Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 71-year-old man was admitted to the Wake Forest University/Baptist Hospital Medical Center on February 1, 1989, with pharyngitis and a cutaneous eruption that began that day. The past history was significant for a diagnosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) made in 1984, and for longstanding hypertension, severe coronary artery disease, and prostatic hypertrophy. The patient had required no therapy for his CLL until August, 1988, when he developed hemolytic anemia and was treated with oral chlorambucil, 4 mg/day, and a tapering course of prednisone. By December, 1988, the prednisone therapy had been discontinued, but the patient required hospital admission for pneumococcal pneumonia, which responded well to intravenous antibiotic therapy. One day prior to the current admission the patient complained of persistent fevers, sore throat, productive cough, and headache. He noted a new cutaneous eruption on the day of admission in February, 1989. The past history was positive for occasional herpes stomatitis. The patient did not know if he had previously been infected with varicella. Skin examination revealed multiple (greater than 20), single, and grouped vesicles in a generalized distribution involving the bilateral trunk, head, neck, arms, and legs. The heaviest involvement was on the right posterior auricular area and on the neck. A Tzanck preparation obtained from an early lesion was positive for multinucleated giant cells. Viral culture was negative at 24 hours and at 1 week. A skin biopsy of an early vesicular lesion was performed and revealed intraepidermal vesicles with acantholysis and giant cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Granuloma annulare and disseminated herpes zoster. 145 73

Six electrical workers accidentally exposed to degradation products of sulphur hexafluoride (SF6) during electrical repair work were followed up for one year. One degradation product, sulphur tetrafluoride (SF4), was identified from worksite measurements. Unprotected exposure in an underground enclosed space occurred for six hours over a 12 hour period. Initial symptoms included shortness of breath, chest tightness, productive cough, nose and eye irritation, headache, fatigue, nausea, and vomiting. Symptoms subsided when exposure was interrupted during attempts to identify the cause of the problem. Although exposure ended after several hours, four workers remained symptomatic for between one week and one month. Pulmonary radiographic abnormalities included several discrete areas of transitory platelike atelectasis in one worker, and a slight diffuse infiltrate in the left lower lobe of another. One worker showed transient obstructive changes in tests of pulmonary function. Examination at follow up after one year showed no persistent abnormalities. Preliminary data from this paper were presented at the VIIth international pneumoconioses conference. Pittsburgh, PA, August 1988.
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PMID:Pulmonary effects of acute exposure to degradation products of sulphur hexafluoride during electrical cable repair work. 227 90

With the aid of a questionnaire form we have gathered information about the clinical picture of patients suffering from primary ciliary dyskinesia. The study group numbered 34 persons, whose diagnosis was confirmed by electron microscopy. Chronic cough and common cold symptoms are present from shortly after birth. Twenty-three respondents reported respiratory tract problems in the neonatal period. The dysfunctional cilia result in chronic respiratory tract infections (chronic bronchitis; bronchiectasis; pneumonia; chronic sinusitis, rhinitis or otitis media). These lead to the following complaints: frequent blowing of the nose (in 32 pat.; 94%), chronic productive cough (in 28 pat.; 82%), chronic common cold (in 26 pat.; 77%), hearing problems (in 24 pat.; 71%), shortness of breath (in 23 pat.; 68%), frequent headache (in 13 pat.; 38%) and sore throat (in 9 pat.; 27%). In order to prevent the invalidating consequences of this disorder appropriate steps should be taken as soon as possible. These should include physiotherapy and adequate antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:[Primary ciliary dyskinesia; a questionnaire study of the clinical aspects]. 258 63

