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 dose range of 4.0--32.0 mg/kg s.c., caffeine produced most of the signs which are commonly seen after the administration of naloxone (0.05 mg/kg s.c.) to morphine-dependent monkeys. The signs designated as lying on side or abdomen, avoiding contact, vocalizing, crawling or rolling, restlessness or pacing, tremors, retching, vomiting, coughing, vocalizing when abdomen palpated, rigid abdomen and salivation were noted. A randomized and blind experimental design, which included vehicle and positive (naloxone) controls was used. The significance of the differences between total scores for the whole syndrome was tested by the Mann-Whitney U-test. In preliminary studies in naive monkeys, caffeine was found to elicit some withdrawal signs but the results were equivocal. Na benzoate also elicited some withdrawal signs in morphine-dependent monkeys at 32.0 mg/kg s.c., but few signs were seen in naive monkeys. Caffeine was found to be approximately 10X more active than Na benzoate in inhibiting cAMP phosphodiesterase activity in a neuroblastoma cell whole homogenate assay. These results are consistent with the observations of Collier and Francis that morphine abstinence in rodents is associated with increased brain levels of cAMP.
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PMID:Caffeine elicited withdrawal signs in morphine-dependent rhesus monkeys. 21 Oct 41

Regional variations in the discharge patterns of the internal and external intercostal muscles of the middle and caudad thorax were studied in decerebrate, spontaneously breathing cats during coughing and vomiting. Coughing, induced by electrical stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerves, consisted of increased and prolonged diaphragmatic activity followed by a burst of abdominal activity. Mid-thoracic external and internal intercostal muscles discharged synchronously with the diaphragm and abdominal muscles, respectively. Caudal external and internal intercostal muscles, however, discharged synchronously with the abdominal muscles. Vomiting, induced by stimulation of the lower thoracic vagi, consisted of a series of synchronous bursts of diaphragmatic and abdominal activity (retching) followed by a prolonged abdominal discharge after the cessation of diaphragmatic activity (expulsion). Caudal external and internal intercostals discharged in phase with diaphragmatic and abdominal activity but both mid-thoracic intercostal muscles discharged out of phase with these muscles. These results indicate major differences in the control and functional roles of intercostal muscles at different thoracic levels during these behaviours.
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PMID:Regional intercostal activity during coughing and vomiting in decerebrate cats. 147 51

1. The patterns of membrane potential changes of phrenic motoneurons were compared during fictive vomiting, fictive coughing, and fictive swallowing in decerebrate, paralyzed cats. These fictive behaviors were identified by motor nerve discharge patterns similar to those recorded from the muscles of nonparalyzed animals. Phrenic motoneurons (n = 54) were identified by antidromic activation from the thoracic phrenic nerve. Intracellular recordings were obtained from 27 motoneurons during fictive vomiting, 40 during fictive coughing, and 27 during fictive swallowing. Sixteen motoneurons were recorded during both fictive coughing and fictive swallowing, eight during both fictive coughing and fictive vomiting, and two during both fictive vomiting and fictive swallowing. Seven motoneurons were studied during all three behaviors. 2. Fictive vomiting, typically evoked by electrical stimulation of abdominal vagal afferents, was characterized by a series of bursts of coactivation of phrenic and abdominal motor nerves, culminating in an expulsion phase in which abdominal discharge was prolonged both with respect to phrenic discharge and to abdominal discharge during the preceding retching phase. During fictive vomiting, phrenic motoneurons depolarized abruptly, and the amplitude of depolarization was significantly greater than during control inspirations. They then repolarized slowly throughout the phrenic burst, rapidly repolarizing at the end of each phrenic burst during retching and reaching a level similar to that observed during expiration. During the expulsion phase, the pattern was initially the same. However, after the cessation of phrenic discharge, the membrane potential repolarized slowly until the end of the abdominal burst, exhibiting greater synaptic noise than during expiration. One phrenic motoneuron, presumably innervating the periesophageal region of the diaphragm, received a strong hyperpolarization just before the onset of the emetic episode and fired for shorter periods during fictive vomiting than did other phrenic motoneurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Membrane potential changes of phrenic motoneurons during fictive vomiting, coughing, and swallowing in the decerebrate cat. 149 Dec 61

During transesophageal echocardiography probe passage, airway reflexes are usually obtunded with topical local anesthetics. This technique meets with varying degrees of success. Even partially intact airway reflexes result in coughing, retching, and withdrawal, which may prevent transesophageal echocardiography examination or predispose to life-threatening tachycardia and hypertension. Proper preparation of the patient enhances comfort and helps protect against tachycardia and hypertension as well as reducing the time required for examination. This article outlines specific monitoring issues and offers precautions that are critical to transesophageal echocardiography probe passage. It suggests a premedication regimen and describes methods of sedation. Furthermore, it outlines the afferent innervation of the upper airway and specific techniques of temporary reflex interruption.
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PMID:Sensory blockade for difficult passage of transesophageal echocardiography probes. 151 Aug 53

