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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with chronic lung disease and a right atrial density that was difficult to distinguish on a transthoracic echocardiogram underwent transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) that demonstrated two mobile masses attached to the anterior right atrial wall. During the TEE procedure, the patient experienced
coughing
and
retching
due to the esophageal intubation, and the embolization of one of the right atrial masses was observed. This case is the first to document this mechanism of pulmonary embolism (a mechanism that was suspected in two prior reports), and it questions the safety of procedures that induce
retching
and
coughing
in patients with mobile right atrial masses.
...
PMID:Witnessed embolization of a right atrial mass during transesophageal echocardiography: implications regarding the safety of esophageal intubation. 1033 74
Early-onset benign childhood occipital seizures (EBOS) described by Panayiotopoulos constitute the commoner after the rolandic phenotype of a childhood seizure susceptibility syndrome. EBOS are the clinical representative of occipital spikes. Their cardinal features are infrequent (often single) partial seizures manifested with deviation of the eyes and vomiting, frequently evolving to hemi- or generalized convulsions. Ictal behavioral changes, irritability, pallor, and rarely cyanosis, and eyes wide open are frequent.
Retching
,
coughing
, aphemia, oropharyngolaryngeal movements, and incontinence may occur. Consciousness is usually impaired or lost, either from the onset or the course of the fits, but in a few children, it may be preserved. Duration varies from a few minutes to hours (partial status epilepticus). Seizures are usually nocturnal, but semiology is similar in nocturnal or diurnal fits. Onset is between 1 and 12 years with a peak at 5 years. One third of children have a single seizure, the median total number of fits is two to three, and the prognosis is invariably excellent, with remission usually occurring within 1 year from onset. A few children may later develop rolandic or other benign partial seizures. The likelihood to have seizures after age 12 years is exceptional and rarer than that of febrile convulsions. EEG shows occipital paroxysms demonstrating fixation-off sensitivity, but random occipital spikes, occipital spikes in sleep EEG alone, or normal EEG may occur. Centrotemporal and other spike foci may appear in the same or more frequently in subsequent EEGs. The EEG does not reflect clinical course and severity.
...
PMID:Early-onset benign childhood occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome: a syndrome to recognize. 1038 32
The effects of intravenous (i.v.) infusion of platelet-activating factor (PAF), 100 ng/kg/min for 10 min, with and without pretreatment with a selective PAF-antagonist on gastrointestinal electrical activity, arterial pressure and clinical and haematological parameters were studied. Conscious miniature pigs with electrodes implanted in the wall of the antrum pylori and small and large intestine were used. Platelet-activating factor induced restlessness or depression, shivering, tachypnoea and
coughing
,
retching
and vomiting, hypotension and a delayed and sustained increase in leucocyte count with an increase in percentage of segmented neutrophils. The PAF-antagonist, SAH 63-675, administered at 10 mg/kg intravenously, inhibited these effects. Platelet-activating factor resulted in a decrease in electrical activity in the antrum and large intestine, whereas small intestinal activity was not significantly influenced. Pretreatment with the antagonist suppressed these inhibitory effects.
...
PMID:Influence of platelet activating factor on gastrointestinal electrical activity and some haematological and clinical parameters in the conscious miniature pig. 1059 37
In this study we tested the hypothesis that the initial cuff volume of the laryngeal mask airway influences emergence characteristics and postoperative laryngopharyngeal morbidity. One hundred and sixty adult patients undergoing minor surgery were randomly assigned for airway management with the laryngeal mask airway with either a fully inflated cuff (LMA-High) or a semi-inflated cuff (LMA-Low). Anaesthesia was with propofol, nitrous oxide, oxygen and isoflurane. Following insertion, the cuff was inflated with either 15 or 30 ml for the size 4 (females) and 20 or 40 ml for the size 5 (males). At the end of surgery, a blinded observer documented the presence or absence of adverse airway events (hypoxia, hypercapnea,
coughing
,
retching
, regurgitation/vomiting, airway obstruction, hypoventilation, hiccupping, biting, body movement or shivering) during every 1 min epoch and cardiorespiratory variables (heart rate, mean blood pressure, arterial oxygen saturation, end-tidal carbon dioxide and respiratory rate) every 5 min until the patient was awake and the laryngeal mask airway removed. Patients were interviewed about pharyngolaryngeal morbidity (sore throat, dysphonia and dysphagia) immediately before leaving the postanaesthesia care unit and 18-24 h following surgery. Analysis by epoch showed more partial airway obstruction in the LMA-High group, but analysis by patient numbers revealed no difference. Heart rate was slightly higher in the LMA-High group upon arrival in the postanaesthesia care unit, but otherwise there were no differences in cardiorespiratory responses. Sore throat and dysphagia were more common in the LMA-High group. We conclude that, in general, emergence characteristics with the laryngeal mask airway are not influenced by the volume of air used to inflate the cuff, but that postoperative sore throat and dysphagia are more likely at high initial cuff volumes.
