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)

In the first phase of a two-phase cross-sectional survey conducted in Oslo from 1972 to 1974 a questionnaire was mailed to a random sample of 19998 persons aged 15 to 70 years. Information was received from 88.7% of those alive in the sample. The completion rate for each of 11 questions on respiratory symptoms in the mail questionaire varied between 94 and 98%. The crude prevalence rates of the symptoms cough in the morning, breathlessness climbing two flights of stairs and wheezing were 24%, 11% and 17%. Only 27% of the men and 46% of the women in the survey population were non-smokers. Among non-smokers, phlegm was reported more fequently by men, irrespectively of age, whereas breathlessness was reported more often by women than by men. In both sexes of non-smokers, a linear increase in prevalence of symptoms with age was observed for breathlessness, attacks of breathlessness, and coughing in the morning and during the day. The prevalence of respiratory symptoms was closely related to the amount smoked.
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PMID:Prevalence of respiratory symptoms in the city of Oslo. 31 74

This double-blind parallel trial evaluated the efficacy of cloprednol, a new synthetic glucocorticoid, in 40 patients with asthma. Patients kept daily records of wheezing, chest tightness, shortness of breath and cough. Analysis of these records showed cloprednol to be statistically significantly better than placebo for the relief of these symptoms (p values ranged from less than 0.01 to less than 0.0001). Weekly physician evaluations of asthma severity, symptoms since last visit and number of asthma attacks also showed a significant drug effect in favor of cloprednol. These subjective findings were confirmed by objective pulmonary function tests (FEV1.0, FVC and PEFR). There was a statistically significant difference favoring cloprednol for all the pulmonary function measurements. Previous studies have suggested that at equipotent anti-inflammatory doses cloprednol is less suppressive of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function. Although plasma cortisol levels were not measured in this trial, none of the patients manifested clinically important side effects which required termination of their participation in the study.
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PMID:Comparative study of cloprednol versus placebo in asthma. 35 97

Intranasal administration of a 4% solution of cromolyn sodium for the treatment of ragweed hay fever was tested in an 8-week double-blind matched-pair study involving 66 patients. Patients on active drug received 5.2 mg into each nostril 6 times daily; control patients received a placebo spray. The treated group showed a significant reduction in mouth breathing (p less than 0.001), stuffy nose (p less than 0.002), runny nose (p less than 0.003), and postnasal drip (p less than 0.035). Patients receiving the active drug also reported fewer sneezing episodes (p less than 0.003) and nose blowing episodes (p less than 0.015). One patient using cromolyn solution developed nasal ulceration, tongue swelling, coughing, and wheezing. Other side effects were minimal and occurred with equal frequency in both groups. In the treated group relief of symptoms was most marked in patients with high preseasonal levels of IgE ragweed antibody. Intranasal 4% cromolyn solution appears to be an effective drug for the treatment of ragweed hay fever; measurement of the preseasonal level of IgE ragweed antibody is a useful screening test to identify patients most likely to achieve a maximal beneficial response to treatment.
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PMID:Preseasonal IgE ragweed antibody level as a predictor of response to therapy of ragweed hay fever with intranasal cromolyn sodium solution. 40

Art glassblowing is a profession bringing the lung in close contact with many potential hazards. Forty-seven art glassblowers with a mean age of 34.5 years answered a questionnaire and had pulmonary function studies performed. While this was generally a young, healthy population, 21% had "usual cough" and 31% had wheezing. Pulmonary functions were most often normal. However, using multiple linear regression analysis, the functions associated with volume, VC and FEV1 showed a significant drop with increase in the total lifetime hours exposed to glassblowing. Both the presence of a cough and the production of phlegm were related to hours of exposure. Thus it seems there may be some unknown toxic effect of art glassblowing which in the future may prove to be hazardous to health.
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PMID:Pulmonary abnormalities in art glassblowers. 46 14

