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

A survey of the health, social and economic problems of the village of A1 Awayda, in Gezira province, Sudan, by medical students, was conducted over 2 weeks as part of their field training research and rural development curriculum. A 40% random household survey was based on a pretested structured questionnaire. The village comprises 195 households of 1201 people, with 40% under 15. As a result of the Sennar Sugar Scheme begun in 1978, 58% of the population work in the sugar factory. Rain-fed crops have failed for the last 2 years because of drought, and subsistence acreage has contracted because of sorghum planting for sugar. Sanitation consists of latrines in 15% of houses. People are at risk of contracting schistosomiasis from crossing the irrigation canal to reach the well. The diet is based on the staple starch, dura in the form of kisra. Breast feeding is continued for 1-2 years, with 47% supplementation by bottle or kisra or rice water at an average of 7 months. The major health problems are malaria, schistosomiasis, cough and diarrhea. 54% of families were immunized. 11.5% of women used modern contraceptives. Non-users cited religion as a reason for non-use. Female circumcision is common. It was recommended that latrines be dug, and that health education, immunization, prenatal care and family planning be provided.
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PMID:Community health in a rural area of Sudan. 221 96

Inhaled amiloride reduces active absorption of sodium of respiratory epithelium in CF patients and so, transiently, diminishes loss of water. 10 CF patients, 8 to 28 years of age, were examined on two days. First day, they inhaled in a randomised order isotonic saline and a solution of amiloride hydrochloride (0.3 mg/ml) one after another, each inhalation taking twenty minutes. Second day, inhalations were performed in an inverse order. To intensify the effect of inhalation, the inhalation procedure was combined with "autogenic drainage", a special kind of physiotherapy. Main criterion for evaluation was the amount of expectorated sputum. Mean increase of sputum during amiloride inhalation in comparison to saline was +50.4%. Patients and physiotherapist observed a liquefaction of secretion and a decrease of coughing by amiloride and a support of physiotherapy. These results suggest a beneficial clinical effect of regular amiloride inhalation in CF patients.
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PMID:[Elimination of secretions in CF patients under amiloride inhalation]. 228 Oct 55

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common inherited fatal disorder among Caucasians. Bronchial mucus in CF contains more potassium and less sodium, which may be due to increased sodium absorption, resulting in a reduced airway water content. We studied 23 patients with CF after inhalation of normal saline or amiloride (10(-3) M), a sodium transport blocker. Mucociliary clearance (MC) and cough clearance (CC) were determined with a gamma camera that traced the movement of 99mTc-labeled, hardened erythrocytes over a 1-h period after the patients inhaled these particles as an aerosol. Before and after each investigation pulmonary function tests (PFT) and blood pressure (BP) were measured. Sputum thread formation was measured by means of a filancemeter. Six of the patients also completed a 3-wk trial of amiloride inhalation therapy. MC increased significantly (p less than 0.001) after acute amiloride inhalation (bronchial deposition, 0.07 mg amiloride) compared with that in the saline control. CC also increased, but not as much as MC. After 3 wk of amiloride inhalation (2 times a day) clearance values (both MC and CC) were markedly enhanced (p less than 0.01); after a similar period of saline inhalation, clearance values were not different from baseline. Sputum filance values also decreased significantly after amiloride inhalation. There were no adverse effects of the amiloride inhalation compared with saline. We conclude that amiloride inhalation administered as a single dose or as long-term therapy is able to increase MC and CC in CF airways and that the effect of 10(-3) M amiloride inhalation on MC lasts at least 40 min. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Acute and long-term amiloride inhalation in cystic fibrosis lung disease. A rational approach to cystic fibrosis therapy. 231 93

One hundred and ten male patients scheduled for coronary artery bypass grafting were allocated randomly into one of three groups. Patients in group A received fentanyl 7 micrograms/kg via a central venous catheter, those in group B were given fentanyl 7 micrograms/kg through a peripheral venous cannula, and patients in group C received sterile water via a central venous catheter. In group A, 45.9% of patients coughed after injection of fentanyl; the mean onset time from the end of fentanyl administration to the beginning of coughing was 10.6 seconds. Only one patient in group B and no patient in the control group exhibited a cough response (p less than 0.0001). We hypothesise that fentanyl can evoke the pulmonary chemoreflex.
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PMID:Tussive effect of a fentanyl bolus administered through a central venous catheter. 238 94

The effect of three different depths of enflurane anesthesia (1.0, 1.4, and 1.8 MAC) upon laryngeal and respiratory responses to tracheal instillation of distilled water in nine female patients in whom a double-cuffed endotracheal tube had been inserted was investigated. The laryngeal responses were monitored by measuring the pressure in the saline-filled cuff positioned within the larynx, and the respiratory responses were monitored by measuring ventilatory flow and tracheal airway pressure. Increases in laryngeal cuff pressure in response to tracheal irritation were 19.7 +/- 4.5 cmH2O (mean +/- SD) at 1.0 MAC, 13.9 +/- 3.6 cmH2O at 1.4 MAC, and 7.6 +/- 1.8 cmH2O at 1.8 MAC, respectively (P less than 0.01 for anesthetic dose). At 1.0 MAC of enflurane anesthesia, tracheal instillation of saline caused immediate laryngeal constriction and all components of the tracheal response, such as apnea, expiration reflex, cough reflex, and spasmodic panting. At 1.4 and 1.8 MAC, the same stimulation caused only apnea and constriction of the larynx in the majority of patients. These results indicate that changes in depth of anesthesia can modify the laryngeal and respiratory responses to tracheal irritation. The close association of laryngeal and respiratory responses may be an integral part of the defensive reflex synergism.
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PMID:Laryngeal and respiratory responses to tracheal irritation at different depths of enflurane anesthesia in humans. 236 Jul 39

