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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pathophysiology, symptoms and treatment of paraquat intoxication, primarily from oral ingestion, and the pharmacology and pharmacokinetics of paraquat are reviewed. Toxicity has occurred after topical application, oral ingestion or inhalation of paraquat. Systemic toxicity has not been reported from smoking of paraquat-contaminated marijuana but heavy abusers of contaminated marijuana may experience
coughing
, hemoptysis and mouth irritation. Following ingestion of 30 mg/kg or 50 ml of a 21% (w/w) solution of paraquat (as the base), hepatic, cardiac or renal failure or death may occur. Smaller doses (greater than or equal to 4 mg/kg of paraquat base) may cause
respiratory distress
, renal dysfunction or, occasionally, jaundice or adrenal cortical necrosis. When paraquat ingestion is suspected, the drug should be removed immediately from the gastrointestinal tract by gastric lavage or by whole-gut irrigation. Adsorbents such as Fuller's earth, bentonite or activated charcoal may be used during gastric lavage. Combined use of forced diuresis (with furosemide, mannitol and i.v. dextrose in water or normal saline), hemodialysis or hemoperfusion is recommended until the compound cannot be detected in body fluids or the dialysate. Immediate and effective treatment is necessary to prevent systemic toxicity or death from paraquat intoxication.
...
PMID:Paraquat poisoning: a review. 36 Aug 33
Varicella pneumonia during pregnancy may be relatively mild or rapidly fatal. Diagnosis is based on the usual criteria for varicella in association with signs and symptoms of
respiratory distress
: dyspnea, tachypnea,
cough
, chest pain, and hemoptysis, with characteristic x-ray findings. Treatment should be directed toward maintaining blood oxygen saturation at as near normal as possible (monitored by serial blood gas determinations). The occurrence of congenital varicella is unpredictable, but an infant born within four days of the mother's development of the varicella skin rash is at high risk, with the outcome being fatal in five percent of cases.
...
PMID:Varicella pneumonia during pregnancy. 42 71
The patient was a 60-year-old white male who, for 18 months, had complained of a substernal wheeze on exertion, exertional dyspnoea and
cough
, and attacks of acute
respiratory distress
. There was no haemoptysis or dyshpagia and he was treated for bronchial asthma until bronchoscopy revealed the tumour which had not been recognized in plain chest films. He showed no evidence of a neurofibromatosis and apart from reduction in pulmonary function tests on a PO2 of 74, his laboratory tests were negative. There was no family history of neurofibromatosis. He underwent thoracotomy and a smooth rounded pedunculated tumour, 2.5 cm in diameter, arising from the posterior wall of the trachea, 3 cm above the carina was excised. He has had no tumour recurrence.
...
PMID:Solitary neurofibroma of the trachea. 63 Jan 92
Primary liposarcomas of the mediastinum are very rare tumors. We record herein the fiftieth documented case, and the sixth in which there was evidence of superior vena caval obstruction. All previously reported cases have been studied; their salient clinical and pathological features have been tabulated. Review of these case reports reveals that the majority of patients have complaints of
respiratory distress
or chest pain. Other common presenting complaints include
cough
and weight loss. These tumors grow to an enormous size, and symptoms are referable to compression of contiguous intrathoracic structures. Radiotherapy or chemotherapy or both are ineffective theraputic modalities. The treatment of choice is surgical in all cases. Such an approach serves to establish a tissue diagnosis, to relieve the patient's symptoms, and may at times result in a cure.
...
PMID:Primary liposarcoma of the mediastinum. Report of a case and review of the literature. 87 45
We describe a rare case of hydatid cyst in the spleen which communicated to the left pleural cavity. The patient presented with
respiratory distress
, characterized by nonproductive
cough
and dyspnea. The difficulties in diagnosis, using standard laboratory and radiologic techniques, were overcome by the use of ultrasound examination diagnosing both the cysts and the supra-diaphragmatic extension.
...
PMID:Splenic echinococcal cyst burrowing into left pleural space. 90 30
The incidence of respiratory symptoms caused by grain dust during harvesting was surveyed in a group of Lincolnshire farmers. A quarter complained of
respiratory distress
after working on combine harvesters or near grain driers and elevators, with
cough
, wheezing, and breathlessness, sometimes so severe as to prevent work. The airborne dust around combine harvesters contained up to 200 million fungus spores/m3 air with Cladosporium predominant while drivers were exposed to up to 20 million spores/m3 air. Verticillium/Paecilomyces type spores, mostly from Verticillium lecanii, Aphanocladium album, and Paecilomyces bacillosporus, were abundant in the dust. Extracts of these species produced immediate weal reactions in skin tests, precipitin reactions with sera, and rapid decreases in FEV1 when inhaled by affected workers. There was no delayed reactions. Results suggest type I immediate hypersensitivity to the spores although the physical effect of a heavy dust deposit could be important. Drivers could be protected by cabs ventilated with filtered air.
