Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tuberculous oesophagitis is a very rare finding; of all organs, involvement of the oesophagus is the least likely. Autopsies on tuberculous patients show an incidence of 0.14%. According to Wexels, only 125 cases have been described in the world literature up to 1954. In general, tuberculous oesophagitis can be included in the differential diagnosis of dysphagia only if this symptom is associated with tuberculosis of an organ, or miliary tuberculosis.
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PMID:[Specific oesophagitis (author's transl)]. 14 65

A case of tuberculosis of the esophagus is presented in a patient with pulmonary tuberculosis. The patient, complaining of dysphagia, had esophagoscopic examination which showed a submucosal tumor with central ulceration. Tissue biopsy, under direct vision from the tumor mass, confirmed the diagnosis of tuberculosis. The patient has been asymptomatic under treatment. Both esophageal and pulmonary lesions are largely improved.
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PMID:Tuberculosis of the esophagus. 94 53

Oesophageal tuberculosis secondary to tuberculous mediastinal lymphadenopathy is a very unusual presentation of adult tuberculosis. We report a young patient who presented with anorexia and weight loss. The chest radiograph and CT scan revealed mediastinal lymphadenopathy causing extrinsic oesophageal compression on the barium swallow. This was confirmed by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Four weeks later, because of spontaneous partial relief in dysphagia, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was repeated and revealed an ulcerated lesion with nodular margins at the mid-oesophagus. Biopsy from the ulcer margin revealed non-caseating granulomas. The patient had complete relief of dysphagia and other symptoms within 3 weeks of start of antituberculosis therapy.
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PMID:An unusual presentation of oesophageal tuberculosis. 142 52

More than 50% of all HIV-infected patients have gastrointestinal symptoms like dysphagia, abdominal pain, diarrhea or intestinal bleeding. We describe an emergency situation with gross gastrointestinal bleeding in a twenty-seven year old drug addicted female. Colonoscopy and histological examination of the biopsies were the main diagnostic procedure to locate an extrapulmonary manifestation of a mycobacterium-tuberculosis-infection.
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PMID:[Primary intestinal tuberculosis in AIDS]. 148 54

Bronchoesophageal fistulas (BEF) are uncommon in children, the etiology being congenital or acquired. Acquired bronchial perforation of tuberculous origin is common in children with pulmonary tuberculosis but bronchoesophageal perforation secondary to tuberculosis and leading to a fistulous tract formation is rare. To date, there have only been 4 case reports of BEF of tuberculous origin in children. We present yet another case of an acquired BEF of tuberculous origin in a child who presented with a sudden onset of dysphagia and choking sensation.
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PMID:Bronchoesophageal fistula of tuberculous origin in a child. 150 53

Although a rare entity, laryngeal tuberculosis must be a diagnostic consideration--along with laryngeal carcinoma--whenever patients present with prolonged hoarseness or painful dysphagia. This form of tuberculosis was once thought to be especially virulent and more infectious than other forms; however, severity was probably the result of the frequent association with advanced cavitary disease. Laryngeal tuberculosis usually responds well to multiple-drug antituberculous therapy.
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PMID:Laryngeal tuberculosis revisited. 151 70

