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)

A 34-year-old man with chronic myelogenous leukemia developed hemoptysis, pain in the left side of the chest, and a systolic heart murmur eight weeks following an allogeneic bone marrow transplant. His clinical status deteriorated, and he died ten weeks after transplantation. Autopsy revealed unsuspected disseminated aspergillosis, including the unusual finding of Aspergillus pancarditis and pericarditis. Cardiac aspergillosis is a uniformly lethal disease in immunocompromised persons and must be aggressively diagnosed following early symptoms.
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PMID:Aspergillus pancarditis following bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelogenous leukemia. 265 15

We describe the case of a 23 years old male, who suffered a 45 bullet wound in the arm and upper right hemithorax. He walked after his injury and 10 minutes later presented dizziness, cough and tachycardia. On admission a minor haemothorax was seen on a chest X ray, but the bullet was not seen. Even without symptoms, an X ray of abdomen showed the missile lying above the left sacroiliac joint. A chest tube was placed, the patient had an excellent recovery and was discharged a week later. After several months he presented hemoptysis and a moderate pain on his right chest and was treated as an acute bronchitis. Six months after his initial injury he developed a florid picture of acute pulmonary embolism (chest pain, dyspnea, hemoptysis, tachycardia, severe cough). A new chest X ray was done and the bullet was shown lying in the right chest. A pulmonary arteriography located it in a lower basal branch. Through a posterolateral thoracotomy the slug was obtained. The recovery was uneventful and he has remained well since. We discuss the possible mechanisms to explain the entrance of the bullet into the vascular system and conclude that in cases of gunshot wounds: a) An exit wound must be always searched for; if not found exploratory X ray are mandatory, b) If the bullet is not found, specially after thoracic injuries, bullet embolism should be contemplated, c) If there are signs of regional ischemia arteriography is mandatory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Embolism caused by a bullet. Report of a case and review of the literature]. 265 26

Twelve patients with a bronchial carcinoid tumor seen over the past 10 years, were retrospectively analyzed. The age, symptoms, smoking habit, previous respiratory conditions, X-ray and extension of the tumor, bronchial endoscopy, treatment and survival were studied. The mean age of these patients was 42.5 years with a male predominance of 2:1. More than half of the patients were smokers (58.3%). The most common symptoms were hemoptysis, costal pain, pneumonia and fever. Two of the patients were asymptomatic (16.6%) and their tumor was detected in a routine health control. Almost half of the patients (41.6%) complained of respiratory symptoms for 3 years previous to diagnosis (mean 7.8 years with a range of 3 to 11 years). 75% of the cases were centrally located. The left lung was most frequently affected (75%). Fiberbronchoscopy was carried out in nine patients; in eight of them the tumor was localized and information was obtained about the segment involved. However, the biopsy was positive in only one case (14.2%). Two patients presented endocrine symptoms with a syndrome similar to the carcinoid. The disease was disseminated with adrenal metastasis in two cases, one of which had also bone and liver metastasis. An immunohistochemical study was performed in eight cases with a positive result for ACTH and calcitonin in one patient. Ten patients were treated with surgery; one with chemotherapy and the other was treated with palliation. Two patients were lost in the follow up period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Carcinoid tumor of the bronchi. An infrequent tumor. Clinical study of 12 cases]. 267 62

During the last 10 years (1975-1985), a total of 18 cases of posttraumatic aneurysm at the level of the thoracic isthmus were operated on. Six of the 18 were women (19-71 years of age) and 12 were men (17-61 years of age). The mean age at the time of injury was, respectively, 22 and 25.8 years and, at the time of operation, 34.5 and 35.5 years. The patients were all involved in a motor vehicle accident, except for 2 (1 falling, 1 crushing). Thirty-nine percent of the patients had no apparent thoracic injury and 89% had associated injuries (bony fractures, craniofacial, visceral and abdominal). Eight of the 18 were asymptomatic at the time of operation, the others had various symptoms (pain, fever, dyspnea, cough, hoarseness, murmur, or hemoptysis). Enlargement of the aortic button was present in every case. Seventeen patients were operated on electively from 4 months to 50 years after the injury. Circumferential rupture was total in 9 patients and partial (2/3 to 9/10) in the others. Complete repair was done by either prosthetic Dacron tube (3), Dacron patch (2), or direct suture (12). Protection by femoro-femoral bypass was used in 3 and simple aortic cross-clamp was used in 14. Mean time of aortic cross-clamp was 36.9 minutes (range, 16-80 min). Among these 17 patients, there was no hospital mortality and no late death. One patient had regressive paraplegia. One patient was submitted to an emergency operation for an intrapulmonary rupture of an infected aneurysm and died in the operating room before completion of the repair.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Chronic traumatic aneurysms of the thoracic aorta. 272 61