...
PMID:Respiratory disease of workers harvesting grain. 94 Nov 15
A girl with Thalassemia major reacted to a transfusion of packed red blood cells with increasing
respiratory distress
until death 12 1/2 hours later. Chills and fever were followed by dry
cough
, dyspnea, and pulmonary edema. The recipient had lymphocytotoxic antibodies specific for donor leukocyte antigens HL-A11 and possibly W14. At autopsy, the lungs showed pulmonary edema with extensive nonspecific acute alveolar injury. Similar cases in the literature are reviewed.
...
PMID:Fatal pulmonary hypersensitivity reaction to HL-A incompatible blood transfusion:report of a case and review of the literature. 125 14
Five patients with neurogenic pulmonary edema (NPE) were reported. The edemas were caused by head injuries in four patients and by a craniotomy in the fifth. The onset of NPE was either acute (3 hours after injury) or was slow to develop (4 days later). Clinical symptoms included the sudden onset of
coughing
, tachypnea, tachycardia, and pink bubbly sputum. Moreover, the patients also suffered cyanosis, confusion, or respiratory failure. The distribution of the resulting pulmonary edema was diffuse in 4 cases and localized within a single lobe of the lung in 1 case. Treatment of the NPE included reducing intracranial pressure (glycerol), diuresis (furosemide and mannitol), narcotics (morphine, phenobarbital), and blocking the peripheral effect of sympathetic reflex activity (hydralazine, sodium nitroprusside). Mechanical ventilation support (CPU-1) in combination with controlled hyperventilation may also be necessary. The inability to correct hypoxemia without toxic levels of oxygen necessitates the use of PEEP (positive end-expiratory pressure, +5-10 cmH2O). Resolution of symptoms was noted 24 to 48 hours after treatment in 4 patients. Early diagnosis and intensive care of the pulmonary edema may have a significant bearing on the recovery of lung functions. Unfortunately, 4 of the patients failed to survive because of central nervous system failure. We therefore want to emphasize that NPE can cause secondary deterioration of neurological functions. In conclusion, when dealing with
respiratory distress
patients with CNS injuries, the possibility of additional damage from a NPE must be taken into consideration.
...
PMID:[Neurogenic pulmonary edema: five cases report]. 129 67
A 21 month-old unvaccinated boy was admitted for an acute
respiratory distress
episode associated with major leukocytosis (maximum = 146 G/l). Transient heart failure and pneumomediastinum occurred but the outcome was favourable.
Coughing
attacks then occurred and the diagnosis of pertussis was serologically confirmed. This case report is reminiscent of the possible severity of pertussis pneumoniae, the mechanisms of haematologic abnormalities, and stresses to the benefit of pertussis vaccination.
...
PMID:[Diffuse alveolar pertussis with major hyperleukocytosis with "pseudocentrocytic" contingent]. 131 26
This report reviews the manifestations in fifteen children of proved adenoviral pneumonia. Patients' ages ranged from 43 days to 4 years and 1 month. Twelve cases were younger than 2 years old. Adenoviral infections were proved by positive viral cultures or a four-fold increase of the complement fixation titer. Prolonged fever and
cough
were found in all cases. In 13 patients,
respiratory distress
occurred; 5 needed mechanical ventilation. Injected throats, conjunctivae and ear drums were common. Other clinical pictures included abdominal discomfort, hepatomegaly, skin rash, convulsion and bleeding tendency. Abnormal laboratory findings were mild anemia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein, impaired liver function test, and prolonged prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time. Anemia (11 cases), leukopenia (7 cases) and elevated transaminases levels (7 cases) were more common than previously reported. All patients had para-hilar peribronchial infiltrates in chest roentgenography. Segmental atelectasis and compensated hyper-expansion were found frequently. Pleural effusion were noted in six of our cases. Air leak syndrome occurred in three patients who had received mechanical ventilation. Three of the 15 patients expired: one had a preceding measles infection, all had disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. For patients with antibiotic-resistant pneumonia, adenoviral studies should be done. Extrapulmonary manifestations, and some abnormal laboratory findings, i.e., mild anemia, leukopenia, impaired liver function are clues to adenoviral infections, while bleeding tendency can be regarded as a poor prognostic sign for children with adenoviral pneumonia.
...
PMID:Adenoviral pneumonia in children. 132 94
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