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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although amebiasis is prevalent in tropical and subtropical areas, it occurs sporadically in the United States. Pleuropulmonary involvement is seen in about 20 percent of the patients with amebic liver abscesses. We describe a patient with pleuropulmonary amebiasis who complained of hemoptysis but had no gastrointestinal symptoms. This rather unusual presentation caused a considerable delay in securing the diagnosis.
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PMID:Hemoptysis in a 49-year-old man. An unusual presentation of a sporadic disease. 222 80

A case of multiple amoebic lung abscesses without indication of direct extension from a subclinical liver abscess, which delayed correct diagnosis, is reported. Severe constitutional symptoms, life-threatening haemoptysis and large pulmonary lesions were the prominent clinical manifestations. The response to metronidazole was dramatic. It is postulated that haematogenous spread was responsible. The rarity of this form of amoebiasis is evident on published reports.
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PMID:Amoebic lung abscesses. A case report. 292 87

Thoracic symptoms were noted in 38 (86%) out of 44 patients with hepatic amoebiasis and dominated the clinical picture in 4 (9%), causing dangerous delay in initiating appropriate treatment. Thoracic amoebiasis characteristically presents as a febrile illness with cough, chest pain, and point tenderness in an intercostal space or the right upper quadrant of the abdomen. Haemoptysis, diarrhoea, and dysentery are uncommon, occurring in approximately equal proportions (9%). The most important factor in clinical recognition is awareness of the possibility of the lesion. Chest radiography, serological tests, and therapeutic trials give corroborative evidence. In endemic areas thoracic amoebiasis should always be considered in the evaluation of obscure, especially right-sided, respiratory symptoms.
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PMID:Intrathoracic manifestations of amoebiasis. 724 69

During a mission in ex-Yugoslavia between 2001 and 2004, three French soldiers were sent home because of right pneumopathy, right pleurisy after appendicectomy, haemoptysis and liver haematoma, respectively. They previously were stationed in Africa and/or South America. The initial diagnosis was quickly modified: pleuropulmonary manifestations of amoebic hepatic abscess in two cases, and pleuropulmonary amoebiasis in the last case. The outcome was favourable with standard anti-amoebic treatment. The reports illustrate the possibility of hepatic amoebiasis with local pleuropulmonary manifestations and an exceptional case of pleuropulmonary amoebiasis with hepatobronchial fistula. The authors report this experience because it demonstrates that amoebiasis in European countries remains an often forgotten diagnosis. Although known for a long time in developing countries, amoebiasis in the military or in tourists should be systematically considered.
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PMID:[Pleuro-pulmonary manifestations disclosing hepatic amoebiasis]. 1987 5