population, prevalence of allergic rhinitis was 13,2%. In 19,1% of cases, allergic rhinitis was accompanied with bronchial asthma and in 8% of the patients there was indicated bronchial spasm of physical load (verified as clinically, also through the test with physical load), coughing version of asthma was observed in 4,5% of children. Thus, in children with allergic rhinitis, within the structure of clinical versions (by the criteria of severity) of rare bronchial asthma prevailed (69,8%, among which 65% - intermitting form and 4,8% - persisting form), without statistically significant difference between the boys and girls. Combination of inherited predisposition to allergy with the atopic dermatitis, in the in the anamnesis of children with the increased level of general IgE in the blood serum may be considered as early diagnostic predictor of atopic phenotype as for the allergic rhinitis, also for its combination with the bronchial asthma.
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PMID:[Peculiarities of joint course of allergic rhinitis and bronchial asthma in population of school-age children]. 1670 35

A 27-year-old medical student seeking acupuncture therapy for a right levator scapular muscle spasm developed acute dyspnea, chest pain, and nonproductive cough within minutes following the treatment. The patient was later diagnosed with a 30% pneumothorax of the right lung. Pneumothorax is a well-known adverse effect of medical procedures such as central line placement, thoracocentesis and transbronchial lung biopsy. This case illustrates another iatrogenic cause of pneumothorax--acupuncture-induced pneumothorax. A review of the literature since 1985 reveals nine case reports of acupuncture-induced pneumothorax.
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PMID:Pneumothorax secondary to acupuncture therapy. 1719 31

Relatively little is known about the characteristics of patients who visit the emergency department for acute allergic reaction. The earliest symptoms are swelling of tissues, sweating, restlessness, itching, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, coughing or wheezing. Hypotension, circulatory failure and cardiac arrest may occur suddenly, often associated with bronchial spasm or laryngeal oedema. The objective of this review is to describe the child with severe acute allergic reaction in emergency department.
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PMID:[Recognizing anaphylaxis in the emergency department]. 1849 74

Authors resume the therapeutic employment of mineral waters, muds and baths in internistic syndromes or diseases. Mineral waters are used in the therapy of functional dyspepsia, gastro-oesophageal reflux, chronic primary stipsis, irritable bowel, biliary dyskinesias, mainly hypokinetic gallbladder and Oddi's sphincter, spasm, postcolecystectomy syndrome. The therapeutic effects of mineral waters are determined by their anion and cation content, the presence of undissociated salts and also by the presence of oligoelements. Additionally, the effects of a mineral waters are connected with physical constants: osmotic pressure and temperature. Many researches showed activity of the mineral waters on intestinal autonomic nerves and plexus (CIA), motility, exocrine, endocrine and paracrine digestive secretions and therapeutic properties belonging to evidence based medicine. Mud and bath therapy are effective in treatment of osteoarthritis. During and after mud-therapy effects on diencephalic-pituitary-adrenal axis were displayed, producing increase of endogenous opioids and cortisol. Clinical controlled trials showed significant improvement of symptoms as pain and stiffness. Inhalant therapy by sulphureous and salsojodic mineral waters improve symptoms as cough and escreate and functional indices as FEV1 in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The oligomineral waters are very useful in the treatment and secondary prevention of urolithiasis and of relapses of urinary stones after spontaneous expulsion, surgical treatment, stones removal by percutaneous or uretheroendoscopic treatment and lithotrypsia. Patients must drink at least 2L every day, substantially for ever. Chloruratesodic and bicarbonate mineral waters show improvement in disorders of lipidic and urate metabolism.
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PMID:[SPA treatments of diseases pertaining to internal medicine]. 2049 22

