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)

Recurrent lower respiratory tract symptoms are common and disabling in childhood, but little is known of their natural history and relationship to asthma. We report a 12-month longitudinal study designed to determine the influence of atopy on respiratory symptoms and bronchial responsiveness in 7- and 8-yr-old children. A postal questionnaire inquiring into the presence of respiratory symptoms was sent to 3,698 children aged 7 and 8 yr. Those reporting either current wheeze (14.8%) or current cough in the absence of wheeze (12.8%) were randomized, and a sample was invited to attend for skin testing. The following groups of symptomatic children entered the longitudinal study: 48 atopic children with cough, 48 atopic children with wheeze, 48 nonatopic children with cough, and 48 nonatopic children with wheeze. All children recorded twice daily the best of three peak expiratory flow (PEF) measurements and completed a 10-point symptom score card, each day for 1 yr. They also recorded all treatment taken and made a note of relevant life events. Each child was seen monthly for general assessment and for measurement of methacholine bronchial responsiveness. Despite the arduous nature of the study 183 of the 192 children (95.3%) successfully completed the 12 months of observation. Symptom groups were compared with regard to FEV1, bronchial responsiveness, symptom chronicity and severity, and diurnal and day-to-day variation in PEF. Atopy was associated with a lower FEV1, increased prevalence of bronchial hyperresponsiveness, greater within-day and between-day variation in PEF, and greater severity of respiratory symptoms compared with the absence of atopy. Wheeze was associated with lower FEV1, increased prevalence of bronchial hyperresponsiveness, greater within-day and between-day variation in PEF1 and greater severity of respiratory symptoms compared with cough [corrected].
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PMID:Effect of atopy on the natural history of symptoms, peak expiratory flow, and bronchial responsiveness in 7- and 8-year-old children with cough and wheeze. A 12-month longitudinal study [published errarum appears in Am Rev Respir Dis 1992 Aug;146(2):540]. 200 88

From about 1190 to the present day opposing views have been expressed about the effects of coughing in patients with asthma. Some accounts have stated that it brought relief and others that it exacerbated asthma, whereas others thought that it could have both effects. In the present investigation, 187 patients with a clinical diagnosis of asthma were asked whether coughing relieved or exacerbated their asthma. In 41.7% coughing caused exacerbation, in 29.9% it brought relief, in 9.9% it had no effect, and in the remaining 18.7% it sometimes exacerbated their symptoms and sometimes brought relief. When asthma was exacerbated, the most common symptom induced was breathlessness, and then wheezing; chest tightness was the least frequent. When coughing brought relief it was mainly through the expectoration of sputum. However, a small proportion of patients found relief even if there was no expectoration. If coughing exacerbates asthma and persists in the face of treatment with standard medication, then treatment specifically directed at its diminution could reduce morbity considerably.
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PMID:Coughing can relieve or exacerbate symptoms in asthmatic patients. 203 40

A retrospective review of 400 Chinese children who had inhaled foreign bodies was undertaken. There has been a yearly increase in the total number of cases of airway foreign bodies removed in our hospital. Fifty-eight percent of the children presenting were from the countryside; 42% were townspeople. Approximately 90% of the patients were under 3 years of age, with the peak incidence of foreign body inhalation occurring between 1 and 2 years of age (57.8%). The male-female ratio was about 1.2:1. About 95% of the removed foreign bodies were organic in origin. The majority of the foreign bodies were found most often in the right bronchial tree (46%). A positive history of foreign body inhalation was obtained in 98% of the cases. Twenty-eight percent of the children presented at the hospital within 24 hours, 71% within 1 week, and 29% more than 1 week after inhaling the foreign body. The most common presenting symptoms of laryngotracheal foreign bodies were cough, wheezing, dyspnea, and hoarseness; those of bronchial foreign bodies were cough, wheezing, decreased air entry, and rhonchi. More than two-thirds of the children with larygotracheal foreign bodies had normal x-ray findings. The most common fluoroscopic findings in those children with bronchial foreign bodies were mediastinal shift (36.8%), obstructive emphysema (35.7%), and normal findings (35%). A total of 348 (87%) bronchial foreign bodies were removed by rigid bronchoscopy (81%), rod-lens bronchoscopy (5%), and spontaneous expulsion (1%); 52 (13%) laryngeal and tracheal foreign bodies were removed by direct laryngoscopy (12%) and tracheotomy (1%). A single endoscopic procedure successfully removed 92.5% of 400 foreign bodies detected in the airways. One child died during bronchoscopy, for a mortality rate of 0.25%.
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PMID:Inhalation of foreign bodies in Chinese children: a review of 400 cases. 204 47