Pulmonary fungal infections complicating hematological malignancies are difficult to diagnose antemortem because clinical findings are actually considered to be not specific. From December 1984 to June 1986 we documented the clinical findings in sixteen patients, 9 with ANLL, 6 with ALL and 1 with CML + BC; all patients were diagnosed as pulmonary fungal infection and treated for this complication. Pulmonary infiltrates occurred after severe aplasia (range 5-90 days) or during bone marrow relapse. We studied pulmonary signs and symptoms (pleuritic pain, cough, hemoptysis, shortness of breath, rales, rub, bronchial murmur) both at the beginning and during the management of this infectious complication and we related them to chest x-ray findings, the duration of granulocytopenia, and fever. Our purpose was to identify clinical characteristics for these episodes and establish roentgenological criteria for prognosis. These findings should improve the possibilities for an early diagnosis and prompt treatment.
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PMID:[Pulmonary mycosis as a complication of acute leukemia in the adult. Diagnostic study]. 274 May 98

Fifteen cases of histologically proven Askin Rosai tumor were treated at Tata Memorial Hospital over a period of 3 years. Patients included 12 men and three women. Clinical features included chest wall mass (14), pain (11), bony involvement (6), fever (4), dyspnoea (4), weight loss (1), cough (1), and hemoptysis (1). Previously treated patients received different treatment protocols, which made evaluation difficult. Of our ten patients who have completed induction therapy, five received vincristine and cyclophosphamide, whereas the other five received more aggressive chemotherapy. Complete remission has been achieved in two and four of these patients, respectively. One patient in each group had recurrence of the disease, in both cases at the local site. Thus, from our preliminary data, we suggest that Askin Rosai tumor should be treated with complete surgical excision followed by an aggressive combination of chemotherapy and local radiotherapy.
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PMID:Treatment of Askin Rosai tumor--need for a more aggressive approach. 284 98

The incidence of endometriosis is between eight and 15 percent among sexually mature women, with peaks being in the third and fourth decades of age. External thoracic endometriosis is associated with implantation of endometrial tissue into lung, pleura, bronchial system, and diaphragm. Major indicators symptoms of thoracal endometriosis include haemoptysis, thorax pain, recurrent spontaneous pneumothorax, and haemorrhagic pleural effusion, with all these manifestations being temporally coordinated with menstruation. Bronchoscopy and radiography are used for diagnosis, while surgery, hormonal treatment, and radiotherapy are used for therapeutic action. One patient with systemic endometriosis is reported in greater detail in this paper.
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PMID:[Endometriosis externa thoracalis]. 336 48

A 17-year-old girl developed fever, cough and hemoptysis, as well as bouts of septic fever, dyspnea on exertion, cyanosis and weight loss. Opacification in the left lower lung was a persistent feature. Complement-fixation reaction to Aspergillus fumigatus was 1:80, and there were four precipitation lines against this fungus on immunoelectrophoresis. Aspergilli were also demonstrated in sputum and bronchial aspirate. Because the patient's condition deteriorated an atypical lingula resection was performed and cortisone treatment begun postoperatively. Subsequently all abnormal findings disappeared and the patient was cured. Two subsequent exposures to Aspergillum on the parental farm produced high fever, cough, dyspnea and thoracic pain. Histological examination of the lingular specimen revealed bronchocentric granulomatosis. In this case it was the rarely occurring morphological manifestation of an allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis without bronchial asthma.
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PMID:[Bronchocentric granulomatosis as a manifestation of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis without bronchial asthma]. 359 64

Eight cases of pulmonary involvement were observed in 17 severe cases of ictero-haemorrhagic leptospirosis. Haemoptysis (7 cases) occurred on the 4th day of the infectious syndrome and was associated with other haemorrhagic manifestations in 4 cases. Cough, pain and polypnoea were not constant. Chest X-ray showed diffuse, non-specific changes, such as nodular opacities or infiltrates. Septicaemia was confirmed in all cases with acute renal failure in 7 cases and meningitis in 6 cases. Severe thrombocytopenia was demonstrated in 2 cases. Six patients recovered quickly with regression of the lung changes within 12 days. Two patients died, one of a fulminant haemoptysis related to a disseminated intravascular coagulation syndrome, and the other of acute respiratory failure. All cases were confirmed serologically. Although lung changes in leptospirosis are usually benign and mild, haemoptysis and polypnoea with diffuse radiological changes are poor prognostic factors. The pathological changes were similar to those of haemorrhagic alveolitis. These changes may be either due to the liberation of toxins or to an immunological phenomenon.
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PMID:[Pulmonary manifestations in severe ictero-hemorrhagic leptospirosis]. 363 26

Sarcoidosis carries a low prevalence in Israel, and acute pleural involvement in sarcoidosis is uncommon throughout the world. We report a case of a young Israeli male of Yemenite origin who presented with atypical manifestations of sarcoidosis: pleuritic pain, hemoptysis, pruritus and alcohol-induced pain. The differential diagnosis from Hodgkin's disease was involved. Various aspects of diagnosis are discussed.
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PMID:Sarcoidosis presenting with acute pleurisy, hemoptysis, pruritus and eosinophilia. 365 75


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