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

Ozone is a principal component of photochemical air pollution endogenous to numerous metropolitan areas, which may induce irritant effects on the respiratory tract which impair pulmonary function, result in subjective symptoms of respiratory discomfort, including cough and shortness of breath, and can limit exercise performance. The effects of moderate ambient photochemical air pollution observed in a mobile laboratory have also been shown to be similar to those induced in laboratory chamber exposures to the same level of ozone alone. The metabolic demand of exercise increases minute ventilation (VE) and thus, the rate of ozone inhalation over that at rest. Potentially, exercise can also enhance the effects of ozone by: (a) reducing nasal passage absorption; (b) increasing the uniformity of ventilation throughout the lungs; and (c) replacing reacted ozone at a faster rate. However, results from 2-hour intermittent exercise and 1-hour continuous exercise exposures at the same total ventilation and ozone concentration have been shown to yield similar pulmonary function effects. It has been shown via significant variation in exercise intensity, and thus VE, that the simple product of ozone concentration, VE and exposure time (termed the ozone effective dose) predicts pulmonary function and exercise ventilatory pattern (induced rapid, shallow breathing) effects more precisely than ozone concentration alone. Better prediction of pulmonary function effects has been achieved via multiple regression analysis in which ozone concentration is given a greater weighting than VE and exposure time. Light intermittent exercise was first studied in 2-hour laboratory exposures to ozone at concentrations rarely seen in the ambient environment. In recent studies, heavy continuous exercise has been used in 1-hour exposures to ozone at levels routinely observed in photochemical episodes (less than or equal to 0.35 ppm). Statistically significant impairment of exercise performance has been observed at 0.18 ppm, a level reached for 1 hour, or more, on about 180 days per year in the Los Angeles basin. Responses of subpopulation groups, such as children, young adult females, older adults, and those with pre-existing pulmonary disease are not notably different from those of young adult males provided that the ozone effective dose is proportional to body size. Conversely, highly trained endurance athletes demonstrate significant responses at rather low ozone concentrations due to their ability to sustain very high VE over prolonged periods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of ozone exposure at ambient air pollution episode levels on exercise performance. 332 57

Three patients addicted to cocaine in the form of "freebasing" were treated because of asthma. Patient no. 1 had very severe asthma while using the illicit drug. Patient no. 2's asthma became severe 2 months after she stopped this form of cocaine. Patient no. 3, who had asthma in childhood, developed cough and shortness of breath (but not wheezing) when he smoked the freebase but not while snorting. Freebasing may cause or contribute to asthma as a nonspecific irritant.
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PMID:Association of asthma and freebase smoking. 335 39

Nine patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), with pulmonary involvement confirmed by biopsy, presented with progressive cough and/or shortness of breath and had interstitial infiltrates on chest radiographs. Biopsies showed a dense lymphocytic infiltrate that followed bronchovascular bundles. We considered CLL the predominant finding, and the cause of the patient's pulmonary disease, in eight cases; in one, a histologically nonspecific organizing pneumonia was the main lesion and CLL was an incidental finding. Culture results were available in six cases and were negative except in one case with presumed contaminants. A granulomatous reaction was present in five cases and was necrotizing in two, although culture results were negative. The only case with a recognizable organism had noninvasive fungal hyphae growing in many of the small airways. All of the patients' respiratory symptoms improved after chemotherapy and/or steroid therapy, and the chest radiographs also showed clearing.
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PMID:Lung biopsy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. 337 59

Outward Bound programs are carried out throughout the world, and many of these courses occur at altitudes above 3000 m (10,000 ft). As more knowledge is accumulated about health problems at high altitudes, exercise has been implicated as a factor contributing to acute mountain sickness in susceptible individuals. Thus, exercise conditioning programs occurring at high altitudes have come under scrutiny. Twenty-eight young men and women were enrolled in an Outward Bound course at an altitude over 3000 m for a 21-day period. Twelve of the 28 individuals developed shortness of breath, cough, or both by the third day of the course. Of these 12, seven had pulmonary function abnormalities: three having evidence of large airway involvement and four having findings of small airway involvement. The symptoms were not significant enough to interfere with acclimatization and the muscular conditioning aspects of the program. Although at altitudes between 3000 m and 4300 m, pulmonary function abnormalities of acute mountain sickness develop in a significant number of participants, the abnormalities were not significant enough to prevent persons from completing the course or achieving marked improvements in fitness measurements.
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PMID:Effects of exercise at high altitudes on young adults. 341 1