Methacholine challenges were performed in ten subjects with mild asthma at 2 h before and 20 min after placebo or 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, and 160 mg of inhaled verapamil given in a single-blind randomized crossover manner on different days. While verapamil did not have a bronchodilator effect, the 10-mg dose modestly increased the concentration of methacholine required to decrease FEV1 by 20 percent (PC20). The mean (+/- SEM) increase in PC20 from baseline was 2.1 +/- 0.2 times baseline after 10 mg of verapamil, compared to 1.1 +/- 0.1 times baseline after placebo (p less than 0.001). Unexpectedly, bronchoconstriction (greater than 10 percent decrease in FEV1) associated with cough or wheezing was observed in seven of ten subjects at doses of 20 mg or more. This adverse effect was not related to the osmolarity of the nebulized solutions. Thirty minutes before a standardized exercise challenge, 13 subjects inhaled placebo, 10 mg, or the highest dose of verapamil tolerated during the methacholine study (20 to 160 mg) in a double-blind randomized crossover manner. The exercise challenge was aborted in three subjects because of bronchospasm that occurred after administration of the higher dose. The mean (+/- SEM) maximum change in FEV1 after exercise in the ten subjects completing all three regimens of treatment was -17.1 +/- 4.0 percent after placebo, -12.7 +/- 4.3 percent after 10 mg (p less than 0.05), and -6.4 +/- 3.6 percent after the highest dose (p less than 0.05). We conclude that increasing the dose of verapamil above 10 mg did not provide greater benefit but, paradoxically, induced bronchoconstriction in most of the subjects. Because of this potential bronchoconstrictor effect, high doses of oral or intravenous verapamil should be used with caution in asthmatic subjects.
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PMID:Inhaled verapamil-induced bronchoconstriction in mild asthma. 206 Mar 39

Foreign bodies can become lodged anywhere in the air passages, depending on their size, shape, and makeup. Symptoms of laryngeal foreign body inhalation can vary greatly but usually include one or more of the following: hoarseness, croupy cough, stridor, wheezing, dyspnea, cyanosis, hemoptysis, aphonia, odynophagia, or a subjective feeling of the presence of a foreign substance. Foreign body inhalation occurs most often in children and the elderly. The symptoms of bronchial foreign body inhalation are very similar to those of laryngeal foreign body inhalation. Usually, after the initial expression of acute symptoms, a period of quiescence follows during which little or no evidence of a problem is manifest. It is during this period of subtle symptoms that treatment is often mistakenly directed toward an infectious cause. The authors describe two unusual cases, one of laryngeal and one of bronchial foreign body ingestion. They also discuss their diagnosis and management.
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PMID:Airway foreign bodies: a diagnostic challenge. 206 Nov 4

The occurrence of a dry, nonproductive cough during ACE inhibitors therapy has been described in several reports. However, the mechanism of this effect is still unknown. In order to clarify whether ACE inhibitor-induced cough is a symptom of an asthmatic disturbance, six patients (age 54-68) with cough related to captopril or enalapril were rechallenged with ACE inhibitors after an adequate washout period. Baseline airway function and bronchial reactivity to metacholine were measured at the end of the washout period and on the fourth day of rechallenge which was accompanied by the reappearance of cough without wheezing. Rechallenge did not cause changes in dynamic lung function; a low and not significant (p less than 0.1) increase in metacholine dose causing a 15% and a 20% reduction in baseline FEV 1 was observed. It is concluded that cough and bronchoconstriction are likely to be mediated through different nervous pathways and that ACE inhibitor-induced cough is not a variant of asthmatic cough.
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PMID:[Bronchial reactivity and cough due to ACE inhibitors]. 207 84