Influenza infection is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in immunocompromised hosts, but its importance in adult cancer patients is largely undescribed. We therefore conducted a prospective study of the incidence and clinical features of influenza infection in patients with acute or chronic leukemia. The cohort, which consisted of all adult leukemia patients undergoing remission-induction chemotherapy during the 1991-1992 influenza epidemic, was followed prospectively for development of signs and symptoms of acute infection of the upper or lower respiratory tract. Of these 294 patients, 111 received chemotherapy as inpatients and 183 as outpatients. Throat swabs and nasal washes for viral culture were obtained from all symptomatic patients, who were then followed until all signs and symptoms resolved. Symptoms of respiratory tract infection developed in 37 leukemia patients (13%). Among these, influenza (A/Beijing/ H3N2) caused 3 (21%) of the 14 infections that developed during hospitalization but only 1 (4%) of the 23 that developed in the community (P = 0.14). Influenza patients presented with fever, rhinorrhea, nasal congestion, headache, and myalgia; those with other infections presented with signs and symptoms of lower respiratory tract infection (productive cough, rales, or rhonchi). Development of pneumonia was common in influenza patients, 1 of whom died from secondary fungal and gram-negative pneumonia. Influenza A virus infections accounted for a substantial portion of acute respiratory infections among adult leukemia patients during a community epidemic. Most infections appeared to be nosocomial and the most likely sources were visitors or hospital personnel. Immunization of household contacts and hospital staff may reduce the risk of influenza infection and its pulmonary complications in leukemia patients.
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PMID:Epidemiology of influenza A virus infection in patients with acute or chronic leukemia. 765 81

A 46-year-old white female with underlying interstitial lung disease and asthma was driving a pickup truck when it was struck broadside. The airbag inflated and then ruptured, forcing inhalation of its contents. This produced facial desquamation, productive cough, wheezing, and headache. Chest radiograph showed bilateral interstitial fibrosis. Pulmonary function tests demonstrated small airway obstruction, hyperinflation, and impaired diffusion. Computerized tomography showed extensive sinusitis. She improved following treatment with inhaled steroids, bronchodilators, and oral antibiotics. Inhalation of the airbag contents produced supraglottic and subglottic airway inflammation, resulting in sinusitis and exacerbation of her underlying asthma.
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PMID:Supraglottic and subglottic airway injury due to deployment and rupture of an automobile airbag. 935 86

Psittacosis, also referred to as ornithosis, is a disease primarily of birds, which may be transmitted to humans. Psittacosis is caused by Chlamydia psittaci, an obligate intracellular parasite found worldwide. Humans are infected with C. psittaci when the organism enters the blood stream, usually through inhalation of dried excrement from diseased birds or through wound contamination with infected avian secretions. C. psittaci replicates in the liver and spleen and infects the lung and other organs hematogenously.1 The clinical manifestations of human psittacosis range from a mild respiratory infection to a severe systemic illness.1,2 Symptoms are frequently described as flu-like with fever, headache, body aches, and dry or productive cough. Sore throat, chest pain, abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea are variably present. Physical findings may include a pulse-temperature dissociation, localized lung crackles, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, and a pale macular skin rash. Chest radiographs may demonstrate lesions that are atelectatic, patchy, miliary, nodular, or consolidated in one or both lungs. White cell counts, erythrocyte sedimentation rates, and liver function tests are usually normal. In severe illness, signs and symptoms of liver dysfunction, neurological impairment, and respiratory and renal failure may be present. Since 1879 when psittacosis was recognized as a disease entity, cases have been reported in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. However, reports of psittacosis in Africa have been rare. An Ethiopian group, studying community-acquired pneumonia, published what they claimed to be the first report of psittacosis in Africa in 1994.3 The report published here is believed to be the first documented case of human psittacosis in Egypt.
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PMID:Psittacosis in Egypt: A Case Study. 981 79

It is presented the clinical case of a man 60 years old, heterosexual, suffering from chronic bronchopathy from old date, inveterate smoker, with previous diskotomy, herniotomy, who presents a symptomatology characterized from recurrent fever, productive cough, dyspnea, asthenia and headache for 6 month. He was admitted to hospital for fever and for a sensory slightly obnubilated. A series of investigations for typhus fever, cytomegalovirus, all with negative results were performed. He resulted negative also to the test to PPD as well as to markers of B and C hepatitis and the test for HIV. The study of the principal cancer markers also gave negative results, while the blood smears displayed leukopenia with monocytosis. The magnetic nuclear resonance of the brain showed the presence of multiple lesions of the brain and along the meninges: the examination of the liquor underlines the presence of the Cryptococcus neoformans, making to set the diagnostic of cryptococcal meningitis. The immunological study showed low values of CD4 in presence of normal values of CD8 and of a normal natural killer function. The exitus happened at 64th day. The interest of the case consists in the fact that in the medical Italian literature, unlike the international one, are not described cases of cryptococcal meningitis in patients not infected by HIV.
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PMID:[A rare case of cryptococcal meningitis unrelated to AIDS]. 1070 79