...
PMID:Emergence characteristics and postoperative laryngopharyngeal morbidity with the laryngeal mask airway: a comparison of high versus low initial cuff volume. 1078 Nov 19
Eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy was diagnosed in 23 young dogs. Clinical signs included
cough
, gagging, and
retching
in all dogs, dyspnea in 21 dogs (91%), and nasal discharge in 12 dogs (52%). The most common radiographic findings were a moderate to severe bronchointerstitial pattern (68%, 13 of 19 dogs). Bronchoscopic findings included the presence of abundant yellow-green mucus or mucopurulent material (70%, 16 of 23 dogs) and severe mucosal thickening with an irregular or polypoid appearance (52%, 12 of 23 dogs), with partial airway closure during expiration in 3 dogs (13%). Peripheral blood eosinophilia was noted in 14 of 23 dogs (61%). Inflammatory cells in brush or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cytologic preparations comprised more than 50% eosinophils in 14 of 23 dogs (61%), and 20-50% eosinophils in 6 dogs (26%). Eosinophilic infiltration of the bronchial mucosa was observed in biopsies from 19 dogs and was graded as mild (37%, 7 dogs), moderate (32%, 6 dogs), or severe (32%, 6 dogs). The mean serum immunoglobulin A concentration was almost double that of a population of 20 healthy dogs of various breeds. Oral glucocorticoids were administered on alternate days with progressive tapering of the dose; the dosage at maintenance varied between 0.1 and 1.0 mg/kg every other day. No relationship was found between the duration of clinical signs and the maintenance dosage or the cytologic and histopathologic grades.
...
PMID:Eosinophilic bronchopneumopathy in dogs. 1083 May 42
A four-year-old, entire male whippet was presented with a three-day history of lethargy, inappetence, occasional
retching
, a soft
cough
and intermittent episodes of haemoptysis. Clinical and laboratory findings, and thoracic radiographic and ultrasonographic studies suggested a diagnosis of lung lobe torsion. A concurrent lung lobe torsion of the right cranial and right middle lung lobes was confirmed at exploratory thoracotomy. Management included resection of both the affected lung lobes. No obvious underlying aetiology for the condition was apparent. The dog made a full recovery from the procedure and at the time of writing (11 months postoperatively) was reported to be well, exercising normally and showing no breathing abnormalities.
...
PMID:Concurrent torsion of the right cranial and right middle lung lobes in a whippet. 1113 56
A 2-year-old, intact male Newfoundland was presented for evaluation of a 1- to 2-day history of
coughing
,
retching
, and progressive lethargy. Thoracic radiographs demonstrated right-sided pleural effusion and lobar vesicular emphysema. An exploratory thoracotomy revealed midlobar torsion of the right caudal lung lobe. A partial lung lobectomy was performed, and following surgery, the dog recovered without complications. Lung lobe torsions in dogs typically occur at the hilus of the affected lung lobe. This report documents that midlobar lung lobe torsions occur in dogs and should be considered as a differential diagnosis in cases of lobar vesicular emphysema and pleural effusion.
...