Information gathered in the Zutphen Study, the Dutch contribution to the Seven Countries Study that started in the 1960s, was used for the present study. In 1960 878 men participated in the physical examination and they were followed for 25 years until 1 July 1985. During this follow-up, their morbidity status was verified regularly. With this information the occurrence of chronic non-specific lung disease (CNSLD) at a specific time was coded by one physician, using strict criteria. The CNSLD diagnosis was based on the following criteria: episodes of respiratory symptoms such as regular cough and phlegm for longer than three months or episodes of wheezing and shortness of breath reported to the survey physician, or: diagnosis of CNSLD, including chronic bronchitis or emphysema by a clinical specialist. Occupation in 1960 was coded and used to generate specific occupational exposures with a Job Exposure Matrix. Because the exact time of diagnosis of CNSLD was known, incidence densities could be calculated. For 804 men a complete set of data was available. A Poisson regression analysis was used to analyse the relationships between the incidence density and independent variables like age, calendar period, occupation and specific occupational exposures. Blue collar workers had a significantly elevated incidence density ratio (IDR) compared to white collar workers (1.82, 95% confidence limits (CL): 1.35, 2.46). Subgroups of blue collar workers, wood and paper workers, textile workers, and tailors, construction workers and transport workers had significantly elevated IDRs also. Of the specific exposures heavy metals, mineral dust and adhesives had a significantly elevated IDR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Occupational exposure and 25-year incidence rate of non-specific lung disease: the Zutphen Study. 208 26

A case of primary diffuse tracheobronchial amyloidosis in a 45-year-old woman is reported. Because of tracheal stenosis immediately beneath the vocal cords, due to amyloid deposits, she was treated with Nd-YAG laser irradiation. Immediately after treatment, symptoms such as cough, wheezing, and shortness of breath on exertion improved. Bronchoscopic Nd-YAG laser irradiation proved useful for the removal of amyloid deposits from the trachea in this patient.
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PMID:Primary diffuse tracheobronchial amyloidosis treated by bronchoscopic Nd-YAG laser irradiation. 210 14

Cessation of smoking in the home is one of the most important nonpharmacologic actions to be recommended. There is a highly significant increase in wheezing, coughing, and respiratory infections in children with smoking mothers, and this increase is directly proportional to the number of cigarettes smoked. Cord blood IgE levels are increased in babies whose mothers smoke during pregnancy. Other agents, such as sulpur dioxide and chemical pollutants from industrial processes may play a role in the development or exacerbation, of asthma symptoms and should be avoided. One of the most interesting areas in food allergy is whether breast feeding causes sensitization or induces tolerance in infants to foods ingested by the mother. There is an increase in asthma in second-generation immigrant populations who are exposed, from birth, to the Western style of living which increases their exposure to house dust mite. Several studies have shown that month of birth is important in the development of specific allergies, for example, in the incidence of birch pollen allergy in Scandinavia. The presence of a pet in the home at birth is associated with a greater incidence of allergy to that animal. Our study in asthmatic children has shown a strong association (p less than 0.001) between the presence of allergens in the air in their homes (sampled retrospectively in the month of birth) with a positive skin test to those allergens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Nonpharmacologic means of preventing asthma. 211 30

About 1% of infants are admitted to hospital with acute bronchiolitis; 85% of cases are caused by infection with Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV). The pathophysiological changes during the acute illness are inflammatory obstruction in the small airways with submucosal cellular infiltration, epithelial necrosis and mucous plugging; FRC increases and dynamic compliance falls. Failure to respond to bronchodilator drugs suggests that muscle spasm contributes relatively little to the airway narrowing. Affected infants become increasingly dyspnoeic and hypoxic for 3-4 days then spontaneously improve. After an attack of acute bronchiolitis up to 75% of children have recurrent lower respiratory tract symptoms, many continue to have hyperinflated lungs and bronchial hyperresponsiveness. In the majority, symptoms of cough and wheezing have subsided by the time they start school, but abnormalities of small airway function are detectable at least 13 years later. Children with a genetic predisposition to atopy do not appear to have an increased risk of developing bronchiolitis. Evidence of genetic predisposition to bronchial hyperresponsiveness in those with persistent wheezing is controversial. There is little to suggest that neonatal lung damage or an adverse home environment are important factors in determining susceptibility to post-bronchiolitis wheezing. IgE antibodies to RSV, and leukotriene C4, are found more frequently in the respiratory secretions of infants who wheeze during and after bronchiolitis than in those who do not. The possibility of viral-induced alteration of the immune response at the time of infection needs further investigation.
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PMID:Acute and long-term effects of viral bronchiolitis in infancy. 211 43


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