Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 69 yr old man was admitted with a 10 day history of fever, arthromyalgia, dyspnoea, dry cough and pleuritic pain. Temperature was 38 degrees C; tachypnoea 36 rpm. Extensive crackles were audible over both upper lung fields. Chest X-ray showed bilateral alveolar infiltrates. Forced vital capacity was 49% of predicted, and carbon monoxide transfer coefficient was 32% of predicted value. The patient had been taking carbamazepine for one month because of a trigeminal neuralgia. After withdrawal of the drug he gradually recovered.
...
PMID:Carbamazepine and the lung. 229 88

We characterized the acute manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux in 46 patients attending an emergency ward. 43 were females and the mean age was 41 +/- 14. The diagnosis of G-E reflux was confirmed in all by the acid reflux test; esophagitis was present in 55% of patients submitted to endoscopy; the Bernstein test was positive in 43%. The population represents 3% of all emergency consults and 8% of gastroenterological consults. Severe epigastric pain, usually burning or constrictive and radiating to the dorsum, left hypochondrium and sternal region was the presenting form in 55% of patients. Pain was refractory to antispasmodic agents but was relieved by antacids. Dyspnea or bronchial obstruction was the main symptom in 16% of cases, heartburn in 13%, hematemesis in 6%. Among these patients a prolonged history of chronic G-E reflux was common. Surgical correction was undertaken in 6%, with some symptoms persisting in 17%.
...
PMID:[Prevalence of acute manifestations of pathologic gastroesophageal reflux]. 229 74

The chest X-ray of a 39-year-old woman who had an acute onset of fever, cough, dyspnoea and thoracic pain revealed two peripheral round opacities (about 1.5 cm in diameter) in the right lower lobe. Extensive further studies having failed to discover the cause, a diagnostic thoracotomy was performed and the two pleura-adjacent tumours were removed. Histological examination revealed granulomatous encapsulated filariae, species Dirofilaria immitis. This was confirmed by a positive ELISA test with Dirofilaria immitis antigen. As the patient had been on holiday in Corsica three months before onset of symptoms, it is most likely that the pulmonary dirofilariasis was acquired autochthonously in Europe.
...
PMID:[Autochthonous pulmonary dirofilariasis in Europe]. 229 99

We describe the clinical characteristics and actuarial survival of a consecutive cohort of 41 patients with rheumatoid arthritis and clinical pericarditis who were seen at the Mayo Clinic between 1970 and 1987 and followed up until death or through 1987. The survivors were followed up for a median of 5.1 years. Approximately three-fourths of our patients had acute pericarditis, the remainder having recurrent acute pericarditis, chronic pericarditis with effusion, or chronic constrictive pericarditis. Most patients had symmetrical joint swelling, morning stiffness, subcutaneous nodules, rheumatoid factor, and classic radiographic changes of rheumatoid arthritis. Common extra-articular features included fatigue, loss of weight, and fever. Dyspnea or orthopnea, typical pericardial pain, peripheral edema, tachycardia, tachypnea, a diminished mean blood pressure, a pericardial friction rub, jugular venous distension, rales, radiographic evidence of cardiomegaly and pleural effusions, and abnormal echocardiograms were the most common cardiac manifestations. An elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and anemia were other common laboratory findings. Our cohort demonstrated decreased survival in comparison with an age- and sex-matched North Central white population (from the upper midwestern United States), especially during the first year after diagnosis. Increasing age, the presence of other heart disease, an increasing total number of other extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis, jugular venous distention, and a lower mean blood pressure were associated with decreased survival.
...
PMID:Rheumatoid pericarditis: clinical features and survival. 231 40

Solid organ transplant recipients can experience serious disease and death from infection due to the parasitic roundworm Strongyloides stercoralis. This parasite lives in soil contaminated with human feces. Domestic dogs and cats may be another reservoir. Larvae can penetrate the skin, are carried hematogenously to the lungs, migrate up the bronchial tree, and then can be passed to the upper small intestine. Autoinfection occurs in the setting of immunosuppression when invasive larvae penetrate the gut wall and cause disseminated infection. Polymicrobial sepsis is sometimes seen due to enteric organisms adhering to the parasite. Transplant recipients are at highest risk during the first 3 months posttransplant. Many organ systems may be affected. Pulmonary symptoms include cough, wheezing, sputum production, dyspnea, hemoptysis, tachypneas, and pleuritic pain. Hyperinfection, an augmentation of the normal skin-lung-intestine life cycle, occurs in roughly two-thirds of infected transplant recipients, with dissemination in the remainder. Diagnosis is made primarily by examination of the stool or intestinal secretions for ova and parasites. Occasionally, parasites are noted in the sputum. New serologic tests show promise. The parasite may remain in the host for over 25 years before immunosuppression causes either dissemination or hyperinfection. Thiabendazole given for 3 to 7 days is the treatment of choice for organ transplant recipients. Repeat courses may be needed to eradicate infection.
...
PMID:Strongyloides infections in transplant recipients. 234 6

