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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To establish whether colonisation of the upper respiratory tract or bacterial contamination of inhaler devices or solutions predisposes to colonisation of the lower respiratory tract in patients with cystic fibrosis, bacterial isolates from groups of children who were positive (n = 13) or negative (n = 18) for
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa were studied. Cultures of swabs from inhaler devices, toothbrushes, and upper airways were compared with
cough
swabs or sputum cultures. No pathogens were obtained from inhaler equipment administering unit dose medications. Upper airway carriage of Staphylococcus aureus and Haemophilus influenzae was identified in both groups but correlated poorly with sputum isolates. P. aeruginosa was found only in the upper respiratory tract of children with established colonisation of the lower airways. No P aeruginosa isolates were obtained from the upper airways of the group with negative sputum, including one patient who became colonised by P aeruginosa during the study. Our results did not support the suggestion that colonisation of the upper respiratory tract by P aeruginosa predisposes to colonisation of the lower airways. Failure to isolate pathogenic organisms consistently from the upper airways in patients with positive sputum argues against a local epithelial factor predisposing to bacterial colonisation.
...
PMID:Bacterial reservoirs in cystic fibrosis. 231 61
The pattern of illness in 60 consecutive children with homozygous sickle cell disease who attended the Paediatric Emergency Room of a busy Lagos hospital with acute illness was studied prospectively. Their ages ranged from 3 months to 13 years with a peak in the 2nd year. There were twice as many boys as girls. The commonest symptoms were fever, limb or abdominal pain and
cough
, and the commonest signs were pallor and hepatomegaly. Painful crises occurred in 27, anaemic crises in 11, and a combination of these in 12 children. Infection was detected in 76% of subjects in crises. Infection was found in 82% of all the children and was mainly bacterial. The commonest infections were pneumonia (35%), bacteraemia (32%), tonsillitis/pharyngitis (17%) and osteomyelitis (8%). The predominant bacteria isolated were Klebsiella spp (38%), E. coli (23%), Staph. aureus (23%), Staph. albus (23%) and
Pseudomonas
spp (23%). Some children had multiple isolates. Bacterial infection was a major cause of morbidity in very young children and merits appropriate control and preventive measures in this age group. The spectrum of bacteria isolated makes it unlikely that the specific anti-pneumococcal measures widely advocated in Europe and America for young children with SCA would be appropriate in Nigeria.
...
PMID:Acute illness in Nigerian children with sickle cell anaemia. 244 66
To determine the potential toxicity of prolonged aerosol tobramycin administration, 22 patients with cystic fibrosis were monitored while receiving inhaled tobramycin three times a day for 12 weeks. Prior to, four times during administration and approximately 6 weeks after discontinuation of treatment, we assessed pulmonary function, weight, height, body temperature, eighth cranial nerve function, serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, urinary creatinine clearance, plasma iothalamate clearance, urinary beta-2 microglobulin concentration, and
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa density in sputum. There was no detectable laboratory evidence of nephrotoxicity. Neither a decrease in auditory acuity (range 250-20,000 Hz) nor vestibular dysfunction was detected. Pulmonary function tests significantly improved during the first month in all subjects (P less than 0.05) but returned to enrollment values by the end of the 12th week of administration of tobramycin aerosol. Sputum P. aeruginosa density initially decreased from a mean of 10(7) cfu/gm to a mean of 10(4) cfu/gm after 2 weeks of aerosol tobramycin administration and remained significantly below the enrollment value throughout. Coincident with the reduced bacterial density, a reduction in
cough
frequency and sputum production, as well as a weight gain was observed. Seventy-three percent of the patients with sputum P. aeruginosa isolates susceptible to tobramycin on enrollment yielded resistant organisms during aerosol administration. However, 1 year later all sputum P. aeruginosa isolates obtained from patients were susceptible to tobramycin. We conclude that thrice daily aerosol tobramycin administration for 3 months is not associated with detectable eighth cranial nerve or renal toxicity. Transient emergence of tobramycin resistant P. aeruginosa may occur.
...
