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 Indo-Dutch Environmental and Sanitary Engineering Project under Ganga action Plan in Kanpur and Mirzapur is being executed within the framework of Indo-Dutch bilateral development cooperation. The project aims to integrate technological, social and health related improvements. It is expected that the development approach and methodology can be replicated in other urban settlements in India. The project is being supplemented by a training and institutional strengthening programme, which will facilitate the transfer of new technologies and improvements in operation and maintenance of these new technologies. One of the project's goals is to improve living conditions in the targeted areas by installing drinking water and drainage systems. A socio-economic unit (SEU) in the project supports these technical interventions by encouraging the community to participate in project activities. The Occupational Health Programme in Mirzapur was conceived by the SEU to improve the health and living conditions of child and adult weavers. At the start of the programme, 200 weavers and 60 non-weaver workers from Mirzapur city, matched for age and socio-economic status, were interviewed and underwent a physical examination. The mean age of the weavers is 27 years, reflecting the relatively large percentage of child labour (13.5%). Illiteracy among them is 73%, whereas 14% have had only a primary education. 64.5% of the carpet weavers are Muslims and 35.6% are Hindus. 61% own a loom or work in a family owned loom shed. 95% of the weavers have a monthly income of less than 600 Rs. Complaints of a persistent cough and cough with expectoration, backache, the common cold and joint pains occurred more often in the weaver population than in the comparison group and have been identified as 'occupational hazards'. An intervention programme has been implemented based on the results of the occupational health survey. These interventions include awareness camps, installment of plexiglass tiles for light improvement in the loom sheds, training of community health volunteers and house-to-house health education. Another essential part of the programme is the provision of functional literacy classes for child and adult labourers in the carpet weaving industry. Occupational health as an entry point proved to be a successful approach in this segment of the informal sector, where child labour plays an important role.
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PMID:An occupational health programme for adults and children in the carpet weaving industry, Mirzapur, India: a case study in the informal sector. 143 12

A 58-year-old woman was admitted complaining of dry cough and exertional dyspnea. Physical findings, chest X-ray films, chest CT scan and respiratory function tests were suggestive of interstitial pneumonia. Transbronchial lung biopsy showed specific findings of hypersensitivity pneumonitis. As a result of positive provocation test using her home humidifier, a diagnosis of humidifier lung was made. Many microorganisms including Flavobacterium meningosepticum were cultured from the water left in the humidifier for one week. As both complement fixation test and precipitation test were positive to humidifier water and to extract of Flavobacterium meningosepticum, the humidifier and Flavobacterium meningosepticum were suggested to be causative in this case.
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PMID:[A case of hypersensitivity pneumonitis caused by a humidifier]. 146 90

According to the author's own investigations and to findings reported in the literature, almost all bolus deaths and highly numerous accidental deaths by drowning occur to adults and adolescents under the impact of alcohol. An attempt was made to elucidate the mechanism by which alcohol actually play its role in bolus or drowning death. These two causes of death have in common complete or partial obstruction of respiratory tract. Yet, safety against that life-threatening condition were devised by evolution very early in phylogenesis (respiratory block, cough reflex, circulatory centralisation). They are reflex-triggered for immediate effect and take that effect through the vegetative nervous system. These findings have been secured by animal experiments. However, on account of considerable interference of alcohol with vegetative activity, via action on transmitter metabolism (transmitter synthesis, storage, release, rebonding and bonding by means of products of alcohol metabolism), symptoms of extreme vagotomia may develop, such as bradycardia with circulatory centralisation and apnoea of alcohol-related irreversibility, finally resulting in cardiac arrest. The "reflex-related" process of bolus death has often been described, with reference being regulatory made to individuals staying in water and drowning without any self-rescue attempt.
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PMID:[Bolus death and drowning--expression of central nervous system dysregulation?]. 148 58

