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Query: UMLS:C0032273 (
pneumoconiosis
)
1,578
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical evaluation and kinetics in serum of cefoperazone (CPZ) in patients with lower respiratory tract infections have been conducted as a multicenter trial participated by 20 institutions in Kyushu area during a period of 8 months from October 1984 to May 1985. Mean serum CPZ levels up to 4 hours following the end of intravenous infusion of either 1 or 2 g CPZ remained higher than the MIC80 of CPZ against major causative organisms of lower respiratory tract infections such as H. influenzae, P. aeruginosa, K. pneumoniae, and S. pneumoniae. Serum half-lives of CPZ following intravenous infusion were prolonged in the elderly and in patients who showed moderate liver or kidney dysfunction, but did not exceed twofold of normal value. Clinical efficacy rates of CPZ were 82.9% (34/41) against pneumonia, 80% (4/5) against lung abscess, 88.9% (32/36) against acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis, 66.7% (2/3) against panbronchiolitis, 100% (1/1) against acute bronchitis, and 85.7% (12/14), 64.3% (9/14) and 70.0% (7/10) against infections concurrent to chronic respiratory diseases, pulmonary
emphysema
and bronchiectasis, respectively. The overall efficacy rate was 81.5% (101/124). Bacteriological eradication rates against P. aeruginosa, H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae were 60% (6/10), 88.9% (8/9) and 100% (3/3), respectively. The overall eradication rate including polymicrobial infection was 67.5% (27/40). The clinical efficacy rate of CPZ in patients with underlying diseases such as lung cancer, pulmonary tuberculosis, and
pneumoconiosis
, etc. was not significantly different from the efficacy rate in patients without these underlying diseases. Of 20 patients who failed to respond to previous antibiotic treatments, 13 were effectively treated by CPZ. Adverse reactions occurred in 6.7% (11/164) of the patients, and consisted primarily of rash, fever, diarrhea and loose stool. Laboratory abnormalities were seen in 5 patients during the study. These included elevations of S-GOT and S-GPT, eosinophilia and neutropenia. CPZ is a very useful drug in the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections because of its excellent clinical efficacy and rare incidence of abnormal accumulations in sera following the recommended 2-4 g/day administration even in the elderly.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of cefoperazone in lower respiratory tract infections]. 354 33
A cohort of 3971 white miners in South Africa, born between 1 January 1916 and 31 December 1930 who were alive on 1 January 1970 and currently working in the East Rand-Central Rand-West Rand mining areas, was followed up for nine years, when the 3426 survivors were aged from 48 to 62. Fifteen (0.4%) had been lost to view and 530 had died (13.4% of the 3956 whose vital status was determined). Based on the occupational histories of a 30% sample of the cohort it was known that the vast majority were gold miners. An estimated 93% had worked more than 85% of their mining service in gold mines. Standardised mortality ratios were calculated as the ratios of the deaths observed in the cohort to those expected on the basis of concurrent mortality in the reference population--the total white male population in the Republic of South Africa. There was little sign of a "healthy worker effect"; of several possible reasons, one is that the white miner in South Africa had adopted certain unhealthy life styles, another is that the reference population was otherwise inappropriate. The SMR for all causes of death (117.6) was raised because of excess mortality due to the following causes: lung cancer (161.2), chronic respiratory diseases (165.6), and acute and chronic nephritis (381.0). A case-referent analysis was carried out on those miners in the cohort who had spent at least 85% of their service in gold mines. For lung cancer, smoking was the main contributory factor towards disease. For chronic respiratory diseases bronchitis,
emphysema
, asthma,
pneumoconiosis
, and pulmonary heart disease), smoking was also the main risk factor, but there was an association wih cumulative dust exposure. Raised blood pressure, smoking, and adiposity were associated with ischaemic heart disease as was the duration of service underground. Study of comprehensive medical histories in all 530 deaths, including necropsy in most cases, showed that none was directly due to
pneumoconiosis
or to tuberculosis.
...
PMID:Mortality of middle aged white South African gold miners. 377 38
General mortality in approximately 25 000 British coalminers over 22 year periods ending in 1980 was 13% lower on average than in English and Welsh men in the same regions of Britain. There were significant within region variations between collieries, and standardised mortality ratios increased during the later years of the follow up, approaching or slightly exceeding 100 in most of the 20 coalmines studied. Age specific comparisons of 22 year survival rates were made in subgroups. Relative risks of death from all non-violent causes for men with the earliest stage of progressive massive fibrosis (PMF category A), compared with risks in miners with no
pneumoconiosis
(category O), ranged from 1.2 in those aged 55-64 initially to 3.5 for those aged 25-34. Mortality in miners with higher categories of PMF (B or C) was even more severe. Survival rates in men with category 1 simple
pneumoconiosis
were about 2% to 3% lower than in miners with radiographs classified as category O, but there was no consistent evidence of an increase in mortality with increasing category of simple
pneumoconiosis
. Mortality from all non-violent causes increased systematically with increases in estimates of exposure to dust before the start of the follow up. That gradient was attributable primarily to deaths certified as due to
pneumoconiosis
and those recorded as due to bronchitis and
emphysema
(p less than 0.001). There was some evidence of a dust related increase in deaths from cancers of the digestive system (p approximately equal to 0.05), but none of an association between exposure to coalmine dust and lung cancer. Lung cancer mortality, assessed over 17 year periods, was about 5.5 times higher in smokers than in life long non-smokers. Smokers with no
pneumoconiosis
had slightly higher lung cancer death rates than smokers with
pneumoconiosis
. We conclude that miners exposed to excessive amounts of respirable coalmine dust are at increased risk of premature death, either from progressive massive fibrosis or from chronic bronchitis or
emphysema
.