PMID:Safety of aerosol tobramycin administration for 3 months to patients with cystic fibrosis. 251 23
Thirty six adults with cystic fibrosis were studied over one year to determine the incidence of infection with respiratory viruses and atypical organisms. Nineteen patients entered the study during an acute exacerbation of respiratory symptoms with an increase in purulent sputum production,
cough
, or breathlessness accompanied by a fall in FEV1 (group 1); 17 patients entered when they were stable both clinically and in terms of lung function values (group 2). Group 1 patients had a mean of 2.6 (range 1-4) infective exacerbations during the year and group 2 patients a mean of 1.1 (0-2) exacerbations. Eleven patients developed serological evidence of viral (influenza virus A and B, cytomegalovirus, human rhinovirus 2, adenovirus) or Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. There was no difference in seroconversion rates between group 1 (five patients) and group 2 (six patients). There was a weak association between viral seroconversion and the isolation of
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa from sputum, though this was not significant.
...
PMID:Infective respiratory exacerbations in young adults with cystic fibrosis: role of viruses and atypical microorganisms. 258 11
During the 11 month period up to 30 September 1987, 37 patients (26 male, 11 female, mean age 27 years) with respiratory symptoms who were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive, were studied prospectively on 40 occasions to determine the cause of any pulmonary complications. HIV was heterosexually transmitted. Predominant symptoms were
cough
(89%), fever (89%), weight loss (83%), and dyspnoea (60%). Transnasal fibre-optic bronchoscopy (with bronchoalveolar lavage, bronchial brushings and transbronchial lung biopsies) was performed on 35 patients, twice on 3 patients. 'Tru-cut' lung biopsies were obtained from 2 patients who died before bronchoscopy. Pulmonary tuberculosis was the commonest disease, being found in one-third of the patients (12 of 37). Mycobacterium tuberculosis was cultured from 4; the remainder of the plates were contaminated. Pneumocystis carinii was present in 8 patients: as the sole pathogen in 3, with Streptococcus pneumoniae in 4, Staphylococcus aureus in 2, and one also had tuberculous lymphadenitis. Endobronchial Kaposi's sarcoma was seen in 6 of 7 patients with skin nodules. Bacterial pathogens isolated included Staph. aureus (5), S. pneumoniae (5), Klebsiella pneumoniae (2), Haemophilus influenzae (2), H. parainfluenzae (1) and
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa (1). Invading Aspergillus fumigatus was diagnosed by lung biopsy in one. No diagnosis was reached for 8 patients. It is concluded that in Central Africa pulmonary complications in AIDS patients are similar to those in Europe and North America but the incidence of different pathogens depends on the prevalence of pathogens in the community. M. tuberculosis is probably the commonest pathogen. This study has confirmed that P. carinii pneumonia does occur, but occurs less frequently.
...
PMID:Pulmonary diseases in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus in Zimbabwe, Central Africa. 261 33
Antimicrobial effect of lysozyme in combination with a wide set of antimicrobial drugs (38) was studied with respect to 74 bacterial cultures. It was shown that synergism of the antimicrobial effect in the presence of lysozyme was variable for drugs differing in the mechanism of their action and depended on the pathogen species. The most pronounced synergistic effect was observed with respect to grampositive bacteria with the use of many drugs such as benzylpenicillin, ampiox, morphocycline, erythromycin and others. The potentiation effect of lysozyme was less pronounced with respect to Coli bacteria and
Pseudomonas
. Combination of lysozyme with aminoglycosides such as gentamicin, tobramycin, sisomicin and amikacin resulted in increasing antimicrobial effect with respect to practically all the microbial cultures tested. The clinical trials of the efficient combinations of the antibiotics and lysozyme studied experimentally proved their high efficacy in combined therapy of patients with pneumonia and pyelonephritis of bacterial genesis. Thus, in children with acute pneumonia (92 observations) it resulted in more rapid elimination of the temperature reaction, toxic and cardiorespiratiry syndromes,
cough
and physical signs of the disease. In treatment of 83 children with pyelonephritis complete clinico-laboratory remission was observed in 81 per cent of the cases against 56.4 per cent in the patients treated with the antibiotics without lysozyme.
...
