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

Group B beta-hemolytic streptococci were isolated from the throats of 49 of 1,110 patients who had pharyngitis. Compared with patients whose throat cultures were negative for beta-hemolytic streptococci, those harboring group B were more likely to have enlarged tonsils (P less than 0.001), exudate (P less than 0.02), and tender enlarged anterior cervical lymph nodes (P less than 0.01). Group B should not necessarily be dismissed as a nonpathogen when identified in the pharynx of patients with exudative pharyngitis; laboratories which report beta-hemolytic streptococcal isolates from the pharynx only as group A or non-group A should be encouraged to perform definitive group identification of all beta-hemolytic isolates to further evaluate the role of other streptococcal groups as the causative agents for pharyngitis.
J Clin Microbiol 1979 Sep
PMID:Group B beta-hemolytic streptococci causing pharyngitis. 38 14

The aim of the present study is to define that temporal relationships of the IgM and IgG responses to streptococcal group A carbohydrate (CHO) in rabbits and in man. Rabbits were immunized with group A streptococci and the development of anti-group A carbohydrate (ACHO) was studied. ACHO which appeared one week after the beginning of immunization belonged to the 19S class of immunoglobulins (IgM). A two- to four-fold rise in ACHO titers and immunoglobulins of the 7S class (IgG) were observed after two weeks. Three weeks after the beginning of immunization, the ACHO titer was at a maximum. In the following months no further rises in titer were seen, and the antibodies belonged mostly to the IgG class. IgM and IgG responses to streptococcal CHO and to extracellular antigens in patients with pharyngitis, acute rheumatic fever (ARF), and acute glomerulonephritis (AGN) were studied. Higher values of IgM were found in pharyngitis and AGN sera than in ARF sera, probably reflecting the interval between streprococcal infection and time of bleeding. ACHO antibodies persisted in patients' sera for long periods and belonged to IgG and IgM. This suggests a continuous, rather than a persistent, production of ACHO.
Inflammation 1979 Sep
PMID:Immune response to extracellular and somatic antigens in streptococcal infection and sequelae. 38 98

Mycoplasmal pneumonia, tularemic pneumonia, Q fever pneumonia, psittacosis, and Legionnaires' disease are the most frequently encountered treatable atypical pneumonias. Mycoplasmal pneumonia, the most common, is often accompanied by nonexudative pharyngitis, conjunctivitis, or otitis. The nonproductive cough is characteristic. Tularemic pneumonia is characterized by substernal chest pain, bloody pleural effusion, and bilateral hilar adenopathy. Although the clinical presentation is mild, roentgenographic findings are impressive. Q fever pneumonia resembles psittacosis but is less serious; it may be accompanied by subacute bacterial endocarditis, hepatitis, or both. Psittacosis is characterized by prominent headache, bloody sputum, and relative bradycardia. Tetracycline is the drug of choice for either. In Legionnaires' disease, pneumonia is accompanied by prominent extrapulmonary symptoms. The most important diagnostic clues include diarrhea and mental confusion. Relative bradycardia and laboratory abnormalities are also helpful. Erythromycin is the drug of choice unless doubt exists as to the diagnosis.
Postgrad Med 1979 Sep
PMID:The atypical pneumonias: a diagnostic and therapeutic approach. 47 55

Seven cases of adult Haemophilus parainfluenzae infections diagnosed by positive blood cultures are compared with cases previously reported in the English literature. Three patients had pneumonia, while the others had epiglottitis with meningitis, pharyngitis, arthritis, and endocarditis, respectively. Nonendocarditic manifestations of adult H parainfluenzae infection were reported in four other cases. In addition to the diseases of our patients, H parainfluenzae also has been isolated from cerebral abscesses. Patients did well with antibiotic therapy and there were no deaths. Patients did well with antibiotic therapy and there were no deaths. Report of antibiotic sensitivity testing of 50 strains disclosed 6% of isolates resistant to ampicillin sodium, with all sensitive to chloramphenicol. If the antibiotic sensitivity of the organism is unknown, then chloramphenicol therapy should be instituted until adequate susceptibility studies have been performed. If the organism is sensitive to ampicillin, then this is the drug of choice.
Arch Intern Med 1979 Sep
PMID:Adult bacteremic Haemophilus parainfluenzae infections. Seven reports of cases and a review of the literature. 47 36

Strains of M-type 12 streptococci from 18 patients with acute glomerulonephritis and 18 patients with uncomplicated pharyngitis were analyzed for in vitro production of streptolysin O, diphosphopyridine nucleotidase, hyaluronidase, streptokinase, streptolysin S, proteinase, hyaluronic acid, and fibrinogen-precipitating factor. In addition, relations to blood group antigens, lysogeny, and susceptibility to bacteriophage were determined. No significant differences were found between strains from nephritic and nonnephritic patients. By not indicating a role in the pathogenesis of poststreptococcal acute glomerulonephritis for any of the factors studied, these observations diminish the probability that these factors are of specific importance in this disease and thus direct our attention elsewhere.
J Infect Dis 1979 Sep
PMID:Extracellular factors, blood group antigens, and bacteriophage of nephritogenic and nonnephritogenic strains of M-type 12 streptococci. 50 Nov 50