Intermittent vagus nerve stimulation can reduce the frequency of seizures in patients with refractory epilepsy. Stimulation of vagus nerve afferent fibers can also cause vocal cord dysfunction, laryngeal spasm, cough, dyspnea, nausea, and vomiting. Vagus nerve stimulation causes an increase in respiratory rate, decrease in respiratory amplitude, decrease in tidal volume, and decrease in oxygen saturation during periods of device activation. It usually does not cause an arousal, or a change in heart rate or blood pressure. Most patients have an increase in their apnea-hypopnea index (AHI). Patients with VNS can have central apneas, obstructive hypopneas, and obstructive apneas. These respiratory events can be reduced with changes in the vagus nerve stimulator operational parameters or with the use of CPAP. In summary, there are complex relationships between epilepsy and obstructive sleep apneas. In particular, patients with refractory epilepsy need assessment for undiagnosed and untreated obstructive sleep apnea before implantation of vagus nerve stimulator devices. Patients with vagus nerve stimulators often have an increase in apneic events after implantation, and these patients need screening for sleep apnea both before and after implantation.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea and respiratory complications associated with vagus nerve stimulators. 2189 79

Neonicotinoid is a recently developed insecticide with worldwide use that has been increasing. It acts as a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonist. Chloropyridinyl neonicotinoid is a subgroup of neonicotinoid, and are commercially available as imidacloprid, nitenpyram, acetamiprid, and thiacloprid. The maximum residue limits of acetamiprid for fruits and tea leaves are high in Japan, e.g. 5 ppm for grapes and 30 ppm for tea leaves. 6-chloronicotinic acid (6 CNA) is a common metabolite in animals after exposure to chloropyridinyl neonicotinoids, but has not yet been detected in human urine. 'Spot' urine samples on the first visit and after were collected from eleven patients 6-52 years-old, who visited X-clinic from August to December in 2008, within 24 hours after symptom onset with unknown origin. Urinary 6 CNA was detected in six out of the eleven patients (IC positive group), by ion chromatography and identified in twenty specimens of these six patients by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC/MS), maximum 84.8 microg/L from the first visit to the 20th visit. The sensitivity of ion chromatography for LC/MS was 45%, and the specificity was 100%. The IC positive group showed headache, general fatigue, finger tremor, and short time memory disturbance in 100%, fever (> 37.0 degrees C), cough, palpitation, chest pain, stomachache, myalgia/muscle spasm/muscle weakness in 83%, heart rate abnormality (sinus tachycardia, sinus bradycardia, or intermittent WPW syndrome) in 83%, high domestic fruits intake (> 500 g/day) in 83%, high tea beverage intake (> 500 mL/day) in 66%. Five patients who were not among the IC positive group showed < 80%, < 40%, 60%, 60%, 20%, respectively. The patients gradually recovered through supportive therapy and the restriction of fruits and tea intake within several days to two months. In conclusion, urinary 6-chloronicotinic acid, a common metabolite of chloropyridinyl neonicotinoid insecticide, was detected for the first time, from six patients with subacute nicotinic symptoms.
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PMID:[Detection of chloropyridinyl neonicotinoid insecticide metabolite 6-chloronicotinic acid in the urine: six cases with subacute nicotinic symptoms]. 2195 25

Rigid Bronchoscopy is carried out for the diagnosis and removal of the foreign body. The post operative period may have complications like laryngobronchial spasm, laryngeal oedema, in turn may require tracheostomy and later on may lead to cardiac arrest and respiratory arrest. These post operative complications can be drastically reduced by the use of nebulization with the combination of steroids, Bronchodilators and lignocaine. Combination with lignocaine nebulization reduces rates of morbidity and mortality effectively then nebulizing only steroid and bronchodilators. Lignocaine reduces the irritative cough, reactive secretion and also hence bronchospasm and also vomiting.
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PMID:Role of lignocaine nebulization in post bronchoscopy patients-A study of 200 cases. 2312 Apr 9

