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)

The main purpose of the paper was to find a possible relationship between smoking and immunological disorders, which are to be the common ground for chronic respiratory diseases. Measurements of IgG and IgA in saliva and blood serum were performed in 87 persons during medical check-up before admission to work in a sulphur mine. Persons with cough and/or sputum production usually in the morning or during the day or at night were defined as positive symptoms. From the study, different immunoglobulin patterns have emerged in saliva and serum in relation to smoking. IgG content in saliva of smokers was lower and IgA higher than in non-smokers. Levels of both immunoglobulins in serum were lower among smokers. In persons with respiratory symptoms IgG content in saliva was markedly lower especially in smokers.
Rev Fr Mal Respir
PMID:IgG and IgA in saliva and blood serum in relation to smoking and respiratory symptoms. 54 78

In this study the Authors have verified the efficacy of Thymopentin administered via aerosol in the prevention of recurrent catarrhal episodes in the patients affected by COPD during the winter season, compared to the previous winter. In October, 1 phial of Thymopentin was administered via aerosol to 15 patients affected by COPD, daily, for 10 consecutive days; all patients were evaluated at monthly clinical control for 4 months and all patients were invited to keep a diary of daily variations. After 4 months from treatment a net improvement was observed in the clinical parameters studied: sputum (volume and purulence), cough and dyspnoea, but the most interesting datum was the total absence of recurrent episodes of infection, associated to the reduction in quantity of antibiotics, mucolytics and number of days of illness and with noticeable improvement in the quality of life of the patients.
Arch Monaldi Mal Torace
PMID:[Aerosol thymopentin in the prevention of relapse of chronic bronchitis]. 130 35

An enquiry was made to determine the prevalence of asthma in adolescents and was achieved using a questionnaire which was filled in by the pupils in secondary schools in Rabat. The sample was determined by a systematic poll of 1,616 pupils of whom 1,464 (90.6%) replied. 88 pupils (6.0%) replied in the affirmative to the question "Have you ever had whistling noises in the chest?", 78 (5.3%) to the question "Have you ever had a sensation of respiratory difficulty or suffocation with a whistling noise in the chest?", 48 (3.3%) to the question "Have you ever had asthma?" and 36 (2.5%) to all 3 questions and 114 (7.8%) to one or other of the questions. After a detailed questionnaire had been carried out on 110 of 114 pupils the diagnosis of asthma was confirmed in 50, which gives an estimation of the accumulative prevalence of 3.4% +/- 0.9%. This prevalence is higher amongst the oldest children in the family (26 out of 349, 7.4%) compared to the birth order of the other brothers and sisters (24 out of 1,112, 2.2%) (p less than 0.001). Pupils from higher social backgrounds (22 out of 256, 8.6% against 28 out of 1,208, 2.3% from more average or more poor social backgrounds, p less than 0.01). A past family history of asthma were more often noted in asthmatics (38 out of 50, 76%) than in non-asthmatics (406 out of 414, 28.7%) p less than 0.001). In the same way cough and phlegm and episodes of bronchitis occurring in autumn and winter and breathlessness on effort are more frequent in asthmatics; 20 out of 50 (40%) against 318 out of 1,414 (22.5%) for the cough (p less than 0.01), 12 out of 50 (24%) against 157 out of 1,414 (11.1%) for phlegm (p less than 0.01), 31 out of 50 (62%) against 337 out of 1,414 (23.8%) for episodes of bronchitis (p less than 0.001) and 15 out of 50 (30%) against 219 out of 1,414 (15.5%) for breathlessness on effort (p less than 0.001). Besides this we have noticed a slight predominance of asthma in boys compared to girls but the difference is not significant.
Rev Mal Respir 1992
PMID:[The prevalence of adolescent asthma in Rabat. A survey conducted in secondary schools]. 156 28

This article is a review of the clinical and functional scores used for the assessment of the severity of asthma. Dyspnea is a key feature of asthma but its severity is difficult to interpret. Subjects with continuous airway obstruction may tend to be poor sensors of their dyspnea. The addition of other symptoms such as cough, wheezing, etc. to the dyspnea score can also be criticized. An international consensus conference recently proposed a clinical and functional scale to assess the severity of asthma. A combination of clinical, drug and functional information can best express the severity of asthma. Data originating from the authors work suggest that the correlations between clinical and drug scores on the one hand and peak expiratory flow rate values on the other hand are weak. It is the authors' final impression that the severity of asthma should be judged in a global way by considering various parameters.
Rev Mal Respir 1992
PMID:[Evaluation of asthma: clinical or functional scores?]. 158 32

