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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Contact ulcer granuloma has a multifactorial etiology but vocal abuse is considered the most important etiological factor. Some other possible factors are well-known: tuberculosis, allergies, hormonal or autonomic imbalance, psychosomatic influences, reflux-esophagitis, pathological conditions of the nose, nasal accessory sinus, tonsils. Constitutional factors play also an important role. The symptoms range from mild huskiness to severe hoarseness with
pain
extending to the ear, dysphagia, sometimes hemoptysis and
chronic cough
. Failure to recognize the pathological features of this frequently overlooked lesion leads to diagnosis of larynx cancer, angiosarcoma or hemangioma. Indication for microsurgical removal is only severe dyspnea by size of mass or if the dignity is not clear, because any surgical procedure has only temporary value and does not eliminate the etiological factors. The dignity can normally be proved by stroboscope. Vocal rehabilitation and re-education are an essential appropriate means of treatment for this disease if other causative factors are excluded.
...
PMID:[Contact granuloma: symptoms, etiology, diagnosis, therapy]. 157 50
A tight but painless soft-tissue swelling in the left parasternal region, with
chronic cough
and lumbo-ischial
pain
becoming progressively more severe over several months, occurred in a 27-year-old man. The chest X-ray film was normal, radiography of the iliosacral joints revealed right-sided sacroiliitis. In the further course of the illness night sweat, nightly fever up to 38 degrees C and weight loss of 7 kg in two months, as well as severe treatment-resistant earache developed. When hospitalized, another chest X-ray film showed disseminated small nodular foci pointing to tuberculosis. Sputum and irrigation fluid from the right middle-ear contained Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Biopsy material from the parasternal tumour and middle-ear mucosa contained caseous granulomas, confirming the diagnosis of tuberculous sacroiliitis as part of multi-organ tuberculosis. Tuberculostatic treatment--400 mg isoniazid, 600 mg rifampicin, and 1,500 mg pyrazinamide daily (the latter discontinued after 8 weeks)--normalized the appearance in the chest X-ray film. The patient returned to his home in Holland and, four years later, reported that he was free of any symptoms, even during sport activity.
...
PMID:[Unilateral sacroiliitis in multiorgan tuberculosis]. 198 8
The author investigated in a representative sample of 431 subjects aged 60-64 years and in 1171 subjects above 65 years by the method of standardized interviews the prevalence of subjectively perceived health complaints--
pain
and its localization, dyspnoea, insomnia and general weakness and restricted locomotion. Health complaints were recorded already at the age of 60-64 years in a relatively high percentage--71.7%;
chronic cough
and digestive complaints equally frequently as in subjects above 65 years. In 11.6% of subjects aged 60-64 years locomotion was restricted, at the age above 65 years in 31.2% of the respondents. Subjectively perceived health complaints influence the lifestyle in advanced age, they influence the need and consumption of health care. In medical practice it is necessary to search for these complaints in an aimed way, to disclose their causes and influence them by early treatment. This could contribute to the improvement of the quality of life in advanced age.
...
PMID:[Subjective health problems in persons 60-64 years of age and over 65]. 262 77
The diagnosis of bronchiectasis usually suggests a patient with a productive cough and shortness of breath. This report describes the case history of an otherwise healthy 43-year-old man who presented with repetitive episodes of pleuritic
pain
that led to several extensive, invasive evaluations in search of a pulmonary embolus. Only after a carefully taken history did the patient admit to an intermittent
chronic cough
, which suggested the diagnosis of bronchiectasis. This diagnosis was ultimately confirmed by bronchography. This report suggests that patients with bronchiectasis may present with unusual clinical manifestations, and that the correct diagnosis may be missed unless physicians are aware that "old" diseases may present in "new" ways.
...
PMID:Bronchiectasis masquerading as pulmonary embolus. 406 81
A patient diagnosed with pulmonary blastomycosis was seen initially by her primary care physician for severe
pain
in her right elbow and was treated with steroid therapy and analgesics. She also had been treated for
chronic cough
and congestion for approximately 2 months before admission. She showed no improvement at home. She was hospitalized for right epicondylitis, and progressively worsening restrictive pulmonary symptoms developed, including hypoxemia and dyspnea. She was transferred to the intensive care unit and treated with mask continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and intravenous amphotericin B. Despite worsening hypoxemia, successful management of oxygenation was achieved with CPAP, averting the need for intubation and mechanical ventilation. This case demonstrates the usefulness of CPAP in infectious disorders that create restrictive lung impairment.
...