Chest and abdominal wall movements were assessed as objective indicators of emesis. Thirty-six vomiting episodes in one intact and four decerebrate cats were monitored either by an inductive plethysmograph or by magnetometers applied to the chest and abdomen. The plethysmographic method was found to be the more suitable of these two monitoring techniques because it produced stable, artifact-free recordings with excellent signal differentiation. The occurrence of emesis was validated by simultaneously recording thoracic central venous pressure. Unlike the intrathoracic pressure measurement, spasmodic movements of chest and abdomen did not differentiate retching from expulsion. However, rhythmic abdominal excursions recorded during vomiting were several times greater than those occurring during any other activity. Surprisingly, these movements indicated an increase in abdominal dimensions during vomiting in contrast to the reduction in size observed during sneezing and coughing. We believe that recording of abdominal movements that accompany vomiting might potentially serve as a noninvasive research tool for the study of emesis in cancer chemotherapy.
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PMID:Noninvasive documentation of emesis in cats. 645 44

Twenty seven patients, inspected by endoscope, and diagnosed as having the Mallory-Weiss syndrome, have been studied taking into account their age, sex, background, clinic presentation, manifestations, number of lacerations, associated lesions and evolution. Twenty three of them were males and 4 females. The age average was 46.7 years. Only 8 patients had intra-abdominal increased pressure, suffering retching and vomiting 7 of them, while one had a cough access. Out of the 21 patients that we controlled, 9 were chronic alcoholism while 3 had ethanol intoxication previously. Immediate prior ingestion of salicylates had taken place in 6 patients. The clinical presentation of 22 of them was gastrointestinal bleeding, that is, 4.9% of all the upper endoscopies carried out within the bleeding patients. Single laceration was present in 22 cases, double one in 4, and triple in 1. We have frequently found endoscopy lesions associated, the most common one (37%), was hiatal hernia. They all were medically treated except one, who was operated because of gastric perforation was associated. Just one of the Mallory-Weiss syndrome patient died, due to an associated diffused bleeding gastritis.
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PMID:[Mallory-Weiss syndrome. Considerations on 27 cases]. 697 2

The occurrence of inflammatory nasopharyngeal polyps is described in a series of four cats. Two of the cats presented with classical features of chronic upper respiratory tract infection, in a third gradual onset of coughing and retching were the only clinical signs, while in the fourth only noisy respiration accompanied the growth. In each cat the polyp was attached to the pharyngeal opening of the eustachian tube and it is suggested that such masses arise from either the lining of the tube itself or that they may even find origin within the tympanic bulla. However, anamnesis and the subsequent clinical and radiographic examinations did not indicate that the polyps were associated with external or middle ear disease. Removal by simple dissection was effected without the necessity of splitting the soft palate in any of the patients and, though expected, recurrence has not yet been seen.
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PMID:Nasopharyngeal polyps in the cat. 733 43

The surgical repair of tracheal collapse in 25 dogs is described. The initial presenting signs included coughing, dyspnoea, gagging, retching, exercise intolerance, cyanosis and collapse. Diagnosis was based upon the clinical signs, plain radiography and tracheal endoscopy. The collapse was corrected by the application of a number of extraluminal polypropylene prosthetic rings applied to the affected trachea. Additionally, a left arytenoid lateralisation was also performed. The perioperative complication rate was approximately 4 per cent, while the success rate was 75 per cent. The technique reduces the likelihood of catastrophic postoperative complications associated with iatrogenic laryngeal paralysis which is a possible complication of placement of extraluminal tracheal support devices.
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PMID:Unilateral arytenoid lateralisation and extraluminal polypropylene ring prostheses for correction of tracheal collapse in the dog. 760 56

To our knowledge, < 30 patients with tuberculous bronchoesophageal fistulae have been described in the English-language literature. However, the overall incidence of infection due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been increasing during the epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We describe three HIV-infected patients who presented with tuberculous esophagomediastinal fistulae during their initial illness. Fistulous connections appeared to be secondary to mycobacterial mediastinal adenopathy. All fistulae healed with antituberculous therapy and nasogastric feeding, and surgical intervention was not necessary. The combination of mediastinal lymphadenopathy, cough, and retching or vomiting should alert clinicians treating HIV-infected patients to the possibility of tuberculous bronchoesophageal fistulae.
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PMID:Tuberculous bronchoesophageal fistulae in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus: three case reports and review. 864 20

The purpose of the study was to compare the incidence of complications (coughing, biting, retching, vomiting, excessive salivation and airway obstruction) associated with removal of the laryngeal mask airway. The laryngeal mask airway was used in 100 adults undergoing urological procedures. The patients were randomly assigned to two groups. In 50 patients the laryngeal mask was removed by a nurse when the patient responded to commands in the recovery area. In the other 50 patients it was removed by the anaesthetist with the patient deeply anaesthetized in theatre. The majority of patients were elderly men who had relatively short procedures. The incidence of gastric regurgitation was assessed by measurement of pH of secretions at the tip of the laryngeal mask airway. Complications occurred more frequently in the awake patients (P < 0.01). Most were minor and occurred before removal of the laryngeal mask airway during emergence in the recovery room. Airway obstruction occurred in three patients in whom the laryngeal mask was removed in the recovery room. In two of these patients the oxygen saturation decreased below 80% and the other to 90%. No decrease in arterial oxygenation occurred in the anaesthetised patients in whom the laryngeal mask was removed by the anaesthetist. In 14 patients in the awake group the pH of secretions at the tip of the laryngeal mask was < or = 3 compared with only four patients in the anaesthetised group (P < 0.05). It is concluded that it may be safer to remove the laryngeal mask airway whilst the patients are deeply anaesthetised in the operating room than when they are awake in the recovery room.
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PMID:Complications associated with removal of the laryngeal mask airway: a comparison of removal in deeply anaesthetised versus awake patients. 859 87


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