Sera from 103 fasting individuals 3 to 76 years of age and free of clinical infectious disease and sera from 183 patients with infectious disease were assayed for serum total non-esterfied fatty acids (tNEFA) and compared. Data were also separated into five groups according to age of donor: 3--7, 8--19, 20--35, 36--60, and 61--76 years. The mean group serum levels of tNEFA increased with age. Among patients with infectious diseases sixty-five were diagnosed as having hepatitis, 41 with infectious mononucleosis, 18 with cellulitis, 12 with pulmonary tuberculosis, 11 with non-pneumococcal pneumonia, 9 with pneumococcal pneumonia, 8 with pharyngitis, 6 with pyelonephritis, 6 with aseptic meningitis, 4 with Gram-negative sepsis, and 3 with encephalitis. The sera from 23 non-fasting patients with gonorrhea were also tested. The serum tNEFA levels were found to be altered, in fact depressed from normal group values, only in patients with pneumonia or tuberculosis. This depression may be related to aberrant pulmonary metabolism during pneumonia.
Clin Chim Acta 1978 Sep 15
PMID:Reduced level of non-esterified fatty acids in sera from patients with infectious respiratory disease. 69 41

Treatment of inflammations of the oral and pharyngeal cavities (glossitis, pharyngitis, pharyngolaryngitis, tonsillitis) in 60 patients with Larypront Throat Tablets alone, without administration of systemic antibiotics, gave very good results in 49 cases (81.6%) with complete regression of the complaints in 3-4 days. In 11 patients with acute pharyngitis and tonsillitis without demonstrable effect, systemic antibiotic therapy had to be added because of radiologically demonstrable acute sinusitis or increasing antibacterial infection. Side effects were not seen with the use of Larypront in any case.
MMW Munch Med Wochenschr 1976 Sep 24
PMID:[Treatment of inflammatory diseases of the mouth and throat with Larypront in ENT practice (author's transl)]. 82 23

In the evaluation of treatment failure in Streptococcus pyogenes pharyngitis it is necessary to distinguish between persistence of the original streptococcus and acquisition of a new strain. We used the analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of total DNA and of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) regions (ribotypes) as epidemiological tools to compare 43 pre- and post-treatment S. pyogenes strains obtained from 20 patients. In 16 cases pre- and post-treatment strains gave indistinguishable RFLP patterns of total DNA, strongly suggesting relapse with the same strain. However, in four cases different patterns were obtained for the pre- and post-treatment isolates, indicating recurrence due to the acquisition of a new strain. Ribotyping did not improve discrimination among strains. Thus, analysis of DNA RFLP is a promising method for distinguishing recurrence from relapse in failures of pharyngitis treatment.
J Med Microbiol 1992 Sep
PMID:DNA restriction fragment length polymorphism differentiates recurrence from relapse in treatment failures of Streptococcus pyogenes pharyngitis. 135 64

The author presents the clinical history of 14 patients, from 21 to 48 years of age, 10 men and 4 women, with a final diagnosis of acute epiglottitis who were hospitalized at Gorgas Army Hospital or at the San Fernando Clinic. All the patients had pharyngitis and dysphagia, a few with nasal voice, stridor and difficulty breathing, as the chief complaint. All the patients were initially intubated orally for diagnostic purposes and immediately after nasotracheal intubation was done until the patient improved in 2 or 3 days (one patient remained intubated for 5 days). All patients were kept in the Intensive Care Unit and were treated with Ampicillin and Chloramphenicol IV and lately with a second generation cephalosporin (Cefamandole). The patients allergic to Penicillin were treated with Clindamycin and Chloramphenicol. Corticosteroids were not used in any of the patients. There were no sequelae and none of the patients expired.
Rev Med Panama 1992 Sep
PMID:[Acute epiglottitis in adults]. 143 5

Two common porpoises (Phocoena phocoena), one found stranded on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent, and the other in the Moray Firth, Scotland, in late 1990, were examined post mortem. Lesions of diffuse bronchointerstitial pneumonia were present in both animals; they were characterised by the infiltration of alveoli with leucocytes, macrophages and multinucleate syncytia, the necrosis of bronchial and bronchiolar epithelium, focal proliferation of type II pneumocytes and occasional acidophilic cytoplasmic inclusions in alveolar macrophages and syncytia. Lymphoid depletion was apparent in the spleen, thymus and lymph nodes of both porpoises. Other changes in the Isle of Sheppey porpoise included severe dacryoadenitis. Marked pharyngitis, oesophagitis and balanoposthitis were present in the Moray Firth porpoise. Immunoperoxidase staining revealed the presence of morbillivirus antigen in a range of epithelia from both porpoises. This is the first report of morbillivirus infection in cetaceans from the coast of Great Britain.
Vet Rec 1992 Sep 26
PMID:Morbillivirus infection in two common porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) from the coasts of England and Scotland. 144 Nov 26


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