Described here is a computer predicted and computer measured pulmonary function in a randomly selected population sample of 111 men. These consisted of 36 primary school teachers (control), 35 Tetra-ethyl Lead handlers (TEL) and 40 Tanker Loaders (TL) at a petrochemical industry in Warri, Delta State, Nigeria. Productive cough and headache were commoner among the TL (45%, 38%) and the TEL handlers (43%, 31%). TEL handlers were 5 times likely to develop insomnia and other sleep disturbances than the control group. TL were more than 3 1/2 times more likely to develop nervousness than the control group. Measured FEF25-75% was significantly lower than its predicted value among the TEL handlers (56%) and TL (55%) when compared with the control group (36%) (P < 0.05 respectively). Although there were distinct reductions in the measured values of FEF75-85% among the TEL handlers (41%) and the TL (40%) compared to the control group (28%), this difference did not reach a level of significance when the TEL or the TL were compared individually to the control group. Predicted and measured forced mid expiratory flow time (FMFT) was not significantly varied among the cases and the control. There was statistically significant disparities (P < 0.005) in the values of predicted and measured maximum voluntary ventilation (litres) of the TEL handlers (47%) and of the TL (46%) compared with that of the control group (29%). The data suggest obstruction of the big and small airways of those occupationally exposed at a petrochemical factory in Nigeria especially the tetra-ethyl lead handlers and the tanker loaders. This data also suggests that pulmonary impairment may lead to an increased respiratory absorption of lead in its organic form. Efforts should be made to ascertain the degree of impairment and to treat the affected workers.
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PMID:Evidence for obstructive and restrictive lung pathology among tetra-ethyl lead handlers and petrol tanker fillers at a petrochemical industry in Nigeria. 1073 89

During 1975-1995, a total of 2960 healthy adults, 18-60 years of age, were prospectively evaluated for respiratory virus infections. Of these subjects, 211 (7%) acquired respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. The infections were symptomatic in 84% of subjects, involved only the upper respiratory tract in 74%, and included lower respiratory tract symptoms in 26%. Overall, 40% of the subjects were febrile. Lower respiratory tract signs developed in 26%. RSV illnesses were more prolonged than non-RSV respiratory illnesses. Compared with influenza, RSV infections were less frequently associated with fever and headache, but were associated significantly more often with nasal congestion, ear and sinus involvement, and productive cough. Absence from work during the acute phase of the illness resulted from 38% of RSV infections and 66% of influenza cases. The mean duration of RSV illness (9.5 days), however, was significantly longer than that of influenza (6.8 days). The occurrence of annual epidemics of RSV, the virus' potential to reinfect all age groups, and the morbidity associated with these reinfections suggest that RSV infections in working adults may result in appreciable costs for medical visits and absence from work.
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PMID:Respiratory syncytial virus infections in previously healthy working adults. 1151 84

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology that has a wide variety of clinical manifestation. Lung involvement may slowly undergo pulmonary fibrosis. Chronic sarcoid arthritis is a rare, usually non destructive arthropathy; may be a mono, oligo or polyarthritis. Knees, ankles, shoulders, wrists and small joint of the hands and feet may be involved. It can involve skin, eyes, exocrine glands such as salivary and lacrimal glands, and many other tissues. We describe the case of a 77 years old woman with a history of rhinopharyngitis with epistaxis and chronic laryngitis since youth; a dry mouth and throat, a erythematous, infiltrative skin lesion in the forehead and in the nape of the neck, a purple lesion of the left ear and nose, skin dystrophy of the hands from 30 years before. She underwent an operation for a left femoral fracture with hemotransfusion 14 years ago. Then she developed a polyarthritis of the small joints of the hands (II, III and IV right DIP, I, III, e V left DIP; III and V bilateral PIP), knees, tarsi, toes and left elbow. An HCV chronic hepatitis was discovered 6 years before. She is affected by productive cough, dysphonia, dyspnoea at rest, fever, headache and asthenia for over 5 years. Laboratory examination revealed leukopenia, HCV hepatitis with anti HCV, HCV-RNA, transaminases elevated and cryoglobulinemia. HCV may be involved in the etiopathogenesis of rheumatic diseases, lung fibrosis and may moreover contribute to the onset or progression of sarcoidosis; the possible pathogenesis is discussed.
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PMID:[Chronic polyarthritis in a patient affected by sarcoidosis and chronic HCV infection. Case report and review of the literature]. 1210 83


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