Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 66-year-old woman had been treated for 3 years by her local physician with Sho-saiko-to for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and liver cirrhosis. She was admitted to our hospital because of cough, fever, and infiltrative shadows on chest x-ray films. Sho-saiko-to-induced pneumonitis was diagnosed and steroid therapy started. Though a temporary improvement was observed, interstitial pneumonitis relapsed and the patient died of respiratory failure and liver dysfunction. Autopsy findings showed diffuse alveolar damage and honeycombing. Furthermore, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction techniques detected HCV-RNA in specimens of fibrotic lung tissue. For comparison, HCV-RNA was not histologically detected in lung tissue specimens from 4 control subjects who were positive for HCV antibodies but who did not have interstitial lung disease. It was speculated that the progression of interstitial pneumonia in the present case may have been caused by HCV in combination with Sho-saiko-to-induced lung injury.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of interstitial pneumonia probably induced by Sho-saiko-to]. 1070 45

A 67-year-old man, treated for years for hypertension, presented with a persistent dry cough and dyspnea 10 days after the administration of drugs including Sho-seiryu-to against the common cold. Chest X-ray and CT scans revealed diffuse reticular shadows in both lung fields. Under a suspected diagnosis of drug-induced pneumonia or a complex of bacterial and interstitial pneumonia, Sho-seiryu-to was discontinued and antibiotics started. After several days, chest X-ray reticular shadows developed and hypoxia worsened. Subsequently the patient received Prednisolone. Two days later his symptoms and findings markedly improved. Drug lymphocyte stimulation tests for Sho-seiryu-to using peripheral lymphocyte were positive and other drugs were negative. Chest CT showed the reversed halo sign in right middle zone, which was relatively specific to the cryptogenic organizing pneumonia. On the basis of clinical history and these findings, we diagnosed a drug-induced interstitial pneumonia caused by the herbal medicine Sho-seiryu-to. To our knowledge, this is the first case of Sho-seiryu-to induced interstitial pneumonia to be reported.
...
PMID:[A case where herbal medicine sho-seiryu-to induced interstitial pneumonitis]. 1570 49

Kakkonto (KK), a traditional Japanese Kampo formulation for cold and flu, is generally sold as an OTC pharmaceuticals used for self-medication. Kampo formulations should be used according to the Sho-symptoms of Kampo medicine. These symptoms refer to the subjective symptoms themselves. Although with OTC pharmaceuticals, this is often not the case. We surveyed the relationship of agreement of Sho with the benefit feeling rate (BFR) of patients who took KK (n=555), cold remedies with KK (CK, n=315), and general cold remedies (GC, n=539) using internet research. BFR of a faster recovery was greater in participants who took the medication early and who had confidence in their physical strength in all treatment groups. BFR was significantly higher in the GC group than in the KK group for patients with headache, runny nose, blocked nose, sneezing, and cough. BFR was also significantly higher in the GC group than in the CK group for headache (males) and cough (females). BFR was the highest in the KK group for stiff shoulders. All cold remedies were more effective when taken early, and the larger the number of Sho that a patient had, the greater the BFR increased. Therefore, a cold remedy is expected to be most effective when there are many cold symptoms and when it is taken at an early stage of the common cold.
...
PMID:Comparison of the Benefit Feeling Rate Based on the Sho of OTC Kakkonto, Cold Remedy and Cold Remedy with Kakkonto Combination Product. 2878 Dec 92


<< Previous 1 2