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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although both cromolyn (C) and inhaled corticosteroids are anti-inflammatory therapies for childhood asthma, there are few controlled comparisons of these medications for asthma therapy in children. None were conducted in the United States, and none specifically study triamcinolone acetonide (T) versus C. This 12-week evaluation followed 31 youths, aged 8 to 18 years, with moderate asthma who were assigned to receive C or T according to a prerandomized and blinded code. Patients were instructed to take two inhalations from the study metered-dose inhaler (active T or placebo) and to inhale the contents of one study-provided ampule (C, 20 mg, or placebo) from a compressor-driven home nebulizer three times per day. Patients also used albuterol, two inhalations from a metered-dose inhaler, three times a day (before study medication) and, additionally, if needed. Patients maintained a daily diary, recording extra medication use, adverse experiences, peak flow rates morning and night, and asthma symptom scores. Laboratory assessment of pulmonary function was done at 1, 4, 8, and 12 weeks. Cosyntropin challenge and methacholine bronchoprovocation challenge were performed at the beginning and end of the study. C and T provided similar, adequate asthma control. Symptoms of wheezing, cough, and chest tightness decreased, and daily peak expiratory flow rate increased with both regimens compared to during a 2-week baseline when patients received medication only as needed. There was no significant change in methacholine sensitivity and no change in endocrine function, as measured with fasting plasma control before and after administration of cosyntropin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cromolyn versus triamcinolone acetonide for youngsters with moderate asthma. 843 85

To determine the current management of acute asthma in the emergency department and to evaluate outcome we reviewed the charts of 99 patients aged 15 to 55 years who presented to the emergency department of a tertiary referral, university-affiliated hospital and were subsequently discharged with a diagnosis of acute asthma. Outcome was evaluated prospectively, with a structured questionnaire, by telephone. During the visit pulsus paradoxus was documented in four patients. Spirometry was done in 63 patients; postbronchodilator values ranged from 0.9 to 4.1 L. A total of 92 patients received inhaled bronchodilator therapy, most by wet nebulization. Sixteen patients received anticholinergic agents and three received theophylline. Ingested corticosteroids were given to 27 patients. Of the 71 patients contacted, a mean of 12 days after the visit, 26 (37%) had sought further medical attention, 19 at the emergency department; 9 had required admission. Forty-six patients reported that their condition had improved, but over 60% continued to have cough, sputum production, nocturnal waking and early-morning chest tightness. The results indicate that asthma continues to be undertreated in the emergency department and highlight the importance of routine spirometry in all patients and the need for systemic corticosteroid therapy.
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PMID:Acute asthma: emergency department management and prospective evaluation of outcome. 234 73

1. We have assessed the effect of a specific histamine H1-receptor antagonist, terfenadine, in the treatment of atopic asthmatics during the grass pollen season. 2. Eighteen mild, grass pollen sensitive asthmatics (10F, 8M, mean +/- s.e. mean age 34.7 +/- 5.6 years), all of whom were controlled on inhaled beta 2-adrenoceptor agonists alone, took part in a 9 week, double-blind, crossover study using terfenadine 180 mg three times daily and placebo. Throughout the study patients recorded peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) twice daily, symptoms of cough, wheeze, breathlessness and chest tightness (scored 0-3), and their use of bronchodilators. Methacholine inhalation challenge tests were performed each week. Data were analysed by a method suitable for a two group, two period crossover trial with baseline measurements. 3. Terfenadine significantly reduced symptoms of cough by 76.9% (P less than 0.05) and wheeze by 46.9% (P less than 0.02). Symptoms of breathlessness and chest tightness were reduced by 16.8 and 30.3% respectively but these were not statistically significant. Morning and evening PEFR rose by 5.5 (P less than 0.001) and 6.2% (P less than 0.003) respectively on treatment with terfenadine and bronchodilator use fell by 40.3%. A progressive increase in methacholine sensitivity was seen in both treatment groups throughout the study but did not reach statistical significance. 4. We conclude that treatment with terfenadine during the grass pollen season in sensitive asthmatics reduced their symptoms and bronchodilator requirements and produced a modest improvement in their lung function without affecting the development of increased methacholine sensitivity that occurred during the grass pollen season.
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PMID:Terfenadine, a potent histamine H1-receptor antagonist in the treatment of grass pollen sensitive asthma. 197 43

In some countries a diagnosis of occupational asthma for medicolegal purposes is made when a questionnaire is suggestive and the individual is exposed to a product known to be a sensitizer. The value of an open questionnaire administered by physicians with experience in occupational asthma is unknown, however. We prospectively assessed all subjects (162) referred to our clinic because their physicians thought their asthma might be work related. The medical questionnaire included questions about the nature of the symptoms (dyspnea, wheezing, cough, and chest tightness) and the timing (worse at work or after a shift at work or improved during weekends or holidays). An initial clinical assessment was set by the physician on a scale that ranged from highly probable to probable, uncertain, unlikely, or absent. Subjects then underwent objective assessment with specific inhalation challenges (n = 72), serial monitoring of peak expiratory flow rates for periods at work and away from work (n = 29), or both (n = 61), to confirm or rule out the diagnosis of occupational asthma. A total of 75 subjects (46%) were shown to have occupational asthma. Symptoms alone (type and timing) did not provide a satisfactory differentiation between those subjects with and those without occupational asthma. For example, 66 of 75 (88%) subjects with occupational asthma said that their symptoms improved during holidays, but 66 of 87 (76%) subjects without occupational asthma experienced a similar improvement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Is the clinical history a satisfactory means of diagnosing occupational asthma? 200 Oct 62

