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)

Asthma is common in the elderly population and the differences between younger and older asthmatics should be appreciated (Table 2). Asthma is frequently overlooked in the geriatric population. Objective measures of pulmonary function can aid in a prompt diagnosis and lead to effective treatment and improved quality of life. Because smoking is an important risk factor for asthma-like symptoms of wheezing, cough, and sputum production, asthma is frequently confused with COPD. When airflow obstruction is found, attempts to demonstrate reversibility can uncover an asthmatic component to the disease. In patients who have asthma symptoms and no airflow obstruction, methacholine testing is helpful. When a normal methacholine challenge is present, a diagnosis of asthma can be excluded and the physician can pursue other diagnostic considerations such as heart failure, chronic aspiration syndrome, pulmonary embolic disease, and carcinoma of the lung. The onset of wheezing, shortness of breath, and cough in an elderly patient is likely to cause concern. Although the adage "all that wheezes is not asthma" is true at any age, it is especially true in the elderly. Diagnosis based on objective measures is essential.
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PMID:Asthma in the elderly. 1273 15

Various types of non-tuberculous mycobacteria can be the aetiologic factors of chronic lung infections especially in patients with underlying chronic lung diseases. The aim of this study is to present the cases of pulmonary mycobacterioses observed in Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases in the years 1995-2001. There were 23 patients, 12 men and 11 women in the age between 35-77 years, mean 56 years. 16 out of 23 patients had underlying respiratory problems, mainly healed tuberculosis (7) and COPD (6). Two additional patients suffered from other diseases with potential immunosuppression (leukopenia). In 5 patients no disease other than mycobacteriosis was found, but they were chronic smokers. In 19 cases cough and expectoration of purulent sputum lasting from several months to several years was observed. In 5 patients onset of disease was acute or subacute with high fever. Eight patients had haemoptysis. In chest X-ray pathological lesions including (18 cases) lung cirrhosis (10) and cavities (15) were found. In 4 cases disseminated bronchiectases with small nodules were the main radiologic feature. Mycobacteriosis was caused by M. kansasii in 11 cases, by M. intracellularae in 6, by M. xenopi in 5 and by M. scrofulaceum in 1 case.
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PMID:[Pulmonary mycobacterioses--frequency of occurrence, clinical spectrum and predisposing factors]. 1288 64

Eosinophilic bronchitis is a common and treatable cause of chronic cough. The major pathological feature is eosinophilic airway inflammation, similar to that seen in asthma. However, the associated airway dysfunction is quite different, with evidence of heightened cough reflex sensitivity, but no variable airflow obstruction or airway hyperresponsiveness. Recent evidence suggests that the differences in functional association are related to differences in localization of mast cells in airway wall, with airway smooth muscle infiltration occurring in asthma and epithelial infiltration in eosinophilic bronchitis. Diagnosis is usually made with induced sputum analysis after exclusion of other causes for chronic cough on clinical, radiological and lung function assessment. The cough responds well to inhaled corticosteroids but dose and duration of treatment remain unclear. Little is known about the natural history of this condition. However, some patients with COPD without a history of previous asthma have sputum eosinophilia, so one possibility is that some cases of eosinophilic bronchitis may develop fixed airflow obstruction. Further study of this interesting condition will increase our understanding of airway inflammation and airway responsiveness, leading to novel targets for therapeutics for both eosinophilic bronchitis and asthma.
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PMID:Eosinophilic bronchitis: clinical features, management and pathogenesis. 1472 15

Exacerbations of COPD are a common cause of morbidity and mortality in this chronic lung disease. Many exacerbations are caused by bacterial or viral infections, but the cause of about 30% of exacerbations cannot be identified. Clinical symptoms (increased dyspnea, cough, and sputum) are due to increased inflammation of the central and peripheral airways, resulting in increased mucus production and bronchoconstriction. Home management consists of an intensive bronchodilator therapy (beta-agonists and anticholinergics), oral glucocorticosteroids and possibly antibiotics, depending on the clinical situation. Hospitalisation has to be considered if initial medical management fails, if there are significant co-morbidities or complications, or if the underlying COPD is severe. Several possibilities to prevent recurrence of COPD exacerbations are discussed.
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PMID:[Exacerbations of COPD--new aspects in pathogenesis and therapy]. 1517 11

To determine the causes, risk factors and complications of planned extubation failure of critically ill elderly patients, we conducted a prospective study of 175 consecutive patients (> or = 70 years old) admitted with respiratory failure. Thirty-six (21%) failed extubation within 72 h after planned extubation. Compared to a younger age group (< 70 years old) matched for severity of illness, inability to handle secretions (20%) was the most common reason of airway causes leading to extubation failure in the elderly while upper airway obstruction (22%) was the predominant cause in the control group. As for nonairway causes, COPD related hypercapnic respiratory failure accounted for the majority of cases in both groups. After adjusting for severity of illness, elderly patients who required reintubation had a higher risk of developing nosocomial pneumonia. The presence of underlying pulmonary disease (odds ratio (OR), 2.9; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2-6.9), length of intubation > 4 days (OR, 4.3; 95% CI 1.8-10.2), and albumin levels < 2.5 g/dl (OR, 2.7; 95% CI 1.2-6.7) were independently associated with extubation failure in the old. Objective measurements of cough strength and secretion volume are needed to reduce the morbidity of elderly patients at risk for extubation failure.
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PMID:Extubation failure in the elderly. 1525 Feb 33