Leiomyoma of the esophagus was surgically treated in 15 patients in 1962-1987. Six patients were asymptomatic and nine presented with dysphagia alone or combined with retrosternal pain, vague thoracic discomfort, dyspnea and cough, or palpitations. Barium swallow and esophagoscopy provided the correct diagnosis preoperatively in most cases. Transthoracic enucleation of the tumor was performed via right thoracotomy in nine patients and left thoracotomy in six. The location of tumor was the upper third of the thoracic esophagus in three cases, middle third in six and lower third in six cases. There was no surgical mortality or morbidity. Surgical removal of esophageal leiomyoma thus gave relief of symptoms, with minimal risk and excellent functional outcome.
...
PMID:Leiomyoma of the esophagus. 235 88

Symptoms by age and sex were studied in two population studies from Gothenburg, Sweden. In general, men and women showed the same age-related pattern. The prevalence of the following symptoms increased with age--sleeping disturbances, pain in the joints, pain in the legs, breathlessness, and impaired hearing. Six symptoms decreased with age--general fatigue, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhoea, cough, and headache. A group of symptoms showed a curvilinear shape with a peak at the age of 50. In general, women presented more symptoms than men. This was especially true for symptoms of depression and tension. A possible explanation is that women are more attentive to their internal state. A more probable explanation, supported by our study, is that the mental symptoms are related to the woman's situation in life with double work (responsible for both work and family).
...
PMID:Symptoms by age and sex. The population studies of men and women in Gothenburg, Sweden. 235 75

Traumatic aneurysms of the descending thoracic aorta are a rare but lethal event, having a mortality of 85-90%. Mortality of this population remains high due to the occurrence of aortic rupture. The isthmus of the aorta, just distal to the left subclavian artery is the most frequent site of injury. Acute traumatic injury to the aorta is characterized by hemorrhagic shock symptoms due to the tear in the layers of the aortic wall. Chronic traumatic injury with aneurysmal formation may not surface with symptoms for months or years after initial trauma. Patients who have formed a chronic aneurysm after a trauma incident can experience dysphagia, chest pain, dyspnea, or cough. Surgical repair involves placing a dacron graft in the area of aneurysmal formation. Protection of the lower extremities during the surgical procedure may prevent paraplegia. In a review of ten cases of chronic traumatic aneurysms at Loyola University Medical Center during the past twenty (20) years, all patients underwent surgical repair. There was no incidence of paraplegia. Post-operative nursing care focuses on monitoring hemodynamic stability, preventing respiratory complications and controlling pain.
...
PMID:Traumatic descending thoracic aneurysms: discussion and nursing care. 236 14

The delay between the onset of symptoms and the call for help is the longest single component of the time taken for patients with acute myocardial infarction to come under coronary care and receive thrombolytic therapy. In order to investigate factors influencing patient delay, visual analogue scores for pain, shortness of breath, and anxiety were obtained retrospectively from 250 patients with acute myocardial infarction, for the time of onset of symptoms, and for the time of the call for help. The predominant symptom was chest pain, followed by anxiety and breathlessness. Although all symptoms increased in severity after their onset, the initiation of a call was largely unexplained in terms of worsening symptoms. Patient delay had a skewed distribution with modal, median and mean values of up to 1 h, 1.5 h, and 11 h respectively. Patient delay was negatively correlated with the pain score at the time of calling, but most of the variance of patient delay could not be explained in terms of symptom scores. However, patient delay was independently and negatively related to maximum serum aspartate aminotransferase. During acute myocardial infarction, patients with higher cardiac enzyme levels experience more pain and delay less. This tendency for patients with more severe infarction and a greater risk of death to call for help sooner is an added reason for administering thrombolytic treatment at the first opportunity: those patients who call early have most to gain from prompt therapy.
...
PMID:Association of patient delay with symptoms, cardiac enzymes, and outcome in acute myocardial infarction. 237 99

A 19-year-old girl had for four weeks the clinical signs of recurrent pulmonary emboli and deep-vein thrombosis (tachycardia, dyspnoea, right inguinal pain), which had been misdiagnosed. The correct diagnosis was made only after drastic deterioration in her condition following appendicectomy for falsely diagnosed appendicitis. Urokinase infusion (80,000-160,000 IU/h for 11 days) having failed to bring about improvement, much greater than ultra-high much less than thrombolysis with streptokinase was begun (250,000 IU streptokinase over 30 min, followed by 9 million IU over 6 hours). Fatal pulmonary embolism occurred seven hours after the end of the infusion. Autopsy revealed extensive separation of thrombotic material in the pelvic veins. This observation and other reports should serve as a warning against using streptokinase in ultra-high doses if large veins, as those in the pelvis, are involved.
...
PMID:[Fatal pulmonary embolism in venous thrombosis of the leg and pelvis during lysis therapy]. 237 66


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10