The new International Union Against Tuberculosis (IUAT) bronchial symptoms questionnaire was completed by 827 subjects participating in a prospective study of respiratory symptoms and lung function in aluminum smelter workers. A modified Medical Research Council (MRC) questionnaire was also administered. Bronchial reactivity (BR) was measured in 809 subjects by methacholine challenge using a rapid method. Factor analysis demonstrated sensible clustering of responses to items unique to the new questionnaire such as nocturnal, spontaneous, and postexertional dyspnea, dust-induced dyspnea and tightness, and breathing difficulty. Responses to IUAT questions concerning past asthma, wheeze, chest tightness, morning cough and sputum, and asthma medication agreed well with corresponding items from the MRC questionnaire. Questions concerning asthma, medication, dust-induced, nocturnal, and spontaneous dyspnea, chest tightness, wheeze, nocturnal cough, postexertional dyspnea and breathing difficulty also had high validity against the criterion of concurrently measured bronchial reactivity. It is concluded that the IUAT questionnaire is a valid asthma questionnaire.
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PMID:Evaluation of a new asthma questionnaire. 201 60

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

Respiratory symptoms and ventilatory capacity were studied in a group of 70 subjects employed as sewage workers. It was found that exposed workers had an increase in the prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms when compared with control workers, although the difference was statistically significant only for chest tightness (p less than 0.01). In exposed workers there was a high prevalence of acute symptoms which develop during the shift being particularly pronounced for eye irritation, dyspnea and cough. A large number of sewage workers complained of skin disorders. Results of lung function testing demonstrated reduction of FEV1, FEF50 and FEF25 in relation to predicted normal values suggesting obstructive changes mostly located in smaller airways. Our data confirm that sewage workers are exposed to different occupational noxious agents which may lead to the development of chronic lung function changes.
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PMID:[Respiratory symptoms and ventilatory capacity of sewage canal workers]. 209 64

Two police officers developed asthma like illness after a single but prolonged exposure to toluene diisocyanate (TDI) by being in the immediate vicinity of a tank car that had overturned on a highway. One officer experienced upper and lower respiratory tract symptoms with chest tightness about 4.5 hours after initial exposure. Shortness of breath, cough, and wheezing were noted the following day. The other experienced symptoms immediately on exposure, developed shortness of breath 20 minutes later, and presented with wheezing four hours after that. Follow up examinations over seven years showed persistence of respiratory symptoms and continuation of airway hyperreactivity requiring treatment.
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PMID:Persistent reactive airway dysfunction syndrome after exposure to toluene diisocyanate. 215 72

A combined epidemiological and intervention study was conducted on 207 swine confinement farmers with matched comparison subjects. The objectives of the study were to define, in detail, the nature and disease determinants in this exposed group and to explore methods of disease prevention. This 5 year prospective study included three annual medical assessments of workers and complementary work environment assessments. Between the first and second assessment periods, an in-depth educational intervention was conducted. An industrial hygiene consultation intervention was conducted between the second and third measurement periods. Outcome measurements included changes in knowledge, attitudes, and behavior following educational intervention. Additionally, the outcomes measured included changes in medical and environmental assessment over the 3 year assessment periods. Results of the baseline respiratory symptoms assessment are reported here. Nearly 20% of swine confinement workers reported chronic cough, and 25% reported phlegm (American Thoracic Society questionnaire). Both symptoms were significantly more prevalent in the confinement workers compared to a blue collar comparison group, but only phlegm production was more prevalent compared to nonconfinement farmers. Work-related symptoms were reported much more frequently than chronic symptoms (e.g., 87% of confinement workers reported work-related cough). Bronchitis as well as airways reactivity were all significantly more prevalent in confinement workers compared to nonconfinement workers. Smoking seemed to have an additive effect with confinement exposure. Bronchitis and chest tightness symptoms were reported to be more severe upon return to work after an absence of 7 days or more. Finally, 34% of workers reported episodes of organic dust toxic syndrome.
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PMID:Preventing respiratory disease in swine confinement workers: intervention through applied epidemiology, education, and consultation. 222 Aug 28

Health and environmental assessment of the consequences of accidental contamination of an area in the Negev desert is described and the effects of exposure to bromine vapor in 6 persons evaluated. They were only mildly affected during the acute spillage of the bromine, with some respiratory symptoms and first and second degree skin burns of small exposed areas on the legs. All were treated in hospital and were released within 1-4 days. 6-8 weeks later they demonstrated a complex array of complaints, including cough, shortness of breath, chest tightness, eye irritation, headache, dizziness, fatigue, memory disturbances, sleep and sexual disturbances. These complaints could not be substantiated by objective clinical or laboratory examination. There was thus obvious magnification of the complaints 1-2 months after the accident.
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PMID:[Late health sequelae of accidental bromine exposure]. 225 10


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