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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The high incidence of serious chest infections in patients with Parkinson's disease is unexplained, but an impairment in
cough
reflex may have a role. Maximal voluntary
cough
(MVC) and reflex
cough
(RC) to inhalation of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water were analyzed in patients with Parkinson's disease and age-matched control subjects by monitoring the integrated electromyographic activity (IEMG) of abdominal muscles. The peak amplitude of IEMG activity (IEMGP) was expressed as a fraction of the highest IEMGP value observed during MVC corrected to account for possible losses in abdominal muscle force due to reduced central muscle activation.
Cough
intensity was indexed in terms of both the IEMGP and the ratio of IEMGP to the duration of the expiratory ramp (
TEC
), i.e., the rate of rise of IEMG activity.
Cough
threshold was slightly higher in patients than in control subjects, but the difference failed to reach statistical significance. Compared with control subjects, patients displayed a lower IEMGP during maximal expiratory pressure maneuvers (PEmax), MVC, and RC (p always < 0.01);
TEC
during RC was longer (p < 0.01) than in controls. Consequently, the rate of rise of IEMG activity during
cough
was always lower in patients (p < 0. 01), especially during RC. Finally, PEmax, and both the peak and rate of rise of IEMG activity during RC were inversely related to the level of clinical disability (Spearman rank correlation coefficient, rs = -0.88, -0.86, and -0.85, respectively, p always < 0.01). The results indicate that the central neural mechanisms subserving the recruitment of motor units and/or the increase in their frequency of discharge during voluntary and, even more markedly, RC are impaired in patients with Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Defective motor control of coughing in Parkinson's disease. 970 Jan 21
Ablation of the larynx implies withdrawal of afferent information from receptors involved both in the control of expiratory flow and in the genesis of protective airway reflexes including
coughing
. To investigate the effects of laryngectomy on the sensory and motor component of
coughing
, maximal voluntary
cough
(MVC) efforts as well as the reflex
cough
(RC) responses at threshold (T) and suprathreshold (1.8 x T, ST) levels induced by inhalation of progressively increasing concentrations of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water (fog) were analyzed in 10 laryngectomized patients and 10 control subjects.
Cough
intensity was indexed in terms of both the peak amplitude of the integrated electromyographic activity of abdominal muscles (IEMGP) and the ratio of IEMGP to the duration of the expiratory ramp (
TEC
), i.e., the rate of rise of IEMG activity (IEMGP/
TEC
).
Cough
peak flow was also recorded.
Cough
threshold was similar in patients and controls, as were IEMGP,
TEC
, and IEMGP/
TEC
recorded during MVC and RCST. In contrast, during RCT, patients' IEMGP was significantly reduced (p < 0.05), thus leading to a significant decrease in IEMGP/
TEC
(p < 0.05) even in the absence of significant differences in
TEC
.
Cough
flow closely correlated with IEMG-related variables.
Cough
volume acceleration, i. e., the ratio of
cough
peak flow to the corresponding time to
cough
peak flow was also significantly reduced in the patients, especially during RCT (p < 0.01). The results suggest that the lack of signals arising from the larynx may result in a reduction of
cough
volume acceleration as well as in the intensity of abdominal muscle contractions during RCT. These factors may contribute to facilitate the onset and/or the persistence of chest infections in laryngectomized patients.
...
PMID:Coughing in laryngectomized patients. 1055 24