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)

We describe four patients with bilateral pleural effusions progressing to diffuse pleural thickening for which we have been unable to find any evidence of an infective, embolic or occupational aetiology. In order to avoid confusion with diffuse pleural thickening attributable to asbestos-related disease, the term cryptogenic bilateral fibrosing pleuritis is suggested. The patients differed from those with pleural shadowing due to asbestos in that none of them gave a history of asbestos exposure, all were ill, presented with chest pain which was not always pleuritic in character, and had dyspnoea, cough or malaise. They had pleural effusions of variable size, pleural shadowing radiographically and raised sedimentation rates. Computed tomography revealed bilateral extensive pleural thickening in all cases. All four were HLA B44 positive. Histology showed that in all cases the pleura was thickened by fibrous tissue. Both layers were affected and the pleural space was often obliterated. Otherwise the pleural surface was covered by organizing fibrin. Focal collections of lymphocytes were often present when the fibrous tissue abutted on the subpleural fat. No asbestos bodies were seen in any of the cases and in one patient electron microscopic fibre counts showed no excess of asbestos. Pleural decortication was successful in three patients. In one of these, contralateral disease was successfully controlled with corticosteroids, but the fourth patient has not improved on corticosteroids.
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PMID:Cryptogenic bilateral fibrosing pleuritis. 316 32

The study is a retrospective analysis of the clinical features of 122 patients from Finland, whose serum showed in immunoelectrophoresis (IEP) a cathodic elongation of the albumin line, "tailing albumin" (TA), not associated with an M-component. One hundred and seventeen of these cases were found among about 40,000 consecutive routine serum IEP examinations in two laboratories during 1967-1980. Five further cases were detected during the collection of the control series. Only a few TA cases of corresponding type have been reported from elsewhere. Previous studies of some of the patients of the present series had shown that the TA phenomenon was due to complexes between albumin and IgG class autoantibodies against albumin. Clinical data were collected mainly from the hospital records. The chest radiographic findings were classified by the ILO (International Labour Office) method. The author herself examined 33 of the patients during the current disease or during the follow-up. One hundred and ten patients were followed up for a period of three months to nine years (mean 2.5 years). The patients were mostly elderly, and 93% of them were women. Most of the patients had one or more previously diagnosed chronic illnesses, for which they were receiving one or several drugs as long-term therapy. Eighty percent of the patients were receiving nitrofurantoin (NF) as prophylaxis for recurrent urinary tract infections. However, urinary tract infection was not a current problem in any of the cases. There was evidence of a role of NF in the development of both the immunologic abnormalities and the clinical disease in the TA patients. On the basis of long-term NF treatment the patients were divided into two groups: 1) 97 patients with NF therapy (NF+ group) and 2) 25 patients without NF therapy (NF- group). The patients had mostly undergone the examinations because of cough, dyspnoea, and general symptoms (fatigue, weakness, malaise, loss of weight). The symptoms had usually started insidiously, and in 50% of the patients they had lasted for at least three months. Eight of the patients had been hospitalized because of various acute diseases (e.g. cerebral stroke). Ten of the patients were subjectively symptomless. The most common pathologic laboratory findings were high erythrocyte sedimentation rate (over 100 mm/h in 47%), IgG class antinuclear antibodies (in 88%; the titre was greater than or equal to 1000 in 56%), high serum IgG (mean 30.6 g/l), and elevated levels of serum aminotransferases (in 54% of the patients examined).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Immunoelectrophoretic tailing albumin phenomenon. Associations with clinical characteristics of the patients and with nitrofurantoin treatment. 320 74