The commonly accepted pathophysiological changes in cough syncope include a fall in systemic blood pressure, raised intracranial pressure and cerebral ischemia. However, cases of cough syncope without hypotension have been reported in patients with the Arnold-Chiari malformation. We describe a 48-year old man with cough syncopes. Constant blood pressure monitoring revealed hypertension instead of the expected hypotension during the episodes. Attacks of loss of consciousness were associated with motor phenomena, i.e. tonic posturing and tonic spasm. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed compression and displacement of the medulla oblongata by an ectatic and elongated vertebral artery. The commonly accepted mechanism of cough syncope cannot explain the symptoms in our patient because a fall of blood pressure was lacking. Instead, a cough-induced compression of the displaced brainstem may have caused a transient dysfunction of the reticular formation.
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PMID:Cough syncope with hypertension-caused by brainstem compression? 2428 33

"The disease often begins in childhood and sometimes lasts until old age. It may follow an attack of whooping cough. One of the most striking peculiarities is the bizarre and extraordinary variety of circumstances, which at times induce a paroxysm. Among these local conditions, climate or atmosphere is most important." -William Osler, MD (1905) Asthma was familiar to various Greek and Roman authors; however, the attacks of severe wheezing were confused with dyspnea from other causes.1 By the 1900s many of the key attributes of the disease state were well described, such as spasm of the bronchial muscles, swelling of the bronchial mucous membrane, and the role of inflammation. The disease was recognized to run in families, and to be influenced by provocative stimuli such as odors, flowers, hay, and emanations from animals.2 Today, asthma continues to be recognized as a chronic inflammatory disease of the lungs, which typically presents with intermittent cough, wheezing, shortness of breath or dyspnea, and chest tightness, commonly occurring during the night and early morning. The underlying inflammation leads to airway hyperresponsiveness and obstruction with some degree of reversibility. This inflammatory reaction may result in sudden exacerbations and chronic progressive structural changes within the lung.
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PMID:Asthma-The National Surveillance Data and the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program's Expert Panel Report 3. 2512 16

Neonicotinoid insecticides are nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonists used worldwide. Their environmental health effects including neurotoxicity are of concern. We previously determined a metabolite of acetamiprid, N-desmethyl-acetamiprid in the urine of a patient, who exhibited some typical symptoms including neurological findings. We sought to investigate the association between urinary N-desmethyl-acetamiprid and the symptoms by a prevalence case-control study. Spot urine samples were collected from 35 symptomatic patients of unknown origin and 50 non-symptomatic volunteers (non-symptomatic group, NSG, 4-87 year-old). Patients with recent memory loss, finger tremor, and more than five of six symptoms (headache, general fatigue, palpitation/chest pain, abdominal pain, muscle pain/weakness/spasm, and cough) were in the typical symptomatic group (TSG, n = 19, 5-69 year-old); the rest were in the atypical symptomatic group (ASG, n = 16, 5-78 year-old). N-desmethyl-acetamiprid and six neonicotinoids in the urine were quantified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. The detection of N-desmethyl-acetamiprid was the most frequent and highest in TSG (47.4%, 6.0 ppb (frequency, maximum)), followed by in ASG (12.5%, 4.4 ppb) and in NSG (6.0%, 2.2 ppb), however acetamiprid was not detected. Thiamethoxam was detected in TSG (31.6%, 1.4 ppb), in ASG (6.3%, 1.9 ppb), but not in NSG. Nitenpyram was detected in TSG (10.5%, 1.2 ppb), in ASG (6.3%, not quantified) and in NSG (2.0%, not quantified). Clothianidin was only detected in ASG (6.3%, not quantified), and in NSG (2.0%, 1.6 ppb). Thiacloprid was detected in ASG (6.3%, 0.1 ppb). The cases in TSG with detection of N-desmethyl-acetamiprid and thiamethoxam were aged 5 to 62 years and 13 to 62 years, respectively. Detection of N-desmethyl-acetamiprid was associated with increased prevalence of the symptoms (odds ratio: 14, 95% confidence interval: 3.5-57). Urinary N-desmethyl-acetamiprid can be used as a biomarker for environmental exposure to acetamiprid. Further multi-centered clinical research in larger patients groups with more metabolites analysis is needed.
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PMID:Relationship between Urinary N-Desmethyl-Acetamiprid and Typical Symptoms including Neurological Findings: A Prevalence Case-Control Study. 2653 79


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