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Query: UMLS:C0019079 (
hemoptysis
)
6,129
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autopsy or surgical specimens from six patients with primary cardiac angiosarcoma seen at the Mayo Clinic (all in men) between 1939 and 1988 were studied (patients' ages, 31 to 80 years; mean 50 years). The symptoms were nonspecific and included dyspnea and thoracoabdominal pain in six; anorexia in five; fatigue,
hemoptysis
, or orthopnea in four; nausea and vomiting, fever, or weight loss in three; and
night sweats
in two. Cardiomegaly was present in five, and a pericardial effusion or density, a mass adjacent to the heart, or nonspecific ST-T wave changes were present in three. All six neoplasms arose from the right atrium and exhibited epicardial or endocardial extension; three produced obstructive intracavitary right atrial masses. Pulmonary metastatic lesions were noted in five patients. The cardiac neoplasm was diagnosed by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging in the three most recent patients, and surgical resection was performed in two of them. Mean survival was 6 months after presentation. Causes of death were pulmonary hemorrhage in three, thoracic metastasis in two, and hemopericardium in one. The diagnosis of primary cardiac angiosarcoma was established at operation in two patients and at autopsy in four. Despite diagnosis by noninvasive imaging procedures and aggressive early surgical intervention, survival was less than 6 months. Thus optimal therapy is unclear.
...
PMID:Primary cardiac angiosarcoma: a clinicopathologic study of six cases. 154 8
The clinical manifestations, predisposing factors, and diagnostic approach to 29 young men and 35 elderly men with pulmonary tuberculosis admitted to a Veterans Administration hospital were compared. Elderly men had a higher number of underlying conditions such as atherosclerosis, previous gastrectomy, and malignancy, whereas alcoholism was more prevalent in the younger group. The classic symptoms and signs of tuberculosis were noted in a significantly higher proportion of the younger group: fever (62 percent versus 31 percent), weight loss (76 percent versus 34 percent),
night sweats
(48 percent versus 6 percent), sputum production (76 percent versus 48 percent), and
hemoptysis
(40 percent versus 17 percent) (p less than 0.05). Abnormal mentation was more common in the elderly group (31 percent versus 10 percent) (p less than 0.05). Radiographic findings were similar in both groups. Mortality related to tuberculosis was 20 percent in elderly men versus 3 percent in the younger men (p less than 0.05). Tuberculosis is frequently not considered in the differential diagnosis when elderly patients present with multiple medical problems and nonspecific complaints. Since there are differences in the clinical presentation and the outcome of pulmonary tuberculosis in elderly patients, a high index of suspicion for the disease should be maintained.
...
PMID:Pulmonary tuberculosis in elderly men. 310 41
A study was made of the presenting features of 100 consecutive Australian patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. A clinical diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis was suspected at the time of first presentation in only 52 patients and the initial provisional diagnosis was that of a non-tuberculous chest condition in a further 32 patients. In another 16 there was a delay in diagnosis because pulmonary tuberculosis was suspected only after chest X-rays were taken for screening purposes--for example, prior to elective surgery. A non-cavitating lesion in an upper lobe was the radiological appearance most often associated with failure to suspect tuberculosis at the time of presentation. The most common symptoms or change in pre-existing chest complaints were cough (55), loss of weight (52) and shortness of breath (43) followed by fever or
night sweats
(23) and
haemoptysis
(10) while 16 were asymptomatic.
...
PMID:Presentation of pulmonary tuberculosis. 694 41
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.
...
PMID:Blastomycosis in children. 931 95
A 53-year-old woman presented with a productive cough, fever, chills, and
night sweats
of one month's duration. She reported having had lightly blood-streaked sputum initially but then experiencing massive
hemoptysis
(> 200 mL/2 hr). Since the onset of symptoms, she had had malaise, body aches, and a 27-lb weight loss. For the last two weeks, she had also had increasing shortness of breath and pleuritic chest pain.
...
PMID:Massive hemoptysis in a woman with seizures. 934 30
A 44-year-old non-smoking patient with longstanding ankylosing spondylitis presented in marked respiratory distress with tachypnea, fever, cough, greenish sputum,
night sweats
, dyspnea and weight loss. Computed tomography showed traction bronchiectases and cavities associated with scarring. The findings were most pronounced in the upper lobes which contained multiple cavities up to 8 cm in diameter harboring fungus balls. The superior segment of the left lower lobe showed two additional cavities. Tuberculosis and atypical mycobacteria were ruled out. Antibiotic therapy resulted in transient improvement. Five months after this acute exacerbation the patient expired from massive
haemoptysis
. Pulmonary fibrosis is a rare manifestation of ankylosing spondylitis, may be complicated by infection and haemorrhage and determine the dismal prognosis of these patients.