A 51-year-old female farmer was diagnosed as having sarcoidosis. During 4 years of observation, slow radiological progression was observed. Cough then developed, necessitating treatment with corticosteroids. After 28 months of continuous treatment with prednisolone in low doses (5-7.5 mg daily), she suffered fever episodes, recurrent haemoptyses, general malaise and loss of weight. A chest roentgenogram showed a left upper lobe infiltrate, which progressed and finally cavitated, and rib destruction. Despite efforts, including a thoracotomy, 22 months passed before a diagnosis could be made. Blood and sputum cultures and cultures from the destroyed rib showed growth of Rhodococcus equi, a common soil organism which can cause infections in foals and other animals. Treatment with rifampicin and erythromycin was successful. R. equi has been reported to cause infection in patients with neoplastic disease and/or immunosuppression, but the disease might be more common than is suggested by the sparse case reports in the literature, owing to lack of familiarity with the organism, which will tend to be overlooked as a contaminant.
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PMID:Infection with Rhodococcus equi in a patient with sarcoidosis treated with corticosteroids. 322 77

Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disease of unknown etiology that is rarely diagnosed in children. When mass screening is performed, the incidence of the disease in children approaches that of adults with similar demographics. Most childhood cases occur around ages 9 to 15 years, with small clusters of cases occurring in children under age 4 years. The disease in these two age groups has very different clinical features. Children under age 4 have a clinical triad of rash, arthritis, and uveitis. The classic syndrome in older children involves primarily lungs, lymph nodes, and eyes. In older children, constitutional symptoms (fatigue, lethargy, malaise) and pulmonary symptoms (cough, dyspnea) predominate. Mortality in childhood sarcoidosis is about 5%, with long-term sequelae in 10% to 20%. Early recognition may prevent complications such as blindness, pulmonary insufficiency, and renal impairment.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis in children. 332 85

A 12 year old boy was admitted to hospital with fever, general malaise, cough and peripheral edema. The patient who have had rheumatic heart diseases-mitral insufficiency was found to be in congestive cardiac failure. In blood cultures Staphylococcus aureus and Alpha-hemolytic streptococcus grew. The regimens of Cephalothin-Gentamicin, Methicillin-Tobramicin, to which the organism were sensitive were given intravenously. On these therapy the patient continued to have fever. He was put on Trimethoprim-Sulfomethoxazole intramuscularly. He became afebril for the first time. After two weeks fever recurred. In spite of medical treatment, the infection persisted and the indication for surgery was considered. Mitral valve replacement with a Starr-Edwards prosthesis was carried out. Postoperatively, the patient was treated with TMP-SMZ. For the past 10 months the patient has remained afebril and without evidence of congestive heart failure.
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PMID:[Treatment of infectious endocarditis with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and cardiac surgery]. 349 82

A previously healthy 27 year-old male plumber presented with six days of fever, nausea, vomiting, malaise and headache. The subsequent development of cough, dyspnoea and pleuritic pain coincided with the simultaneous development of progressive bilateral cavitary pneumonia with pleural effusion. Leucocytosis, thrombocytopenia, hyponatraemia, hypoalbuminaemia, hypophosphataemia and hypoxaemia were the main laboratory abnormalities. Clinical suspicion of Legionnaires' disease was confirmed by the presence of serum antibody to Legionella pneumophila (titre 1:512) by an indirect fluorescent antibody test. Treatment with erythromycin and rifampicin resulted in clinical recovery with minimal residual bilateral pleural effusion six months after presentation. This patient is the first to acquire Legionnaires' disease in Singapore.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease--report of Singapore's first local case. 355 84