Inhaled furosemide prevents bronchoconstriction induced by nebulized distilled water, exercise, and antigen challenge. We examined the effect of furosemide on cough induced by low chloride content solutions and by capsaicin in double-blind, placebo-controlled studies. A group of eight nonsmoking normal subjects was given furosemide (3.75 mg/ml inhaled for 8 min) and placebo (saline) immediately before consecutive 1-min inhalations of four isosmolar solutions with decreasing chloride content every 5 min from an ultrasonic nebulizer. Decreasing concentrations of chloride induced dose-related coughing, which was inhibited by furosemide. Thus, chloride-free solution induced 13.1 +/- 1.6 coughs after placebo and 8.4 +/- 1.9 coughs after furosemide (p less than 0.005). In a separate study, six of the same normal subjects were given inhaled furosemide or placebo before inhaling one breath of capsaicin solution given in three consecutive increasing concentrations. Capsaicin induced dose-related coughing, which was not inhibited by furosemide. Thus, after placebo the highest concentration of capsaicin induced 20.8 +/- 1.8 coughs and after furosemide, 21.5 +/- 2.7 coughs. We conclude that furosemide may act by inhibiting the cough reflex indirectly, perhaps by changing local chloride ions within the vicinity of epithelial cough receptors.
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PMID:Inhaled furosemide inhibits cough induced by low chloride content solutions but not by capsaicin. 236 61

Short term, sublethal changes in coughing rate, cardiac and ventilatory frequencies in hatchery-reared rainbow trout (27-34 cm) exposed to menazon and gamma BHC containing pesticide were monitored at 15 +/- 1 degree C during recovery period to investigate the effects of this chemical on fish respiratory and cardiovascular systems. Laboratory conditions simulated a rapid environmental pollution often occurring in running waters. The coughing response was particularly sensitive to water pollutants. Average rate of ventilation was lower in treated fish than in control specimens and decreased parallel with the time of recovery. Average heart rate was higher in treated trout as compared to the controls. These changes were characteristic for hypoxic conditions and provide useful sublethal physiological indications for a rapid environmental stress. Percentage coupling and phase angle of ECGs within the ventilatory cycle were also studied during recovery when significant differences were observed between treated and untreated groups of fish.
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PMID:Recovery of cardiac and ventilatory frequencies after sub-acute pesticide (ABOL-X) treatment in rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri Richardson. 243 1

The therapeutic inhibition of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) is associated with the production of a dry cough, which occurs more commonly in women than men and appears to be unrelated to concurrent illness. At present the exact incidence of ACE inhibitor cough and the substrate of ACE responsible for this effect is unknown. Cough challenge by inhalation of aerosols of tussive agents such as citric acid and capsaicin may be used to study the effect of drug administration on the cough reflex. In normal subjects, an oral dose of captopril (25 mg) causes a significant shift in the dose-response curve to capsaicin inhalation, but not that to distilled water or citric acid. The exacerbation of artificially induced cough by ACE inhibition may be the result of a local increase in perineuronal substance P or bradykinin concentrations within the lung.
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PMID:Cough associated with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition. 247 6

We investigated responses of respiration, blood pressure, and heart rate to tracheal mucosa irritation induced by injection of distilled water at three different levels of CO2 ventilatory drive in 11 spontaneously breathing female patients under a constant depth of enflurane anesthesia [1.1 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC)]. The airway irritation at the resting level of spontaneous breathing caused a variety of respiratory responses such as coughing, expiration reflex, apnea, and spasmodic panting, with considerable increases in blood pressure and heart rate. Although the latency of respiratory responses after water injection was much shorter than those of blood pressure and heart rate responses, blood pressure and heart rate responses, once elicited, were prolonged much longer than was the respiratory response. An increase in CO2 ventilatory drive decreased the degree and duration of respiratory, blood pressure, and heart rate responses to the airway irritation, whereas a decrease in CO2 ventilatory drive had the opposite effect on these responses. Our results indicate that changes in CO2 ventilatory drive can modify reflex responses of respiration, blood pressure, and heart rate to airway irritation.
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PMID:Inhibitory effects of CO2 on airway defensive reflexes in enflurane-anesthetized humans. 250 Dec 89

As a result of clinical heart-lung transplantation, the lungs are denervated below the level of the tracheal anastomosis. It has been questioned whether afferent vagal reinnervation occurs after surgery. Here we report the cough frequency, during inhalation of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water, of 15 heart-lung transplant patients studied 6 wk to 36 months after surgery. They were compared with 15 normal subjects of a similar age and sex. The distribution of the aerosol was studied in five normal subjects using 99mtechnetium diethylene triamine pentaacetate (99mTc-DTPA) in saline. In seven patients, the sensitivity of the laryngeal mucosa to instilled distilled water (0.2 ml) was tested at the time of fiberoptic bronchoscopy by recording the cough response. Ten percent of the aerosol was deposited onto the larynx and trachea, 56% on the central airways, and 34% in the periphery of the lung. The cough response to the aerosol was strikingly diminished in the patients compared with normal subjects (p less than 0.001), but all seven patients coughed when distilled water was instilled onto the larynx. As expected, the laryngeal mucosa of heart-lung transplant patients remains sensitive to distilled water. However, the diminished coughing when the distilled water is distributed by aerosol to the central airways supports the view that vagal afferent nerves do not reinnervate the lungs after heart-lung transplantation, up to 36 months after surgery.
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PMID:The cough response to ultrasonically nebulized distilled water in heart-lung transplantation patients. 250 56


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