Tuberculous infection of the oesophagus is rare. This is confirmed by our present review of cases managed in our teaching hospitals over a period of 18 years which uncovered only 11 patients. The main presentation is that of dysphagia whose algorithm of investigation should seek to differentiate tuberculosis from carcinoma, the more common cause of this symptom. Of the 11 patients, 9 presented with dysphagia while 2 had haemorrhage; 7 had an abnormal plain chest radiograph, of whom 4 had a mediastinal mass lesion (3 were lymphadenopathy and one an abscess). All but one had an abnormal radio-contrast oesophagogram, including a mediastinal sinus in two and a traction diverticulum in another two. The mainstay of investigation was oesophagoscopy through which diagnostic biopsy material was obtained in half of the patients. In the other half diagnosis was by either biopsy of associated mediastinal (3) or cervical (1) lymph node masses or by acid fast bacilli positive sputum (1). The diagnosis was established post-mortem in one patient. Treatment was primarily non-operative with standard anti-tuberculosis drug therapy. Two patients underwent a diagnostic thoracotomy and one a drainage of mediastinal abscess together with resection and repair of oesophago-mediastinal sinus during the early part of the series. Outcome of management was very rewarding in 9 patients and death occurred in 2 patients, one of whom had his anti-tuberculosis drug therapy interrupted by severe hepatitis B virus infection. The other death occurred in a patient whose haemorrhage from an aorta-oesophageal fistula was not established ante-mortem. It is recommended that when biopsy material of the oesophagus is unobtainable or non-diagnostic in patients with dysphagia, especially with an abnormal chest radiograph or human immunodeficiency virus infection, effort should be made to obtain biopsy material from associated lymph nodes, even by thoracotomy if necessary, or culture of biopsy from the radiologically abnormal part oesophagus and sputum for mycobacteria, in order to establish the diagnosis of this rare but eminently treatable cause of dysphagia. Clinicians should be aware of tuberculosis of the oesophagus as a possible cause of haematemesis in patients with otherwise unexplained upper gastrointestinal haemorrhage.
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PMID:Oesophageal tuberculosis: a review of eleven cases. 157 Feb 50

Contact ulcer granuloma has a multifactorial etiology but vocal abuse is considered the most important etiological factor. Some other possible factors are well-known: tuberculosis, allergies, hormonal or autonomic imbalance, psychosomatic influences, reflux-esophagitis, pathological conditions of the nose, nasal accessory sinus, tonsils. Constitutional factors play also an important role. The symptoms range from mild huskiness to severe hoarseness with pain extending to the ear, dysphagia, sometimes hemoptysis and chronic cough. Failure to recognize the pathological features of this frequently overlooked lesion leads to diagnosis of larynx cancer, angiosarcoma or hemangioma. Indication for microsurgical removal is only severe dyspnea by size of mass or if the dignity is not clear, because any surgical procedure has only temporary value and does not eliminate the etiological factors. The dignity can normally be proved by stroboscope. Vocal rehabilitation and re-education are an essential appropriate means of treatment for this disease if other causative factors are excluded.
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PMID:[Contact granuloma: symptoms, etiology, diagnosis, therapy]. 157 50

A case is reported of a 56-year-old woman of Libyan origin presenting with dysphagia, retrosternal pain and weight loss. Oesophago-gastroduodenoscopy revealed an ulcerated tumor in the upper oesophagus strongly suggesting a malignancy. A positive Mendel-Mantoux test along with histological evidence of epitheloid cell granulomas and clinical findings consistent with pulmonary and lymph node tuberculosis led to the presumptive diagnosis of oesophageal tuberculosis. The diagnosis was later confirmed by positive bacteriological cultures of oesophageal biopsies and gastric washings. It is very unusual for dysphagia to be the presenting symptom of active adult tuberculosis. Oesophageal tuberculosis is extremely rare and must be distinguished predominantly from oesophageal carcinoma.
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PMID:An unusual case of active tuberculosis of the oesophagus in an adult. 174 35

A 44-year-old man, a heavy smoker over many years, complained of hoarseness for 8 weeks with weight loss and dysphagia. Malignant tumour of the pharynx was suspected. Examination revealed a swelling of the right upper lip, tumorous changes in the right buccal mucosa, about 6 x 6 cm in size, as well as enlargement of the cervical lymph-nodes. Microlaryngoscopy revealed a three-level tumour of the entire side of the right larynx. Histological examination of biopsies of the right false and true vocal cords as well as the buccal mucosa demonstrated numerous, partly caseous epithelioid granulomas with Langhans giant cells. Ziehl-Neelsen staining showed acid-fast rods. Combined tuberculostatic treatment with isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol and pyrazinamide achieved regression of all signs and symptoms within two months. This case emphasizes the need for including laryngeal tuberculosis in the differential diagnosis of seemingly malignant laryngeal tumours.
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PMID:[Tuberculosis of the larynx, oral cavity and pharynx]. 191 28


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