To clarify the association between spirometry variability and respiratory morbidity and mortality, the authors analyzed data for miners examined in the first round of the National Coal Study, 1969-1971, and they compared groups of miners who failed with those who met each of two spirometry variability criteria: a 5% criterion recommended by the American Thoracic Society, and a 200 ml criterion used in prior research studies. Compared with miners who met the 5% criterion (the best two forced vital capacities must be within 5% or 100 ml of one another), the group that failed had a lower mean for forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), and odds ratios for cough, phlegm, wheeze, shortness of breath, and death of 1.75, 1.67, 1.76, 2.71, and 1.30, respectively. The findings for the 200 ml criterion (the best two FEV1s must be within 200 ml of one another) were somewhat different. The group that failed versus the group that met this criterion had a higher mean for FEV1, and odds ratios for cough, phlegm, wheeze, shortness of breath, and death of 1.13, 1.07, 1.15, 1.43, and 0.94, respectively. Although the findings differ for the two criteria, the findings demonstrate that increased spirometry variability is associated with poorer health.
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PMID:Spirometry variability criteria--association with respiratory morbidity and mortality in a cohort of coal miners. 349 12

Byssinosis, a respiratory disease of workers on cotton, flax, and soft hemp, is classically characterized as shortness of breath, cough, and chest tightness on Mondays or the first day of return to work after a time off. Exposure to these vegetable dusts can also result in other respiratory diseases, and the term cotton dust-induced respiratory disease (CDIRD) is introduced. Although clinically characterized for more than a century, the underlying pathogenesis of CDIRD remains obscure. An allergic pathogenesis has been proposed. This article reviews previous and current research findings supporting this mechanism and raises the possibility that, in some individuals, CDIRD may be due to pre-existing or occupationally induced mold allergy.
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PMID:Immunologic responses to inhaled cotton dust. 351 2

Previous studies indicated that the prevalence of symptomatic asthma is about 4 to 7 percent. No similar studies exist to suggest the prevalence of asthma in highly trained competitive athletes, since asthma is thought to be an uncommon disease in this population. We became concerned, therefore, when a large number of football players developed symptoms consistent with asthma during preparation in California for the Rose Bowl in December 1981. We studied the team and found 12 percent of the football players admitted to a history of asthma, whereas none of the members of the university basketball team and 7 percent of a group of sophomore medical students and physician assistant students gave a history of asthma. Furthermore, 19 percent of the football players indicated that at some time they had chest tightness, cough, wheezing, or prolonged shortness of breath after exercise; 12 percent of the basketball players and 37 percent of the students indicated such a history. We examined each of these three groups for non-specific bronchial hyperresponsiveness to inhaled methacholine using a modified methacholine bronchoprovocation (MBP) challenge and found that 76 of 151 (50 percent) football players tested had positive tests; 76 percent of those with symptoms had positive results of inhalation tests and 47 percent of those with minimal or no symptoms had positive test results. In addition, four of 16 (25 percent) basketball players and 69 of 167 (41 percent) students had positive MBP tests. These studies indicate that bronchial hyperresponsiveness to inhaled methacholine is much more common in these young adults than has previously been suspected.
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PMID:Prevalence of bronchial hyperresponsiveness in highly trained athletes. 352 19