Inhalation cough challenge has become an accepted method of investigating antitussive agents. It is, therefore, important to examine the degree of tachyphylaxis seen with repeated cough challenge. In addition, different types of challenge may reveal important differences in the neuronal pathways involved in the cough reflex. Citric acid, distilled water and capsaicin were examined to determine adaptation of the cough response during acute and long-term inhalation studies in healthy subjects. To study acute tachyphylaxis two separate one minute continuous inhalation challenges (n = 13) were performed. Long-term tachyphylaxis (n = 10) was examined using citric acid and capsaicin inhalation at 10 min intervals for 40 min, and at 4 and 6 h. Cross-tachyphylaxis to citric acid and capsaicin was examined in a separate randomized crossover study (n = 10). Highly significant adaptation occurred between the first and last 10 s of the one minute challenge with citric acid (90-100%) and distilled water (74-84%), but was less pronounced with capsaicin (37-49%, at 2 microM). Cough during the whole of the second test was significantly reduced for citric acid (50%). During long-term challenge cough was attenuated over 40 min both with citric acid (100 mM, p less than 0.05; 300 mM, p less than 0.001; 1 M, p less than 0.001) and with capsaicin (3 microM, p less than 0.01; 10, 30, 100 microM, p less than 0.001 each). With higher doses, tachyphylaxis was still present at 180 min with both citric acid (300 mM, p less than 0.05) and capsaicin (100 microM, p less than 0.008).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adaptation of cough reflex with different types of stimulation. 148 81

We challenged 446 schoolchildren and measured the percent decrease in FEV1 following 10 min of tidal inhalation of UNDW. Assessment tools for respiratory symptoms and atopy were questionnaire and skin testing, respectively. A previous diagnosis of asthma was most strongly associated with a positive airway response (defined as a fall in FEV1 greater than or equal to 10 percent. A positive response was also associated with atopy, presence of cough, cough during night, or any respiratory symptom. A child's age and the prechallenge FEF75% also explained response to distilled water indicating less responsiveness for older children and those with relative greater airway diameter. For the previous diagnosis of asthma, a positive distilled water challenge test had a sensitivity of 36 percent and a specificity of 92 percent. We conclude that a significant relationship between airway response to distilled water, asthma and symptoms suggestive for asthma exists for a childhood population sample.
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PMID:Determinants of airway response to challenge with distilled water in a population sample of children aged 7 to 10 years old. 151 99

The angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are a group of effective drugs with a unique mechanism of action. These drugs have proven to be useful for hypertension and congestive heart failure. Early clinical trials of captopril used doses that are now known to be inappropriately high, and dose-related adverse effects were observed frequently. The recognition that lower doses are effective has reduced the incidence of adverse reactions and resulted in improved patient tolerance. When patients are properly selected and correctable risk factors are removed, serious side effects are uncommon. Unfortunately, the early reputation of nephrotoxicity persists, as does the belief that significant blood dyscrasias, endocrine effects and rash are serious risks for the average patient. After wide use of captopril, enalapril and lisinopril, and investigational trials of nearly a dozen newer agents, a sufficiency of clinical observation, experimental evidence and accurate postmarketing recording of events is accumulating to allow insight into the major toxicities with regard to more intelligent patient selection, more rational dosing and proper identification of risk factors. The most common adverse reactions are cough and skin rash. It appears that the agents are generally not cross-reactive with regard to skin rash, although it is not clear whether this effect is drug-specific or class-specific with regard to cough. Statistically but not clinically significant lowering of haemoglobin and hematocrit is common; these effects are inconsequential in most patients. Neutropenia, once thought to be prevalent, now appears to be so only in patients with autoimmune or collagen-vascular disease; the majority of patients outside these groups are at low risk. Hyperkalaemia is a frequent occurrence. This should not be surprising in view of the effect of the ACE inhibitors on plasma aldosterone. When dietary potassium intake is regulated and sources of altered potassium excretion are identified, hyperkalaemia is seldom a serious problem. Identification of sodium and water deficits allows correction before the drugs are started, and the frequency of hypotension and hyperkalaemia caused by the drugs is quite low if these factors are properly managed. An unexpected finding emerging in recent years is the dry cough associated with ACE inhibitor therapy. Its mechanism is not definitely known. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may control this symptom in some patients. The frequent observation of proteinuria in patients taking ACE inhibitors has gained notice and sometimes caused undue alarm. It is difficult to separate disease effects in diabetes and hypertension from true drug effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Adverse effects of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. An update. 153 95

The urethral and bladder pressure increments registered during a cough were investigated in 30 woman with genuine stress incontinence (GSI) and compared with those from 30 previously investigated healthy women. The pressures were measured by means of a double microtip transducer catheter with the bladder sensor uncovered and the urethral sensor covered with a water-filled rubber cylinder and placed at the bladder neck, midurethrally, or distally in the urethra. In GSI women the pressure increment preceding the pressure spike produced by coughing was significantly higher in the bladder compared with the urethra, and the pressure increment seemed to be initiated in the bladder and all along the urethra simultaneously. In healthy women the pressure increment preceding a pressure spike was significantly higher in the midurethra compared with the bladder and it seemed to be initiated in the midurethra. These findings seem to reflect a defective active closure mechanism in GSI which may be a contributing factor in its pathogenesis.
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PMID:Initial urethral pressure increase during stress episodes in genuine stress incontinent women. 153 23