Metered-dose inhalers have several caveats. They contain fluorocarbons which are considered to be responsible for the depletion of the ozone layer in the stratosphere. Inhalation through metered-dose inhalers can cause cough and bronchospasm. Moreover, metered-dose inhalers are difficult to handle. Errors in using these devices have been described in 30% to 70% of subjects, the incoordination between the actuation of the device and the inhalation being the most common. The author describes the Turbuhaler made of three parts (a reservoir for the powder, the dosing chamber and the inhalation channel) and the way it works. It has been shown that the efficacy of terbutaline (in mg/mg) is equivalent with the Turbuhaler and the metered-dose inhaled. Several studies that are reviewed by the author show that the Turbuhaler is the inhalation device that is the easiest to use.
Rev Mal Respir 1992
PMID:[The Turbuhaler]. 158 36

Several respiratory complications have been described in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC), and are the subject of this review. Involvement of the bronchial tree is the most frequent of them. Chronic bronchitis (16 patients) and bilateral bronchiectasis (16 patients) are responsible for chronic disabling bronchial suppuration. Symptoms related to the bronchial disease most often develop in patients in whom the diagnosis of ulcerative colitis is already established (88% of cases). Occurrence before the diagnosis of UC is possible, but unusual. Bronchial involvement can develop in patients whose UC is in complete remission, or who have undergone coloproctectomy up to several years earlier. Impressive improvement of cough and sputum production commonly occur following inhaled steroids. This is of great diagnostic and therapeutic significance. Other complications include subacute asphyxiating tracheal obstruction due to intralumenal inflammatory overgrowth (1 patient), small airways disease and panbronchiolitis (2 patients), BOOP (4 patients), pulmonary angiitis (6 patients), desquamative interstitial pneumonitis and granulomatosis (2 and 3 patients respectively), biapical pulmonary infiltrates (2 patients) and serositis. In addition, UC patients can develop less specific pulmonary problems such as pulmonary edema, pulmonary embolism and sulfasalazopyridine-induced pneumonitis and fibrosis.
Rev Mal Respir 1991
PMID:[Respiratory manifestations of hemorrhagic rectocolitis]. 176 14

The authors report a case of benign multinodular pulmonary histoplasmosis, occurring in a 65 year old woman coming back from Guatemala. The disease presented with both fever and cough. The diagnosis was made on a lung biopsy (by thoracotomy) that showed granulomas with giant cells, lymphocytes and central necrosis, and histoplasma capsulatum yeasts on Gomori Grocott coloration. The authors recall the main radiological forms of the disease, and the difficulties of the diagnosis. When not disseminated, histoplasmosis usually has a good prognosis and does not require any treatment.
Rev Mal Respir 1991
PMID:[Pulmonary histoplasmosis due to Histoplasma capsulatum. A case]. 176 22

We report the case of 3 1/2 year old child presenting a left pleuropericarditic cyst causing febrile cough and an opacity of the left lower lobe of the lung. We underline the importance of computed tomography of the thorax allows differential diagnosis with encysted effusion. Surgical treatment rarely indicated in pleuropericarditic cysts has stopped respiratory symptoms.
Rev Mal Respir 1991
PMID:[Pleuro-pericardial cyst in children]. 176 24

The authors describe a case of toxoplasmosis occurring in a subject who is HIV positive who presented with a cough and an infectious syndrome. Toxoplasma gondii was identified in the broncho-alveolar lavage even though the X-ray, the fibroscopy, blood gases and the broncho-alveolar lavage were normal. The frequency of pulmonary disease in the course of a toxoplasma infection in HIV subjects was underlined. Amongst the non invasive diagnostic methods the authors stress the value of broncho-alveolar lavage with a close search for toxoplasma even in the absence of any suggestive paraclinical anomalies.
Rev Mal Respir 1991
PMID:[Disseminated toxoplasmosis in a patient with HIV infection]. 185 17

We have studied cough and bronchial constriction induced by inhaling citric acid in 15 smokers with baseline airflow obstruction, in 13 occasional smokers and 13 non smokers. The threshold for cough was significantly higher in occasional smokers in relation to smokers and non smokers. Citric acid produced the same degree of bronchial constriction at the same time in smokers and occasional smokers: the maximum fall in forced expired volume (FEV1-VEMS) was recorded five seconds after inhalation of the citric acid (dose threshold) and there was no significant difference between the two groups. In the non smokers, the maximum fall in VEMS was recorded twenty seconds after inhalation of the citric acid and was significantly less in relation to that of the smokers and occasional smokers. In the smokers the degree of smoking could influence the fall of VEMS (% predicted). Cough and bronchial constriction after the inhalation of citric acid are probably related to different physiological mechanisms and are linked to the history of smoking.
Rev Mal Respir 1991
PMID:[Cough and bronchial obstruction induced by citric acid in smokers, occasional smokers and non-smokers]. 192 77


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