We have studied 50 children with one parent with asthma at a mean age of 6.4 years by symptom questionnaire and performed allergy skin testing and measurement of bronchial responsiveness to methacholine in both parent and child in 29-32 cases. Ninety eight per cent of the parents were receiving medication for asthma. Fifty one per cent had visited their doctor and 20% had taken more than five days off work in the previous 12 months; 12% had been admitted to hospital during the preceding 10 years. In the children the prevalences of wheeze, shortness of breath, and cough were all about double that found in a general population survey of children of similar age. Atopy was present in 90% of parents, but the prevalence of atopy among the children was not significantly different from the children in the general population. Eczema and hay fever, however, had high prevalences of 40% and 24%, respectively. Responsiveness to methacholine (provocation dose achieving 20% fall in forced expiratory volume in one second less than 6.4 mumol) was found in 93% of parents and 45% of children, which is compatible with a large increase compared with the general population. All atopic but only 50% of non-atopic children with symptoms of asthma responded to methacholine. These findings indicate that children who have one parent with asthma have roughly double the chance of developing clinical features of asthma compared with the general population and suggests that, in these children, a causal interaction occurs between atopy and bronchial hyper-responsiveness.
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PMID:Symptoms, atopy, and bronchial response to methacholine in parents with asthma and their children. 354

Acceleration atelectasis is the absorptional collapse of alveoli in the dependent lung due to increased accelerative forces. It is exacerbated by breathing 100% oxygen and, during +Gz exposure, by the use of an anti-G suit. Experiments were conducted on 12 subjects using simulated aerial combat maneuvers (SACM) with G profiles having peak exposures of either 4.5 G or 9 G. Decreases in vital capacity (VC) measurements were used as quantification of atelectasis, two types of reduction being identified and described. Labile reductions in VC were readily restored by a deep breath or cough. Such reduction approximated 28% following the 4.5-G SACM and 25% following the 9-G SACM. More persistent (so called) stable reductions were of lesser degree, values of -20% being seen following both 9 G and 4.5 G maneuvers. Acceleration atelectasis causes symptoms of chest pain, coughing, and shortness of breath. Subjective ratings of the severity of these symptoms were obtained from the subjects, and these were much greater following the 4.5-G SACM exposures than after the 9-G runs. Acceleration atelectasis was reduced by dilution of the inspired oxygen concentration by argon and nitrogen (evaluated at 95, 82.5, 70, 50, and 20% oxygen); the addition of unassisted positive pressure at 30 mm Hg (4 kPa) to the breathing mask; or the performance of the anti-G straining maneuver (AGSM).
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PMID:Induction and prevention of acceleration atelectasis. 354 76

The bronchoprovocation test has been widely used in diagnosis of bronchial asthma. Forty-eight cases under tentative diagnosis of bronchial asthma, with complaints of cough, shortness of breath, and wheezing, were studied by using histamine and methacholine. Their baseline pulmonary functions were all normal. Among the Fourteen cases, histamine and methacholine provocation tests were both negative in 14 cases (29%) (Group 1). There were 18 cases (37%) of allergic asthmatics with positive challenge to either histamine (2 cases) or methacholine (1 case) or both (15 cases) (Group 2). There were 16 cases (34%) of nonallergic asthmatics with positive challenge to either histamine (2 cases) or methacholine (3 cases) or both (11 cases) (Group 3). In Group 2, the average PD20 FEV1 for methacholine and histamine was 25.8 +/- 8.2 BU and 22.9 +/- 7.1 BU respectively; the average PD25 FEF25-75 for methacholine and histamine was 19.4 +/- 7.0 BU and 21.1 +/- 7.1 BU respectively. The sensitivities, compared between both agents, were nearly the same. In Group 3, the average PD20 FEV1 for methacholine and histamine was 35.1 +/- 9.0 BU and 54.5 +/- 9.6 BU respectively; the average PD25 FEF25-75 for methacholine and histamine was 27.9 +/- 8.6 BU and 50.2 +/- 9.6 BU respectively. Methacholine is more sensitive in detecting airway hyperreactivity in this group. When these two groups of asthmatics were compared, Group 2 patients were more sensitive to challenges with histamine and methacholine (p less than 0.02).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Bronchoprovocation test in the normal and in asthmatics. 354 1


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