PMID:Spontaneous midlobar lung lobe torsion in a 2-year-old Newfoundland. 1513 Nov 3
An important limitation of antireflux surgery is a 5%-10% failure rate. We investigated the correlation between various diaphragm stressors and failure of antireflux surgery. Forty-one study cases who underwent a reoperative antireflux operation from 1997 to 2001 and 50 control patients who had undergone a successful laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication during the same period without clinical or symptomatic evidence of failure were randomly selected for comparison. A retrospective analysis was conducted utilizing a standardized diaphragm stressor questionnaire, addressing the period between the primary and secondary operation. Stressors considered in the study included height, body mass index (BMI), postoperative gagging, vomiting, weight lifting (greater than 100 pounds),
coughing
, hiccuping, motion sickness,
retching
, belching, antidepressant use, smoking, preoperative grade of esophagitis, size of hiatal hernia, lower esophageal sphincter pressure, esophageal body pressures, and preoperative response to proton pump inhibitors. Of the potential stressors investigated, the following were significantly associated with surgical failure after adjusting for other variables through multivariate analysis: gagging (P = 0.005), belching (P = 0.02), and hernia size greater than 3 cm (P = 0.04; Table 1). Other potential risk factors show trends as obvious in Fig. 2. Vomiting was significant (P = 0.01) in the earlier models but lost significance when logistic regression was applied. Patients with postoperative gagging and an intraoperative hiatal hernia (greater than 3 cm) have a poorer outcome, whereas patients with postoperative belching have a better long-term outcome.
...
PMID:Assessment of diaphragmatic stressors as risk factors for symptomatic failure of laparoscopic nissen fundoplication. 1636 86
Acute gastric volvulus associated with congenital diaphragmatic hernia is an unusual surgical emergency. We describe a case of an 11-year-old girl who presented with a 4-day history of abdominal pain, nonproductive
retching
,
cough
, and shortness of breath. A chest radiograph revealed a large air-fluid level in left hemithorax and the presence of intestinal loops with marked mediastinal deviation. Nasogastric decompression was unsuccessful. Via a thoracoscopic approach, the large fluid-filled stomach was percutaneously decompressed but could not be reduced. Through a left subcostal incision, a left-sided diaphragmatic defect about 4 x 5 cm was encountered. A large portion of small intestines, ascending and transverse colon, strangulated but viable stomach, and a large spleen herniated through the defect. The contents were reduced, revealing a combined gastric volvulus. Once the diaphragmatic defect was repaired primarily, there was insufficient space in the abdominal cavity to contain all the viscera reduced form the chest. Therefore, we placed an AlloDerm patch on the fascia and closed with a wound V.A.C (Kinetic Concepts Inc, San Antonio, TX). Two weeks later, the wound was definitively closed; she recovered uneventfully and was discharged home 3 days later. To our knowledge, only 26 previous cases of acute gastric volvulus complicating a congenital diaphragmatic hernia in children have been reported in the literature. Our patient represents the 27th case and the first combined type acute gastric volvulus case.
...
PMID:Delayed presentation of congenital diaphragmatic hernia manifesting as combined-type acute gastric volvulus: a case report and review of the literature. 2808 38
A 25-year-old woman with hirsutism presented to the Emergency Department of the medicine faculty in Gaziantep University with a 4-h History of dyspnoea, dysphagia,
coughing
, continuous and progressive chest pain radiating to the back and palpation of her neck. The physical examination was significant for diffuse neck and chest subcutaneous emphysema. The x-ray study and CT scan of the chest revealed pneumomediastinum. The patient reported that 6 h before presentation she took spironolactone due to hirsutism and she retched.
Retching
caused the symptoms. The patient was followed conservatively and fully recovered over the next 7 days. Spontaneous pneumomediastinum developed in this patient with no underlying lung disease, presumably from air leakage secondary to the excessive elevation of intrathoracic pressure due to
retching
. Pneumomediastinum is an uncommon disease arising most frequently and remains largely underdiagnosed clinically, especially in young, healthy patients.
...
PMID:Pneumomediastinum after retching. 2306 Mar 71
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