...
PMID:Case report and review of the literature. Fatal pulmonary complication in ankylosing spondylitis. 945 16
An elderly man had several weeks of
night sweats
, weight loss, and an anterior mediastinal mass on chest radiography. Computed tomographic-guided needle aspiration was nondiagnostic. Shortly after the patient's admission, three sets of blood cultures yielded Streptococcus pneumoniae. Despite systemic antimicrobials, the patient had an episode of acute
hemoptysis
and died. Autopsy showed an anterior mediastinal abscess with pneumonic involvement of the left lung. There was histologic evidence of necrotizing pneumonia and parenchymal hemorrhage, which likely resulted in fatal
hemoptysis
.
...
PMID:Pneumococcal abscess manifesting as an anterior mediastinal mass and fatal hemoptysis. 1062 17
Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the oldest known diseases and has claimed more lives than any other Today, about one-third of the world's population is infected with TB. In 2003, 1,379 cases of new, active and relapsed TB were reported in Canada. TB is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Only 10 per cent of infected individuals will develop active TB. Pulmonary TB can be spread by an infectious person through the aerosolization of droplets when coughing, talking, spitting, sneezing or singing. Symptoms of pulmonary TB are a cough with or without sputum production lasting at least three weeks, chest pain,
hemoptysis
, fever,
night sweats
, weight loss, lack of appetite, chills and weakness. Extrapulmonary TB is generally not associated with person-to-person spread. Common sites include the throat, lymph nodes, abdomen, intestines, long bones of the legs, spine, kidneys, bladder, skin, eyes and meninges. The risk factors for TB infection and disease include close contact with an active pulmonary TB case, HIV infection or AIDS, inactive disease not adequately treated, low income, underlying medical condition, homelessness, alcoholism, injection drug use, aboriginal background or occupation in health care. Risk settings include travel or residence in an endemic area or work or residence in a correctional facility, shelter, rooming house, residential facility, hospital or long-term care facility. Nurses need to advocate for the prompt diagnosis and isolation of suspected and confirmed TB cases. Knowing when to institute such measures as isolation in a negative pressure room, using respirator masks and limiting interpersonal contacts is vital to the nursing care of TB patients. In addition, the role of the public health department needs to be understood; for example, all jurisdictions have legislated requirements for reporting new positive TB skin tests to public health.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis prevention and treatment. 1562 10
Tuberculosis (TB) is often mistaken for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). To avoid missing the diagnosis, we recommend that any CAP patient with upper lobe infiltrate, cavitation, miliary pattern,
hemoptysis
or >1 month of any of cough, fever, malaise,weakness,
night sweats
, or significant weight loss, should have sputa submitted for Mycobacterium tuberculosis smear and culture. Any CAP patient failing or relapsing after empiric therapy should be investigated for TB. In the presence of HIV with low CD4 count (< or = 200 cells/mL), the presentation may be atypical, and therefore sputa should be submitted for M tuberculosis. Any HIV patient, regardless of CD4 count, with a known history of positive tuberculin skin test, previous TB, or recent exposure to TB, who presents with CAP, should be investigated for TB.
...
PMID:Tuberculosis: still overlooked as a cause of community-acquired pneumonia--how not to miss it. 1576 19
Coccidioidomycosis is an endemic infection acquired by inhalation of the spores (arthroconidia) of the thermally dimorphic fungus, Coccidioides immitis. The arthroconidia transform into spherical cells called mature spherules in the lung. Immature spherules and other atypical forms of immature C immitis have rarely been found in vivo. We report on a case that presented unusual forms of immature sporulating C immitis in a fine-needle aspiration specimen. A 36-year-old Chinese woman, living in New Jersey for the past 10 years, presented with fever,
night sweats
,
hemoptysis
, and an abnormal chest radiograph approximately 9 months after a brief vacation trip to the Grand Canyon in Arizona. She was treated with antibiotics for 4 weeks without improvement. Subsequent chest computed tomography showed a 3-cm cavitary lesion in the right lower lobe of the lung. Fine-needle aspiration biopsy revealed diverse morphologic forms of a fungus that was confirmed by culture as immature sporulating C immitis.
...
PMID:Unusual forms of immature sporulating Coccidioides immitis diagnosed by fine-needle aspiration biopsy. 1639 Feb 47
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