Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0031350 (pharyngitis)
2,405 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A study was carried out of 274 children in Scotland aged 0 to 13 years recorded as having had acute nephritis over a four-year period (1976-79). The medical records for 223 of the patients were examined and 79 cases of poststreptococcal nephritis were identified, giving an estimated incidence of 2.1 episodes per 100,000 children per year. Using a number of assumptions, the authors sought the answers to two important questions: What is the risk that glomerulonephritis will develop after sore throat/inflamed throat illness? Is this risk influenced by the prescribing of an antibiotic for the original illness?The risks of developing nephritis after an antibiotic-treated sore throat and after a non-antibiotic treated sore throat were assessed as being equivalent (1:13,000 and 1:17,000 respectively). Furthermore, it appears that, during his lifetime, a general practitioner has a chance of only one in six of seeing a child with post-streptococcal nephritis after a sore throat.
...
PMID:Antibiotics, sore throats and acute nephritis. 665 20

Mycoplasma hominis seldom colonizes the human respiratory tract and only rarely causes acute respiratory infection. It can be recovered from the respiratory secretions of 1-3% of healthy persons and of less than or equal to 8% of persons with chronic respiratory disease, but it has not been implicated definitely in the etiology of this disease or in the exacerbations that characterize its course. M. hominis has been isolated from less than or equal to 6% of persons with acute pharyngitis or acute upper respiratory tract illnesses and can induce exudative pharyngitis in susceptible volunteers when administered intranasally and oropharyngeally. Colonization of the respiratory tract by M. hominis occurs in approximately 15% of persons who engage in oral-genital sexual practices, but colonization alone is not necessarily associated with sore throat or other upper respiratory diseases. Although M. hominis has been recovered from adults with pneumonia more often than from controls, a pathogenic role in pneumonia of adults has not been established. Under special conditions, e.g., neonatal pneumonia, M. hominis appears to be pathogenic for the lower respiratory tract. Thus M. hominis probably is only an occasional respiratory pathogen in the adult and a rare "opportunistic" pathogen of the respiratory tract of the neonate.
...
PMID:Mycoplasma hominis: a review of its role as a respiratory tract pathogen of humans. 666 78

During the investigation of a large multistate outbreak of milk-borne yersiniosis, 14 patients who presented with pharyngitis had Yersinia enterocolitica isolated from the throat. Their illness was characterized by sore throat and fever without enteritis; 3 needed hospitalization. All patients tested had leukocytosis and an elevated convalescent-phase serum titer against the outbreak strain. In contrast to patients with enteritis, who were children, all patients with pharyngitis were adults. Thus, Y. enterocolitica may be responsible for some sporadic cases of pharyngitis in which the throat culture is negative for other pathogens.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica pharyngitis. 668 88

We treated four adults whose upper airway was compromised due to acute epiglottitis. We also reviewed the English literature for all reports of this condition in adults (18 years and older). Among the 158 cases, the infectious etiology was identified in 29 (H. influenzae 20, Streptococcus pneumoniae six, H. parainfluenzae two, Streptococcus pyogenes one). In the remaining cases, the etiology was uncertain. Bacteremia was documented in 23/32 patients (71.9%), but extra-epiglottic infections were strikingly rare (X = six). The clinical manifestations were sore throat (100%), fever (88%), dyspnea (78%), dysphagia (76%), anterior neck cellulitis or tenderness (27%), hoarseness (21%), pharyngitis (20%) and anterior cervical lymphadenopathy (9%). Complete airway obstruction ensued in 23 out of the 119 subjects (18.3%) who had respiratory difficulty. Overall mortality rate was 17.6% but it was 6.4% among the patients who were semi-electively tracheostomized or endotracheally intubated. These findings illustrate that antibiotics therapy active against H. influenzae is required in the treatment of acute epiglottitis in adults. Additionally, airway patency should be established when inspiratory stridor appears assuring uncomplicated recovery.
...
PMID:Acute epiglottitis in adults. 670 91

This study examines the relationship between the symptom of sore throat and the signs of pharyngitis. Patients seeking medical attention for sore throat were examined by their physician, who documented findings on a Tonsillopharyngitis Score (TPS) and obtained a throat culture. Each patient was then instructed by the physician's assistant to characterize the severity of throat pain on a Sore Throat Pain Intensity Scale (STPIS) and Sore Throat Questionnaire. A high positive correlation was found for the STPIS and TPS but not for these findings and the cause of pharyngitis. A similar association was found between the relative severity of throat pain and the words patients use to describe it. This new method objectively confirms the subjective rating of sore throat pain.
...
PMID:Subjective and objective features of sore throat. 670 20