PMID:Blastomycosis-induced respiratory failure: the successful application of continuous positive airway pressure. 931 71
Thoracoscopy has been revived and expanded by recent improvements in endoscopic technology. The enhanced application and outcome of VATS (video assisted thoracic surgery) was retrospectively studied. Between 1992 and 1995, 82 patients underwent diagnostic thoracoscopy or interventional VATS. Indications included: shortness of breath with nonspecific x-ray abnormality (45%), pulmonary nodule (25%), pleural effusion/empyema (21%), pneumothorax (14%), and hemoptysis,
chronic cough
or lung consolidation (5%). Sixty-six (83%) of the procedures were completed thoracoscopically. Eight procedures (10%) required addition of a utility mini-thoracotomy and 6 procedures (7%) were converted to formal thoracotomy. Specific diagnostic and/or therapeutic applications of VATS included: inspection; lysis of adhesions; stapling of blebs; biopsy of lung, pleura, or mediastinal structures; drainage and decortication of empyema; mechanical and chemical pleurodesis; wedge resection; and segmental resection. Diagnosis was established and/or treatment completed in 95% of cases. Pathologic diagnoses included: interstitial pneumonitis (22%), cancer (19%), bullous disease (15%), cocci nodule (9%), and other (18%). There were twenty-two complications (28.9%) and four deaths (4.8%). All four deaths were from causes unrelated to the surgery. The most common complications were: residual pneumothorax or hydrothorax (7), failed pleurodesis (3), and prolonged incisional
pain
(2). The advantage of reduced chest wall and muscle trauma utilizing VATS as opposed to traditional thoracotomy translates to less patient discomfort. The excellent magnified visualization afforded by VATS offers the opportunity to successfully conduct diagnostic and therapeutic interventions in the chest with equal or better visibility. Our findings suggest that the applicability and success of VATS is greatly expanding and its complication rate is less or, at worst, comparable to traditional thoracotomy.
...
PMID:Video-assisted thoracic surgery: applications and outcome. 987 45
Blastomycosis is endemic in river valley areas of the southeastern and Midwestern United States. Pulmonary manifestations include
chronic cough
and pleuritic
pain
. Radiographic appearance of the infection can mimic bronchogenic lung carcinoma. Pleural effusion is rarely associated with this pulmonary infection, and empyema has not been previously reported. We report a case of pulmonary and pleural Blastomyces dermatitidis infection presenting as empyema thoracis. Diagnosis and treatment were attained with video-assisted thoracoscopic (VATS) pleural and lung biopsy and debridement.
...
PMID:Thoracic blastomycosis and empyema. 1032 75
An 80-year-old man presented with subjective fever,
chronic cough
occasionally producing scant yellow sputum, retrosternal pleuritic
pain
, and dyspnea on walking one block. Since symptom onset three months earlier, he had lost 20 pounds; he had had two loose stools a day, fatigue, malaise, and anorexia but not hemoptysis, nausea, vomiting, hematemesis, hematochezia, or melena. He denied paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea or orthopnea. As far as could be ascertained, he not recently been exposed to tuberculosis or any other infectious disease. He had previously been seen at another clinic and had completed a 10-day trial of erythromycin (500 mg p.o. q12 h) without apparent change in symptoms.
...
PMID:Pulmonary infiltrates in an elderly man. 1045 60
Today, it is difficult to set a correct definition and diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease. The attempt to define it on the basis of "typical" symptoms, like heartburn and regurgitation, or "atypical" symptoms, like
chronic cough
, asthma, hoarseness and thoracic
pain
, or on the basis of endoscopic esophagitis presents notable difficulties. Moreover, the problem of a correct definition is tightly tied up to the ability to set a correct and early diagnosis. There are many diagnostics tools, but none of them is the golden standard. Today, the trend is to emphasize the role of the 24-hour pH-monitoring in diagnosing the reflux in those symptomatic patients with no visible esophagitis. However, its limit is to underline only the acid, not the duodenogastric alkaline reflux, which is also very important in the genesis of the inflammatory esophageal lesions. The esophageal manometry, however, evaluates only the mechanical state of the lower esophageal sphincter and the peristaltic function of the esophageal body but does not provide any direct information about the exposure of the esophagus to the gastric juice. The aim of this study is to analyze the problems concerning the definition and the diagnosis of the gastroesophageal reflux disease with particular attention to the practical implications on the common surgical practice, and to review some solutions reported in the literature for the difficult clinical approach to the patient with this pathology.
...
PMID:[Difficulties in defining and diagnosing gastroesophageal reflux: practical implications in surgery]. 1121 72
Around 10-20% of the population suffer from the hallmark symptoms of heartburn, regurgitation, sour burping and retrosternal
pain
. Based on their characteristic medical history alone, such patients can usually be presumed to have gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). In around 30-50% of them, the endoscopic examination will reveal the typical erosions and ulcerations in the esophagus. In addition to the clinical symptoms, endoscopy plays a central role in diagnosing GERD. An endoscopy is always indicated whenever these warnings symptoms are present. In patients with persistent reflux problems, endoscopy is indicated to diagnose erosive reflux esophagitis. This procedure should include a routine biopsy taken distal to the Z-line to enable histological detection of the metaplasia associated with Barrett's esophagus. Although the majority of patients exhibit the classical symptoms and respond to acid suppression therapy, endoscopy may not find erosions (non-erosive reflux disease NERD). In these cases, further diagnostic steps must be taken to verify the diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease. There are patients, moreover, who exhibit unclear, uncharacteristic reflux symptoms, such as respiratory diseases with bronchial asthma, chronic bronchitis,
chronic cough
or ENT problems like posterior laryngitis and globus sensation (a lump in the throat). In these uncertain cases and in patients with NERD, 24-hour pH monitoring can verify and objectify and acid gastroesophageal reflux. An association can then be made between acid reflux and symptomatology. As an alternative, trial therapy with a proton pump inhibitor can help identify patients who have acid-related problems and symptoms. Other functional tests such as radiographic examination, manometry or scintigraphy are less well suited, if at all, for primary diagnostics of gastroesophageal reflux disease.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux]. 1207 Oct 79
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