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

Pleuropulmonary blastoma is a rare childhood malignancy that may simulate an empyema both clinically and radiographically. A 3-year-old boy with fever, cough, and abdominal pain developed complete opacification of the left hemithorax with contralateral mediastinal shift over the course of several weeks. At thoracotomy, a pleuropulmonary blastoma was discovered. The radiology, pathology, and clinical course of this rare neoplasm are discussed.
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PMID:Pleuropulmonary blastoma simulating an empyema in a young child. 776 24

Atypical pulmonary manifestations of Pneumocystis carinii infection and fair numbers of extrapulmonary and disseminated infections have lately been documented in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection treated prophylactically with inhalative pentamidine. We report the case of a 32-year-old homosexual patient who was assessed for complaints of night sweats, weight loss, and progressive malaise. The patient denied any respiratory tract symptoms such as cough, sputum production, pleuritic chest pain, or shortness of breath. Chest X-ray revealed two large round noncavitating lesions in the lower lobe of the right lung. Pneumocystomas were diagnosed by fine-needle aspiration. A 3-week course of intravenous high-dose cotrimoxazole resulted in amelioration of symptoms but no change in the radiographic appearance of the pulmonary lesions. Four months later the patient is alive and stable and is being treated with pentamidine inhalation of 300 mg per 2 weeks and two tablets of pyrimethamine sulfadoxine per week.
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PMID:A novel variety of atypical Pneumocystis carinii infection after long-term prophylactic pentamidine inhalation in an AIDS patient: large lower lobe pneumocystoma. 847 17

A 3-year old male presented with a 12-month history of painless scalp swellings associated with cough, fever and night sweats. Physical examination showed tender, fluctuant, pulsatile right frontotemporal and temporoparietal masses. Skull radiographs showed osteolytic skull lesions in the frontal and temporal bones. Microscopy of drained caseous material and histology of biopsies from the affected bone edges confirmed tuberculous osteitis. Though there was an initial response to antituberculous agents, the child died after 5 weeks from hepatic failure. Tuberculosis of the skull bones though rare, may become more common with the recent upsurge of tuberculosis worldwide. A high index of suspicion is necessary for early diagnosis and treatment.
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PMID:Tuberculous osteitis of the cranium: a case report. 1059 63

Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) causes chronic cough and triggers asthma. Mechanisms of reflux-associated chronic cough include micro- and macroaspiration, laryngeal injury, and a vagally mediated reflex. An empiric trial of a proton pump inhibitor in patients without other etiologies of cough found through diagnostic testing may be an effective diagnostic strategy for GERD-associated cough. In GERD-associated asthma, there is evidence of neurogenic inflammation. Medical or surgical therapy of GERD results in asthma symptom improvement in about 70% of patients. A 3-month empiric trial of omeprazole, 20 mg daily, followed by esophageal pH testing in drug nonresponders, is the most cost-effective way of diagnosing asthma triggered by GERD.
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PMID:Chronic cough, asthma, and gastroesophageal reflux. 1095 33

Exposure to mushroom spores may cause many respiratory allergic diseases, however, there has been no serial study in a mushroom factory to address this problem. The aim of this study was to investigate the serial changes in respiratory allergy and the incidence of hypersensitivity pneumonitis (HP) in mushroom workers. A 3-year follow-up study, beginning in June 1996, was conducted in a newly operating mushroom factory in which one kind of mushroom is produced: Hypsizigus marmoreus (Bunashimeji). Allergic symptoms, chest roentgenogram, serum precipitins to the spores and soluble adhesion molecules in sera were evaluated once a year in 60 workers and 20 controls. Three out of the 60 subjects were diagnosed as having HP caused by inhalation ofthe mushroom spore and they were therefore excluded from this study, and the 57 non-HP subjects were evaluated. In this study 24 workers quit because of intolerable cough, runny nose, wheezing, sputum, fever elevation and/or shortness of breath at their place of work. During each year of this study as many as 70-80% of employees suffered some ofthe above symptoms, cough being the most frequent, and positive rate of serum precipitins to the spore revealed 30% in 1996, 93% in 1997 and 94% in 1998. From the June 1996 examination until the following May, serum soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 levels of the 15 workers who quit during that period were significantly higher than those in the 42 workers still employed in 1997 (P < 0.05). Workers in Bunashimeji mushroom factories might be at critical risk of developing respiratory allergy. In our 3-year study over 90% workers were sensitized to the spore, 40% quit because of the symptoms and 5% developed HP. It was suggested that workers should be counselled about the risk of mushroom allergy and precautionary measures should be taken to prevent its occurrence.
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PMID:Three-year follow-up study of allergy in workers in a mushroom factory. 1177 90

