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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0031350 (
pharyngitis
)
2,405
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Children presenting with acute respiratory disease to a private group practice in the fall of 1975 were studied to: (1) evaluate the efficacy in a pediatric office of a simple technics of obtaining nasal washes for the diagnosis of parainfluenza virus infections and (2) to determine the quantities of virus shed in relation to clinical characteristics. The nasal wash technic proved feasible for an office or clinic.
Parainfluenza
virus type 1 was recovered from 26 (74%) of 35 children with croup and from 40 (56%) of the total 72 children presenting with any form of respiratory illness. Virus was recovered significantly more often from children with croup and from those of younger age. The mean quantity of virus in 26 nasal washes was 2.97 log10 TCID50/ml. The shedding of greater quantities was correlated with younger age and the more frequent occurrence of laryngitis,
pharyngitis
, and fever.
...
PMID:Parainfluenza viral infections in children: correlation of shedding with clinical manifestations. 19 32
Direct and indirect immunofluorescence techniques were used to investigate the presence of some viral, chlamydial, Rickettsia and Mycoplasma antigens in the exfoliated nasal and pharyngeal epithelial cells from 156 patients with acute or chronic respiratory infections. Positive results were found in 98 (62.82%) of them, parainfluenza (36.88%) and herpes (23.3%) antigens, being the most frequent. Herpes, parainfluenza and adenoviral antigens were found the most frequently among patients with
pharyngitis
(76 cases).
Parainfluenza
, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia and Rickettsia burneti antigens had the highest prevalence among the patients with rhinitis (34 cases). The presence of a single antigen was detected only in 36 patients (36.73%), two or more antigens being found simultaneously in other 62 cases (63.27%). The results demonstrate the utility and efficiency of the immunofluorescence techniques for the rapid etiological diagnosis of acute or chronic respiratory infections.
...
PMID:[Immunofluorescence for the rapid diagnosis and complex study of various acute and chronic respiratory infections]. 353 18
Parainfluenza
types 1, 2 and 3 were studied in a pediatric outpatient population from 1976 to 1992 to compare seasonal patterns over time and to define better the spectrum of illness in all ages of children caused by these viruses.
Parainfluenza
type 1 occurred in the fall of odd numbered years; parainfluenza type 2 was less predictable; and parainfluenza type 3 appeared yearly with peak activity in spring or summer. The parainfluenza viruses were the major cause of croup and also accounted for one-half of the cases of laryngitis and over one-third of all lower respiratory tract illness in children from whom a virus was isolated. The major clinical manifestations of infection with parainfluenza types 1 and 2 were croup, upper respiratory infections and
pharyngitis
; for parainfluenza type 3 upper respiratory tract infection was predominant in all age groups. The parainfluenza viruses cause appreciable respiratory morbidity each year among infants and young children. They are the major cause of croup but also produce a spectrum of diseases ranging from mild upper respiratory tract infection to bronchiolitis and pneumonia. Most studies have focused on the morbidity of parainfluenza viruses in infants and young children who are hospitalized. Less appreciated is the impact of parainfluenza viral infections in outpatients and in older children. The parainfluenza viruses have a striking epidemiologic pattern which has evolved over the past 30 years. In the early 1960s parainfluenza types 1, 2 and 3 were all reported to be endemic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Parainfluenza viral infections in pediatric outpatients: seasonal patterns and clinical characteristics. 803 42
Human parainfluenza viruses (HPIVs) are single-stranded, enveloped RNA viruses of the Paramyoviridaie family. There are four serotypes which cause respiratory illnesses in children and adults. HPIVs bind and replicate in the ciliated epithelial cells of the upper and lower respiratory tract and the extent of the infection correlates with the location involved. Seasonal HPIV epidemics result in a significant burden of disease in children and account for 40% of pediatric hospitalizations for lower respiratory tract illnesses (LRTIs) and 75% of croup cases.
Parainfluenza
viruses are associated with a wide spectrum of illnesses which include otitis media,
pharyngitis
, conjunctivitis, croup, tracheobronchitis, and pneumonia. Uncommon respiratory manifestations include apnea, bradycardia, parotitis, and respiratory distress syndrome and rarely disseminated infection. Immunity resulting from disease in childhood is incomplete and reinfection with HPIV accounts for 15% of respiratory illnesses in adults. Severe disease and fatal pneumonia may occur in elderly and immunocompromised adults. HPIV pneumonia in recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is associated with 50% acute mortality and 75% mortality at 6 months. Though sensitive molecular diagnostics are available to rapidly diagnose HPIV infection, effective antiviral therapies are not available. Currently, treatment for HPIV infection is supportive with the exception of croup where the use of corticosteroids has been found to be beneficial. Several novel drugs including DAS181 appear promising in efforts to treat severe disease in immunocompromised patients, and vaccines to decrease the burden of disease in young children are in development.
...
PMID:Parainfluenza Virus Infection. 2748 35