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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026936 (
Mycoplasma
)
14,761
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 69-year-old female was admitted for the evaluation of chronic persistent cough of about six week duration which was particularly worse at night and did not respond to antibiotics or cough medicines. She did not smoke and had no history of allergies or abnormal inhalations. Eosinophil counts, serum IgE, CRP, titers of cold hemagglutinin (CHA), and antibody to
mycoplasma
were all within normal ranges. Chest X-ray films and respiratory function tests showed no abnormalities. Because of her complaint of mild
heartburn
, gastroesophageal reflux (GER) was thought to be a possible cause of her chronic cough. Upper gastrointestinal X-ray films revealed barium reflux up to the cervical esophagus, and gastrointestinal fiberoscopy showed reflux esophagitis. Bronchial biopsy specimens taken by fiberoptic bronchoscopy showed chronic inflammatory changes of bronchial mucosa with focal squamous metaplasia, mucosal basement membrane thickening, and lymphocytic infiltration in the submucosa. She made favorable progress following treatment with a histamine H2 blocker and cisapride for six weeks. She met Irwin's criteria and we concluded that her cough was caused by GER. We speculate that repeated tracheobronchial microaspirations of refluxed gastric acid may cause chronic inflammatory changes of the bronchial mucosa resulting in persistent cough.
...
PMID:[A case of chronic persistent cough caused by gastroesophageal reflux]. 827 65
In a recent study, a large proportion of veterans seen for chronic
heartburn
or dyspepsia after the Persian Gulf War had evidence for Helicobacter pylori. Thomas Jackson was born and raised in an area of West Virginia that has a high prevalence of H. pylori. He suffered chronic dyspeptic symptoms following his service in the Mexican-American War. Therapies that he tried included treatment with a variant of the Sippy diet. Following a bullet wound to the left arm at the battle of Chancellorsville on Saturday, May 2, 1863, Thomas Jackson underwent amputation of the left arm below the left shoulder. He died 1 week later with a diagnosis of
pleuropneumonia
. The records of the postsurgical course are incomplete. The available clinical information raises the hypothesis that his chronic dyspepsia and his cause of death could have been related to chronic peptic ulcer disease due to gastric H. pylori infection.
...
PMID:Chronic gastrointestinal symptoms of Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson following Mexican-American War exposure: a medical hypothesis. 1752 Nov 13