A 3-year-old spayed female Whippet was examined for cough and respiratory distress. Lung lobe torsion with pleural effusion was diagnosed, and lung lobectomy was performed. Pleural effusion recurred during the following 27 months; conventional bacteriologic cultures of pleural effusion did not result in bacterial growth. A second lung lobectomy, pleuroperitoneal shunt placement. and pericardectomy were subsequently performed. Mycobacterium kansasii was eventually isolated from pleural fluid and identified by polymerase chain reaction amplification and DNA sequencing. The dog was euthanatized before therapeutic response could be evaluated. To our knowledge, this is the first report of M. kansasii infection in a dog. Additionally, this is the first report of mycobacterial isolation from pleural fluid, and one of few reports of antemortem mycobacterial isolation from a body fluid, as opposed to identification in specimens during histologic examination. Routine bacteriologic culture methods are insufficient to isolate mycobacterial agents, and special methods are indicated in dogs with persistent pleural effusion.
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PMID:Isolation and identification of Mycobacterium kansasii from pleural fluid of a dog with persistent pleural effusion. 1199 12

A 3-year-old spayed female dog was admitted with a history of episodes of dyspnoea and coughing. Severe tracheal stenosis was found on radiography. The dog died during an episode of refractory dyspnoea. Necropsy revealed an obstruction of the thoracic part of the trachea because of a chronic granulomatous inflammation protruding into the tracheal lumen. Histological examination revealed nematodes, which were identified as Onchocerca sp. according to their morphological characteristics. In contrast to the common ocular manifestation in dogs, obstructive tracheitis caused by Onchocerca infection has not been reported before.
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PMID:Obstructive, granulomatous tracheitis caused by Onchocerca sp. in a dog. 1553 18

Docetaxel (75 mg m(-2) 3-weekly) is standard second-line treatment in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with significant toxicity. To verify whether a weekly schedule (33.3 mg m(-2) for 6 weeks) improved quality of life (QoL), a phase III study was performed with 220 advanced NSCLC patients, < or =75 years, ECOG PS < or =2. QoL was assessed by EORTC questionnaires and the Daily Diary Card (DDC). No difference was found in global QoL scores at 3 weeks. Pain, cough and hair loss significantly favoured the weekly schedule, while diarrhoea was worse. DDC analysis showed that loss of appetite and overall condition were significantly worse in the 3-week arm in the first week, while nausea and loss of appetite were more severe in the weekly arm in the third week. Response rate and survival were similar, hazard ratio of death in the weekly arm being 1.04 (95% CI 0.77-1.39). A 3-weekly docetaxel was more toxic for leukopenia, neutropenia, febrile neutropenia and hair loss; any grade 3-4 haematologic toxicity was significantly more frequent in the standard arm (25 vs 6%). The weekly schedule could be preferred for patients candidate to receive docetaxel as second-line treatment for advanced NSCLC, because of some QoL advantages, lower toxicity and no evidence of strikingly different effect on survival.
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PMID:A randomised clinical trial of two docetaxel regimens (weekly vs 3 week) in the second-line treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer. The DISTAL 01 study. 1555 71

A 3-month-old baby with trisomy 18 syndrome was scheduled for tracheostomy under general anesthesia because of the prolonged tracheal intubation. Immediately after transferring the patient to the operating table, the patient suddenly began crying and coughing, resulting in severe hypoxia. The patient's lungs could not be ventilated by manual and positive pressure ventilation, and airway obstruction could not be relieved until the respiratory effort spontaneously decreased. We started to administer sevoflurane on the recommendation of pediatricians who had successfully treated the patient with sedation using either midazolam or trichlorethylphosphate in similar situations. After sevoflurane administration, the sedated patient never developed the respiratory effort, and the lungs could be ventilated by manual and positive pressure ventilation without difficulty. The patient was diagnosed as tracheobronchomalacia as a result of intraoperative flexible bronchoscopy performed through tracheostomy tube, revealing significant narrowing of both the trachea and mainstem bronchus lumens. Sedation using sevoflurane may be helpful in maintaining airway patency in the pediatric patient with tracheobronchomalacia.
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PMID:[Severe airway obstruction relieved by sedation using sevoflurane in a pediatric patient with tracheobronchomalacia]. 1574 14

A 3-month-old Schnauzer was presented with congenital defects of the secondary palate. On the clinical examination, coughing, sneezing, drainage of nasal discharge from the external nares and poor growth were found. Vital signs and results of blood examination were within normal ranges. Thoracic radiography revealed mild pneumonia in the right lung lobes. In a puppy suffering from cleft palates, a palatal prosthesis was applied to the hard palate in order to protect the surgical wound, because a routine surgery was not successful. A palatal prosthesis was applied and held in place using the instant glue and plastic bands to protect the surgical wound following the third repeated surgery. Although a small oronasal fistula still remained, there was no functional defect. This prosthesis was easy to apply and helpful to protect the surgical wound. In addition, this implant could be placed or adjusted without or sedation/anesthesia.
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PMID:Application of a temporary palatal prosthesis in a puppy suffering from cleft palate. 1643 60


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