Cough induced syncope belongs to the heterogenous group of situational syncopes. The mechanism of tussive syncope is demonstrated by presenting an illustrative case. A 79 year old male with underlying COPD was evaluated because of repeated cough related syncopal episodes. The nature of fainting was elucidated by haemodynamic monitoring of an induced cough attack. As documented by continuous blood pressure and middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity recordings, fainting was the result of the equalization of arterial and central venous pressures, with concomitant decrease in cerebral blood flow. Analogies and differences between haemodynamic responses induced by cough and Valsalva straining are highlighted. The typical lack of prodromal symptoms in cough syncope are well explained by the rapidly developing cerebral hypoperfusion.
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PMID:[Mechanism of cough syncope]. 1538 60

Acute episode of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease occurs in almost all patients, during which cough, expectoration and dyspnea increase. When the underlying disease is not severe and the acute episode not life-threatening, the term "exacerbation" is appropriate, and the patients can be managed at home. When the underlying disease is advanced and the acute episode possibly life-threatening, the terms of "acute respiratory failure" or "decompensation" can be used. These patients are most often admitted to the hospital, and at times to the intensive care unit. Bronchodilators and respiratory physiotherapy form the basis of the management of acute episodes of COPD. In severe cases, oxygen must be administered, and the decision of an hospitalisation considered. Antibiotics and corticosteroids shoud not be prescribed in a systematic manner. In the most severe cases, non-invasive ventilation must be accessible. The prevention of acute episodes of COPD is best achieved through tobacco cessation and influenza vaccine. Finally, an acute episode may be an opportunity to make a diagnosis of COPD if this has not been done before.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and management of exacerbations and acute respiratory failure in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]. 1549 98

The diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis is often delayed due to atypical clinical features and difficulty in obtaining positive bacteriology. We reviewed 232 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis diagnosed in Kedah Medical Centre, Alor Setar from January 1998 to December 2002. All age groups were affected with a male predominance (Male:Female ratio = 60:40). Risk factors include underlying diabetes mellitus (17.7%), positive family history (16.8%) and previous tuberculosis (5.2%). Nearly half (45.3%) of patients had symptoms for more than one year. Only 22% of patients had typical symptoms of tuberculosis (prolonged recurrent fever, cough, anorexia and weight loss), whilst others presented with haemoptysis, chronic cough, COPD, bronchiectasis, general ill-health, pyrexia of unknown origin or pleural effusion without other systemic symptoms. Fifteen percent of the patients presented with extrapulmonary diagnosis. Ninety percent of the patients had previous medical consultations but 40% had no chest radiograph or sputum examination done. The chest radiographs showed 'typical' changes of tuberculosis in 62% while in the other 38% the radiological features were 'not typical'. Sputum direct smear was positive for acid-fast bacilli in only 22.8% of patients and 11.2% were diagnosed base on positive sputum culture. Sputum may be negative even in patients with typical clinical presentations and chest radiograph changes. Bronchial washing improved the diagnosis rate being positive in 49.1% of cases (24.1% by direct smear and the other 25.0% by culture). In 16.8% of cases, the diagnosis was based on a good response to empirical anti-tuberculosis therapy in patients with clinical and radiological features characteristic of tuberculosis. In conclusions, the clinical and radiological manifestations of pulmonary tuberculosis may be atypical. Sputum is often negative and bronchoscopy with washings for Mycobacterium culture gives a higher yield for diagnosis. In highly probable cases, empirical therapy with antituberculosis drugs should be considered because it is safe and beneficial.
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PMID:Pulmonary tuberculosis--a review of clinical features and diagnosis in 232 cases. 1553 27

COPD is often accompanied with acute symptoms exacerbations. Patients in Ist stage: slide grade of COPD and IInd stage: middle grade of COPD suffer exacerbations accompanied with increased dyspnoea often together with increased cough and increased production of sputum. Patients in IIIrd stage (serious) and IVth stage (very serious) experience during exacerbations development of respiration insufficiency or its worsening and thus are usually treated in hospital. The most frequent causes of exacerbations are tracheobronchial tree infections and air pollution. The cause of approximately one third of serious exacerbations is not disclosed. Conditions which can resemble acute exacerbation are pneumonia, congestive heart failure, pneumothorax, pleural exudation, pulmonary embolism, and arrhythmia. Exacerbation treatment is symptomatic. Obstruction symptoms are treated with bronchodilatants and corticosteroids administration, hypoxemia with oxygen administration and signs of bacterial infection with antibiotics.
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PMID:[Treatment principle of the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation]. 1558 Sep 1

Whether women receive the same medical care for COPD as men and if they are at risk of different outcomes as a result, is not known. The Confronting COPD International Survey was performed in the USA, Canada, France, Italy, Germany, The Netherlands, Spain and the UK in 2000 with 3265 COPD participants. Forty-one per cent were women; mean age in women and men was 61.2 (SD 10.5) and 64.4 (11.0) years, mean pack-years of smoking 36 (29) and 46 (35) years, respectively. After adjusting for age, pack-years, country and severe dyspnea (MRC scores 5 and 4), women were less likely to have had spirometry (OR 0.84, 95% C.I. 0.72-0.98) but more likely to get smoking cessation advice (OR 1.57, 1.33-1.86). Despite significantly lower pack-years of smoking, women were more likely to report severe dyspnea than men (OR 1.30, 1.10-1.54), with similar cough (OR 1.08, 0.92-1.27) and less sputum (OR 0.84, 0.72-0.98). There were no differences in the risk of hospitalisation or emergency room visit. This study indicates that gender differences in COPD care and outcomes exist.
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PMID:Gender differences in the management and experience of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. 1558 42


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