Biomechanical changes in airway cartilage could influence the mechanics of maximal expiratory flow and cough and the degree of shortening of activated airway smooth muscle. We examined the tensile stiffness of small samples of human tracheal cartilage rings in specimens obtained at autopsy from 10 individuals who ranged in age from 17 to 81 yr. The tensile properties of the cartilage were compared with its content of water (%water), glycosaminoglycans (chondroitin sulfate equivalents, mg/mg dry wt), and hydroxyproline content (mg hydroxyproline/mg dry weight). The average values for tensile stiffness ranged between 1 and 15 MPa and increased significantly with increasing age [tensile stiffness = 0.19 x (age in yr) + 2.02; r = 0.83, P less than 0.05]. The outermost layer of cartilage was the most stiff in all individuals, and the deeper layers were progressively less stiff. Water content and hydroxyproline content both decreased with increasing age. Thus tensile stiffness correlated inversely with water content and hydroxyproline content [tensile stiffness = -0.83 x (%water) + 16.4; r = 0.82, P less than .05 and tensile stiffness = -342 x (hydroxyproline content) + 25; r = 0.87, P less than 0.05]. Total tissue content of glycosaminoglycans did not change with age, although changes in glycosaminoglycan type and proteoglycan structure with increasing age have been described. We conclude that there are age-related changes in the biomechanical properties and biochemical composition of airway cartilage that could influence airway dynamics.
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PMID:Mechanical properties of human tracheal cartilage. 153 17

Twenty-two clinically continent women with severe genitourinary prolapse were evaluated urodynamically to determine the prevalence of urodynamic abnormalities that could lead to potential urinary incontinence. Urodynamic testing found an occult incontinence disorder in 13 women (59%), of whom four had urine loss during cough pressure profiles after pessary placement, four had uninhibited detrusor contractions during retrograde medium-fill water cystometry, and five had both stress urinary incontinence and an unstable bladder. Therefore, nine of the 22 patients (41%) had uninhibited detrusor contractions during urodynamic testing. However, uroflowmetry did not reveal voiding dysfunction in this group, although peak flow rates appeared to be lower in the subgroup of women manifesting uninhibited detrusor contractions. Associated symptoms of frequency, nocturia, and urgency occurred in 41% of the women in this study; four of nine (44%) who had normal urodynamic test results, five of 13 (38%) who had abnormal test results, and five of nine (56%) who had an unstable bladder. Therefore, associated symptoms could not be used to determine which women would have abnormal urodynamic test results. These preliminary results suggest that women with genitourinary prolapse may be at risk for an occult incontinence disorder that is masked by the prolapse and that could manifest after corrective surgery for prolapse. Urodynamic testing is suggested for women with genitourinary prolapse who present with or without symptoms of incontinence, so that more data can be obtained to determine the importance of abnormal test results.
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PMID:Prevalence of abnormal urodynamic test results in continent women with severe genitourinary prolapse. 155 72

The respiratory mucus is a very complex biological material, which possesses both flow and deformation rheological properties, characterized by non-linear and time-dependent viscoelasticity and physical properties of adhesiveness and wettability. Viscosity and elasticity are directly involved in the transport capacity of mucus, whereas wettability and adhesiveness contribute to the optimal interface properties between the mucus and the epithelial surface. Optimal conditions for the protective and lubricant properties of respiratory mucus are represented by high wettability, and adhesiveness high enough not to induce flow of mucus in the respiratory bronchioles under gravity but low enough to mobilize mucus by airflow during coughing. An intermediate viscoelasticity is also required for an optimal mucociliary transport. Different biochemical constituents such as glycoproteins, proteins, proteoglycans and lipids are involved in the gel properties of respiratory mucus. During bronchial infection and particularly in cystic fibrosis, the loss of water and the increase in macromolecules result in a marked increase in viscosity and adhesiveness responsible for the mucus transport impairment. The various lipids present in mucus contribute differently to the physicochemical properties. Surface-active phospholipids, such as phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol improve the wettability of mucus, whereas neutral lipids and glycosphyngolipids contribute to the hyperviscosity of mucus during infection. Phospholipids and associated mucins are also implicated in the interaction between bacteria and epithelial cells. Therefore, the respiratory mucus needs appropriate physicochemical properties for the protection, hydration and lubrication of the underlying airway epithelium.
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PMID:Role of the physiochemical properties of mucus in the protection of the respiratory epithelium. 156 6


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