Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (hemoptysis)
6,129 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although blastomycosis is prevalent in the North American continent, it occurs only sporadically in Africa. We describe a 42 yr old patient who complained of intermittent cough and haemoptysis. Clinical findings were strongly suggestive of lung cancer. The diagnosis of pulmonary blastomycosis was made at thoracotomy. This rather unusual disease in our areas caused a considerable delay in securing the diagnosis and we suggest that this infection may be found elsewhere in Africa and the distribution may be wider than has previously been suspected.
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PMID:Blastomycosis in Africa: a new case from Tunisia. 137 39

Most cases of blastomycosis are sporadic and only nine outbreaks representing a total of 112 cases have previously been reported. Less than half of these have been culture proven cases. Outbreaks have previously occurred in North Carolina, Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin and Virginia. We report three culturally confirmed cases of blastomycosis from Elizabethton, Tennessee, who had onset of illness within a one-week span of time. The patients presented with fever, chest pain, weight loss, poor appetite and myalgia. Each initially had a dry cough which became productive of purulent sputum as the illness progressed. Mild hemoptysis occurred during each patient's course. Serologic testing by immunodiffusion and enzyme immunoassay were positive and testing by complement fixation was negative in each case. The diagnosis was made by histopathology on transbronchial biopsy or transthoracic needle aspiration material. Each patient improved on ketoconazole therapy.
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PMID:An outbreak of blastomycosis in eastern Tennessee. 176 58

We observed a new case of blastomycosis in a patient with haemoptysis. The chest X-ray revealed a lesion confined to the upper right lobe of the lung and there was an ulcerating vegetation at the medial angle of the right eye. Skin biopsy and bronchial aspiration led to the identification of typical Blastomyces dermatitidis. Outcome was favourable after oral therapy with ketoconazole. Cutaneo-pulmonary blastomycosis is weakly endemic in Tunisia. Pulmonary lesions are more frequent because of airborne transmission. Cutaneous lesions may be clinically misleading. This disease is sensitive to antifungal imidazole derivatives.
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PMID:[Cutaneopulmonary blastomycosis]. 797 35

Children acquire blastomycosis, with rare exceptions, through the respiratory route. Nearly half of those who are infected may be asymptomatic. Cough is the most common symptom and is usually without sputum production, and hemoptysis is not noted. Other symptoms are chest pain (described as tightness or pain when breathing), weight loss, night sweats, and loss of appetite. The severity of illness is variable and may simulate an upper respiratory infection, bronchitis, pleuritis, or pneumonia. As in adults, an overwhelming infection may cause respiratory failure even in immunocompetent children and in immunocompromised children who live in or travel to endemic areas are susceptible to infection. Some reports based on consecutive cases note extrapulmonary dissemination commonly in children, whereas dissemination is rarely noted in outbreak cases. Chronicity of the disease favors extrapulmonary dissemination. Chest radiograph patterns are alveolar infiltrates, consolidation, and nodule(s), and these may be accompanied by cavitation. Diagnosis is suspected when the symptoms that mimic common respiratory infections persist for more than 2 weeks and by a history of residence or travel to an endemic area. Chest radiographic findings of nodule(s) or cavitation further increase the suspicion. Confirmation of diagnosis is by microscopic examination and culture of sputum. When expectorated sputum is unavailable, bronchoscopy with lavage and biopsy or percutaneous needle biopsy of lung is the appropriate next step. Disease that is progressive or severe or disseminated to other organs should be treated. Amphotericin B is effective and results in excellent cure rates. Experience using oral azoles is limited in children.
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PMID:Blastomycosis in children. 931 95

An otherwise well 21-year-old man from Northwestern Ontario presented to our emergency department in Winnipeg, Manitoba, with a 2-month history of cough, progressively increasing dyspnea, hemoptysis and a 15-kg weight loss. His symptoms were worsening despite antibiotic treatment for presumed bacterial pneumonia. His past history included work as a seasonal labourer clearing brush. He was not hypoxic on room air, but his chest radiograph revealed a miliary pattern and bilateral infiltrates. A Mantoux test for tuberculosis was non-reactive, and the sputum gram stain was unremarkable. Empiric therapy was initiated for blastomycosis and the diagnosis was confirmed with a calcofluor stain of the sputum. Although blastomycosis is rare in most regions in North America, there is an unusually high incidence of blastomycosis in Northwestern Ontario. This case highlights the intolerance and utility of knowledge of the local epidemiology in establishing difficult diagnoses of regional importance, such as fungal pneumonias.
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PMID:Using local epidemiology to make a difficult diagnosis: a case of blastomycosis. 1735 74

Pulmonary blastomycosis is an uncommon pathologic condition that is quite rare in Africa compared to endemic regions of Canada and the upper Midwest of the U.S. We describe a 45-year-old patient who complained of productive cough, hemoptysis, and dorsal rachiodynia. Chest imaging revealed a necrotic tissue-density pulmonary mass involving both the upper and lower right lobes. Chest MRI showed signal abnormality of the third thoracic vertebral body and the greater trochanter, consistent with metastatic lesions. Clinical and radiological findings were strongly suggestive of lung cancer. Diagnosis of pulmonary blastomycosis was made by visualization of yeast in bronchial biopsies and further confirmed by culture of bronchoalveolar lavage specimens. The patient was treated with itraconazole and his clinical condition improved markedly. Pulmonary blastomycosis is unusual in Africa and that fact caused a considerable delay in diagnosis. We suggest that this disease may be more common in Africa than has been previously suspected.
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PMID:Pulmonary blastomycosis: a case from Africa. 1934 29

One of the endemic fungi, Blastomyces dermatitidis, can cause epidemics of infection with multiple persons involved in a point source outbreak but more commonly causes sporadic cases of infection within the areas of endemicity. Blastomycosis can present as an acute pneumonia which is often misdiagnosed as acute pneumococcal pneumonia or the infection may present as a chronic pneumonia along with weight loss, night sweats, hemoptysis, and a lung mass suggesting tuberculosis or carcinoma of the lung. Extrapulmonary infection with B. dermatitidis is protean with many different manifestations. Most commonly, skin or subcutaneous lesions are found with either a verrucous or warty appearance or in an ulcerative form. Cases have been misidentified as keratoacanthoma, pyoderma gangrenosum, carcinoma, or as Weber-Christian panniculitis if there are nodular subcutaneous lesions. Essentially any site or organ can have lesions of disseminated blastomycosis. In our series, cases of laryngeal carcinoma, adrenal insufficiency, thyroid nodules, granulomatous hypercalcemia, abnormal mammograms thought to represent breast carcinoma, otitis media with cranial extension, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and hemolytic anemia of unknown cause have been misdiagnosed and blastomycosis subsequently identified as the cause. This infection causes manifestations which mimic many other more commonly diagnosed conditions and must always be considered by clinicians practicing in the endemic region.
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PMID:The endemic mimic: blastomycosis an illness often misdiagnosed. 2512 34