We have analyzed an unusual group of 19 patients (15 previously reported) with Wegener's granulomatosis, who presented with severe glomerulonephritis and developed diagnostic respiratory lesions only after 4 to 78 months. Necrotizing glomerulonephritis, often with crescents, and rarely with vasculitis, was the predominant renal lesion. Wegener's granulomatosis was unsuspected initially, since systemic manifestations, such as fever, arthralgias, malaise, and even pulmonary hemorrhage, were nonspecific or transient, and because renal biopsy findings resembled those seen in microscopic polyarteritis or idiopathic crescentic nephritis. Despite therapy, usually with corticosteroids, only 4 patients maintained adequate renal function. Most patients were receiving chronic dialysis when respiratory involvement developed. Cavitary nodular pulmonary infiltrates were seen in 12 of the 17 patients with lung involvement, and otorhinological disease occurred in 10 patients. Arthralgias, fever, and cough, with or without hemoptysis, were common. Wegener's granulomatosis was diagnosed by lung biopsy in 15 cases and by nasal biopsy in 4. Specific treatment was required for the respiratory disease and was delayed in many patients, because of lack of awareness that Wegener's granulomatosis may present with primary glomerulonephritis and become active during chronic renal failure or dialysis. Nevertheless, all but 1 patient eventually responded to treatment, although 3 additional patients died of late complications.
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PMID:Severe glomerulonephritis with late emergence of classic Wegener's granulomatosis. Report of 4 cases and review of the literature. 357 16

Rat-bite fever results from an infection with the organism Streptobacillus moniliformis. Symptomatic patients often present with fever, malaise, cough, maculopapular rash, and occasional arthritis, and usually have a history of rodent exposure. This report describes a patient with rat-bite fever resulting in suppurative arthritis. The patient's diagnosis was made by culture of S moniliformis from his left wrist. The diagnosis was delayed, however, owing to the lack of an exposure history, atypical clinical presentation, and the unusual microbiologic characteristics shown by this organism.
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PMID:Rat-bite fever as a cause of septic arthritis: a diagnostic dilemma. 368 5

On epidemiologic grounds, respirable particles from chilled-water air-conditioning systems in textile production plants have been implicated as a cause of hypersensitivity pneumonitis. We have purified the antigen from scum growing in this chilled water by antibody-affinity chromatography by use of IgG isolated from a pool of serum obtained from three workers with disease. Two patients with the disease, three coworkers without the disease, and two unexposed control subjects inhaled a dose of the purified antigen approximately equivalent to that amount calculated to be inhaled during an 8-hour work shift. Both workers with disease experienced fever, malaise, cough, and dyspnea 6 to 8 hours after the aerosol challenge. In these two patients the exposure evoked a transient decrease in circulating lymphocytes, predominantly T cells. Before challenge the patients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells demonstrated a blastogenic response to the antigen. The responding cells had disappeared from the circulation 24 hours after the challenge. Seventy-two hours after the challenge, mononuclear cells that were producing large amounts of specific IgG antibody appeared in the circulation. We conclude that the same antigen(s) that react with IgG antibody produced an acute episode of the disease, that specific antigen-recognition cells disappear from the peripheral blood after exposure to the antigen (presumably because they are attracted to the lung), and that antibody-forming cells appear in the peripheral blood approximately 2 days after a challenge. These antigen-specific reactions of circulating mononuclear cells may be specific for the disease, but studies on a larger number of cases are needed to be certain.
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PMID:Immunologic response to aerosols of affinity-purified antigen in hypersensitivity pneumonitis. 376 Apr

During an epidemiological study of visceral leishmaniasis in an endemic region of Brazil, new perspectives emerged on a subclinical form of the disease. A group of 86 children with antibody to Leishmania were identified. None of these children had a history of leishmaniasis. The children were segregated into four groups: One group remained asymptomatic (n = 20), whereas another developed classic kala-azar within weeks of the index serology (n = 15). The remaining 51 patients initially had subclinical disease; 13 (25%) of these patients progressed to classic kala-azar (mean, five months). The others (75%) resolved their illness after a prolonged period (mean, 35 months). The initial illness in the subclinical group was characterized by hepatomegaly, frequent splenomegaly, intermittent cough, diarrhea, and low-grade fever. Malaise and poor weight gain were common. Giemsa-stained smears and cultures of bone marrow aspirates were usually negative for Leishmania in the absence of symptoms of classic kala-azar.
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PMID:New perspectives on a subclinical form of visceral leishmaniasis. 378 64


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