In this retrospective study of 115 cases of histoplasmids, there were 66 male and 49 female patients ranging in age from 2 months to 79 years. The most common presenting symptoms were cough, chest pain, wheezing, weight loss, hemoptysis, and shortness of breath. Thirty-five patients (30%) were asymptomatic. Two patients had manifestations of obstruction of the superior vena cava. Radiologic findings simulated carcinoma, tuberculosis, pneumonia, and viral infections. Sixty-five patients had various operative proceudres, such as lung biopsy, wedge resection, lobectomy, pneumonectomy, resection of lymph node, and bypass of superior vena cava, for diagnosis and treatment. There were two deaths and two postoperative complications. A total of 15 patients received intravenous amphotericin B. Four patients with pneumonic infiltrates developed disseminated histoplasmosis.
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PMID:Histoplasmosis: clinical manifestations and surgical management. 47 35

Children six months to four years of age are at greatest risk for aspiration of foreign bodies. A history of coughing after contact with small objects is the most important clue. The clinical presentation varies from paroxysms of choking and coughing to chronic cough or wheezing. Chest radiographs are normal in up to one-half of the children. The location and size of the foreign body determine the urgency and selection of therapy. Prevention and a high index of suspicion will decrease morbidity.
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PMID:Aspirated foreign bodies in children. 47 60

Sixty-eight steroid-independent children, whose asthma was poorly controlled by bronchodilators and other anti-asthmatic drugs, were treated for six weeks with 200 to 400 mcg per day of beclomethasone dipropionate aerosol. Symptoms of wheezing, blockage, and cough, reported by the children in a daily diary, improved in 80% of cases. Use of other anti-asthmatic medications, which the children were free to modify as they wished, decreased. Objective measurements of pulmonary function, VC, FEV1, and FEV%, evaluated by weekly spirometry, also improved in almost 80% of cases. The dosages used here had no effect on early morning plasma cortisol levels and none of the children developed signs of oral candidiasis.
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PMID:Beclomethasone dipropionate aerosol in the treatment of asthma in steroid-independent children. 49 46

Seven well volunteers and three patients with a naturally occurring influenza A/USSR/77 (H1N1)-like infection were given amantadine by small-particle aerosol with a Collison generator modified for this purpose. Inhalation periods for the volunteers were increased on consecutive weekends from 15 min to 1 h, 4 h, 9 h, and 2 consecutive days of 6 h each. The particle size was 1.2-micrometer mass median diameter, and the concentration of inhaled aerosol ranged from 47 to 75 microgram/liter. Estimates of retained doses in 9 h were 74 to 149 mg. About two-thirds of the dose was recovered in the urine. Pulmonary function studies did not vary significantly from base-line values and were within a normal range for five of seven volunteers. Two volunteers with a moderate reduction in mid-maximal flow before exposure had a total of three episodes of coughing and wheezing associated with moderate reductions in mid-maximal flow values. These episodes cleared spontaneously or improved promptly after isoproterenol therapy. The patients with influenza tolerated the treatment well and recovered promptly.
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PMID:Amantadine aerosol in humans. 52 96

Classical symptoms and signs common to most pulmonary diseases, such as dyspnea, cough, chest pain and cyanosis, are reviewed to assess their significance for diagnosis and evaluation of the degree of impairment in acute respiratory failure. While frequently useful for diagnosis, they are often inadequate to determine the degree of emergency. In each particular etiology other information is needed to obtain an objective and quantitative assessment. Two examples selected for their frequency are considered: barbiturate intoxication and severe exacerbations of asthma. The severity of barbiturate poisoning can be assessed clinically in the light of the degree of central nervous depression. Classical signs and wheezing are poorly correlated with the intensity of acute asthmatic attacks, but high-risk patients can be identified by seeking neglected physical findings such as pulsus paradoxus and sternomastoid muscle contraction. In many other pulmonary emergencies further studies are required to assess the usefulness of various clinical signs as objective indices of the severity of respiratory impairment.
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PMID:[Various aspects of respiratory emergencies in non-hospital practice]. 53 46

A study of respiratory symptoms in 6918 schoolchildren aged 6-10 years was carried out in 1975, in 7 French areas having different pollution levels. The proportion of children with respiratory symptoms (cough and/or wheezing), dyspnoea, colds and colds "going to the chest" was higher in Paris than in the other areas. The frequency was related to age, allergy and some socio-economic factors. After adjustment for these factors the difference in the respiratory symptoms between those in Paris and elsewhere was still statistically significant. According to 1974 average pollution data, air was more polluted in Paris than in the other areas, particularly for black smoke.
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PMID:[Respiratory symptoms in school-age children, in 7 areas of France]. 55 16


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