In a clinical and bacteriological study of 42 patients with acute tonsillo-pharyngitis or chronic tonsillo-pharyngitis with acute exacerbation, patients were allocated at random to receive either a 3-day course of spiramycin or a 5-day course of erythromycin, both antibiotics being given in a dosage of 500 mg 3-times daily. The median time to disappearance of patient complaints such as fever, difficulty in swallowing, sore throat, cough and mucus was 3 days in each group and there was a significant reduction from pre-treatment to normal levels in total white cell count and erythrocyte sedimentation rate after treatment. Although more patients were considered to have shown a good clinical response to spiramycin, the difference was not statistically significant. From a bacteriological point of view, however, treatment with the regimen used was considered a failure in all cases in that neither antibiotic completely eradicated the pathogens identified at the start of treatment even though, with 3 exceptions, all of the micro-organisms were shown to be sensitive to the antibiotics before and after treatment. Few side-effects were reported in either group.
...
PMID:A comparative study of spiramycin and erythromycin in acute tonsillo-pharyngitis. 672 48

The records of 84 patients with peritonsillitis were reviewed. Only 19% (16) of the patients had a history of two or more notable episodes of pharyngitis. Six patients underwent an immediate tonsillectomy. The remainder of the patients was treated initially with drainage and parenteral antibiotics. Twenty-one patients underwent an interval tonsillectomy, and 57 patients had no further therapy. Of those patients who received no further therapy, 72% (41) of the patients had either one or no subsequent episodes of sore throat symptoms. Only one patient had recurrent peritonsillitis. Peritonsillitis may not necessarily be an indication for an interval tonsillectomy, and it can reasonably be managed by drainage and antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Peritonsillitis. Evaluation of current therapy. 693 13

Culture of throats specimens is essential in the diagnosis of streptococcal tonsillo-pharyngitis. Selective sheep's blood agar media for beta-hemolytic streptococci have been developed to simplify throat streptococcal bacteriology. In this prospective study the reliability and practical performance of a selective medium of this kind, the Isocult culture test for throat streptococci, were evaluated in 226 pediatric patients with the clinical diagnosis of acute tonsillo-pharyngitis. At the time of diagnosis two throat specimens were obtained from each patient; one swab was cultured for group A beta-hemolytic streptococci on standard laboratory media, and the other on the Isocult media. Procedure and interpretation of the two culture methods were carried out independently. In 209 (92.5%) of the 226 patients the two culture results were in agreement, i.e. either positive (19 patients) or negative (190 patients) for group A beta-hemolytic streptococci. In comparison to routine bacteriology the Isocult results showed sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value of 86%, 93% and 91%. Neither the performance nor the interpretation of the Isocult method require special bacteriological training or equipment. It is concluded that the Isocult culture test for throat streptococci is a simple and reliable diagnostic tool in the management of patients with sore throat.
...
PMID:[Simple and reliable detection of beta-hemolytic streptococci in throat swabs with the streptococcus-isocult]. 702 93

Acute epiglottitis in adults is a fulminant disease characterized by local cellulitis of supraglottic structures. Symptoms include sore throat, dysphagia, respiratory difficulty and muffled voice. Signs are pharyngitis, swollen and inflamed epiglottis, epiglottic abscess and/or cervical swelling. Diagnosis is facilitated by an upright, lateral neck x-ray and indirect laryngoscopy. The mainstays of treatment are airway maintenance, antibiotics, steroids, hydration, cool mist, oxygen and supportive care.
...
PMID:Acute epiglottitis in adults. 710 96

A study has been conducted in general practice comparing two brands of lozenges, Merocaine (Merrell) and Tyrozets, (M.S.D.), in the management of acute sore throat and pharyngitis. Eighty-eight patients entered the between-patient study and each completed a diary card covering symptoms experienced and dosage used for each of the two drugs. The doctor reported upon the appearance of the throat and added antibiotics in cases of necessity, which was approximately for one-third of patients. Merocaine proved to be significantly superior to Tyrozets in producing rapid pain relief (within 15 minutes) and reduction of faucial and pharyngeal injection.
...
PMID:Two lozenges containing benzocaine assessed in the relief of sore throat. 715 85


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