PMID:[Experimental and clinical study of the use of lysozyme in combination with chemotherapeutic agents]. 356 22
Possible mechanisms of transmission of
Pseudomonas
cepacia in hospitalized patients with cystic fibrosis were examined. Twelve patients were colonized with P. cepacia prior to admission (group 1), and 15 patients were not (group 2). Daily contact occurred between both groups. Sputum cultures were obtained from all patients at admission and discharge, and 3 and 6 months after discharge in group 2 patients. Environmental cultures included
cough
plates, settle plates, spirometry tubing, stethoscopes, sinks, wall outlets, and hands of patients, physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists. Specimens were plated on a P. cepacia-selective medium. All group 1 patients remained colonized with P. cepacia at discharge. None of the group 2 patients acquired P. cepacia during hospitalization or follow-up. P. cepacia was recovered from three of 151 environmental cultures; two of these were presumably patient related. P. cepacia contamination of pulmonary function equipment, wall outlets, hands, and stethoscopes was not documented. We conclude that transient aerosol environmental contamination is uncommon and restricted to the immediate patient environment.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas cepacia in the hospital setting: lack of transmission between cystic fibrosis patients. 372 40
With the recent development of new potential antibiotics, it has become easier to treat patients with common bacterial infections. However, we find it difficult to handle severe infections due to opportunistic pathogens, developed in the so-called immunocompromised patients. SM-4300 is a newly developed intravenous human gamma-globulin, which is said to be intact without conventional enzyme-treatment and sulfonization. SM-4300 is also free from large molecules of aggregated gamma-globulin. SM-4300 was administered in combination with antibiotics to 2 patients of severe respiratory infections, having refractory underlying diseases. Case No. 1 was a 65-year-old female with bronchopneumonia, who had been suffering from pulmonary fibrosis, chronic bronchitis, chronic congestive heart failure and tricuspid insufficiency for several years. During her hospitalization because of these diseases, she developed
cough
with slight sputum and exertional dyspnea accompanied by high body temperature of 38 degrees C on January 1983. Chest X-ray revealed infiltration in the right lung field which was compatible with bronchopneumonia. SM-4300 of 5 g was added intravenously on 5th day after 4 day-cefotiam treatment with no improvement. High body temperature subsided and laboratory data became normal around 3 days after single SM-4300 injection. Case No. 2 was a 68-year-old male patient of chronic bronchitis with chronic pulmonary emphysema and bronchial asthma. Around the end of May 1983, he complained of dyspnea on exertion and had mucopurulent sputum, more than 100 ml daily, from which
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa was cultured in large number. He was afebrile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical studies on SM-4300, a new intravenous human gamma-globulin]. 393 26
In order to identify the possible reservoirs and routes of cross-infection with
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, samples from patients, staff, and the environment of a cystic fibrosis centre and two control wards at an infectious disease clinic were collected during a two-week period in 1980. All the Ps. aeruginosa strains were phage and serotyped. Ps. aeruginosa was isolated from 90 (51%) of the cystic fibrosis patients and most belonged to the 0-3/9 complex, characteristic of strains from patients in the centre. Some of the patients were able to spread Ps. aeruginosa into the air and to their hands by
coughing
, and Ps. aeruginosa in dried sputum could survive for at least one week. Strains of the same epidemiological types as found in the cystic fibrosis patients were isolated from sinks, soap, baths, toys, tables, brushes, cloths, and air in the clinic. In contrast, Ps. aeruginosa of the same epidemiological types were only found in a few of the sinks in one of the control wards where a few cystic fibrosis patients were regularly treated in isolation cubicles. The precautions employed to prevent future cross-infection include segregation of Ps. aeruginosa-infected from non-infected patients in separate wards and arranging for visits on separate days in the out-patients clinic. The survival of cystic fibrosis patients treated in the centre is much longer than those treated outside the centre despite the problems of cross-infection.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection and the role of contamination of the environment in a cystic fibrosis clinic. 619 Aug 82
During the 10 year period 1972-81, 39 patients with neurological disorders referred to a respiratory unit required artificial ventilation, seven on two occasions. The decision to undertake ventilation was usually made on clinical grounds because of deteriorating respiratory effort, ineffective
cough
, or inability to swallow. Arterial blood gas studies were of limited value in assessing the need for ventilation. The most frequent complication was bronchopulmonary infection which occurred in almost every patient, Staphylococcus pyogenes,
Pseudomonas
pyocyanea, and coliforms being the organisms most commonly isolated. In contrast, serious complications of tracheostomy and pulmonary thromboembolism occurred infrequently. There were 10 deaths among the 39 patients ventilated on 46 occasions; six were directly attributable to the neurological disease itself but four resulted from complications of artificial ventilation.
...
PMID:Artificial ventilation for neurological disease: retrospective analysis 1972-81. 640 50
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