...
PMID:Dust exposure, pneumoconiosis, and mortality of coalminers. 406 15
The Industrial Injuries Advisory Council has reaffirmed the view that simple
pneumoconiosis
does not produce disability or shorten life. This is often true but, without overlooking the importance of chronic bronchitis, such conclusions are wrong in many instances.Chronic bronchitis is probably commoner in miners without
pneumoconiosis
than in those with it, and an uneven distribution of bronchitis may mask the effects of
pneumoconiosis
. Cough and sputum in a miner with
pneumoconiosis
are not always due to chronic bronchitis. Disability is usually judged on measurement of vital capacity and forced expiratory volume, factors which cannot be expected to be significantly altered by simple
pneumoconiosis
alone. Other tests may show abnormalities which lead to ventilation and perfusion inequalities and to an increase in the ventilatory cost of exercise. Focal
emphysema
, often a consequence of simple
pneumoconiosis
, develops slowly and its influence on disability is delayed.Disagreements arise because epidemiologists expect all lungs with simple
pneumoconiosis
react in the same way, and they want a quantitative relation between simple
pneumoconiosis
and
emphysema
before attributing one to the other.There are major difficulties in assessing disability but there is little justification for the regular application of the rule that if the results of ventilatory tests are normal disability is not present and if they are abnormal this is due to something other than simple
pneumoconiosis
.
...
PMID:Disability and coal workers' pneumoconiosis. 427 9
Results from a correlation survey which compared radiological and physiological findings during life with detailed morbid anatomical findings in the lungs of 247 deceased miners and ex-miners with
pneumoconiosis
were used to assess the extent and significance of their pulmonary disability.Coal workers' pneumoconiosis usually caused progressive impairment of ventilation, which in the simple type of disease was not related to radiological category. In such cases the presence of
emphysema
was found to be a more important factor in determining the impairment of ventilation than the radiological category of simple
pneumoconiosis
.
...
PMID:Pulmonary disability in coal workers' pneumoconiosis. 501 24
A correlation survey has been carried out between the pathological, physiological, and radiological findings pertaining to
emphysema
in 247 deceased coal miners and ex-miners, most of whom had been diagnosed as suffering from coal workers'
pneumoconiosis
during life. The pathological findings, which included large lung sections and detailed histology in every case, were compared with similar findings in a contrast non-mining population matched for age and sex.The results indicated that
emphysema
was much more common among the coal miners, both with simple and with complicated
pneumoconiosis
, than among the contrast group. In addition the extent of the
emphysema
as measured by a recognized "counting" method carried out on paper-mounted lung sections was remarkably closely related to ventilatory impairment as evidenced by the forced expiratory volume in one second.Extensive
emphysema
was more commonly found in those
pneumoconiosis
cases, both simple and complicated, showing the finer punctiform type of radiological change than in cases showing the larger micronodular and nodular opacities.
...
PMID:Emphysema in coal workers' pneumoconiosis. 545 40
The prevalence of right ventricular hypertrophy was studied in necropsy material from 215 coalworkers, a group which consisted of 115 men with simple or no
pneumoconiosis
and 100 with progressive massive fibrosis. Right ventricular hypertrophy was considered to be present if the ratio of the weight of the left ventricle plus septum to that of the right ventricle was less than 2:1. The prevalence of right ventricular hypertrophy was low (15%) in the absence of progressive massive fibrosis and appeared to be related to
emphysema
or airways disease or both, and not to simple
pneumoconiosis
. It was evident only in subjects who had smoked. In subjects with progressive massive fibrosis the prevalence of right ventricular hypertrophy was higher (34%) and it was occasionally seen in non-smokers. The prevalence increased with increasing size of lesion, and for any given size of lesion subjects with right ventricular hypertrophy had more panacinar
emphysema
than those without right ventricular hypertrophy. There was no relationship, however, between the extent of massive lesions or amount and type of
emphysema
and the degree of right ventricular hypertrophy.
...
PMID:Right ventricular hypertrophy in a group of coalworkers. 622 8
The pathology and dust content of lungs from 261 coalminers in relation to the appearances of their chest radiographs taken within four years of death were examined. Radiological opacities of coalworkers'
pneumoconiosis
were more profuse the more dust was retained in lungs. Among the men who had mined low rank coal--that is, with a relatively high proportion of ash--the increase in profusion was most closely related to the ash component of the dust, whereas in men who had mined high rank coal both coal and ash increased in the lungs in relation to radiological profusion. The fine p type of opacity was found to be associated with more dust and a higher proportion of coal and less ash than the nodular r opacity, and was also more likely to be associated with
emphysema
. The pathological basis of the different types of opacity found on the radiographs of coalminers related to the number, size, and nodularity of the dust lesions. Larger fibrotic lesions were likely to appear as r opacities, whereas fine reticular dust deposition was most likely to present as p opacities, q opacities showing a mixture of appearances. The study has shown that the composition of dust retained in the lung, as well as its amount, makes an important contribution to the radiographic appearances of
pneumoconiosis
. In particular, the r type of lesion on the radiograph of a low rank coalminer indicates the possibility of a silicotic like lesion.
...
PMID:Comparison of radiographic appearances with associated pathology and lung dust content in a group of coalworkers. 649 10
Since 1978, the authors have collected ashes from Sakurajima volcanic eruption in Kagoshima City, and the ashes were administered to rats and rabbits through different routes and forms injecting into the trachea in order to see the effect of ashes on the respiratory organs. The authors experimentally and histopathologically demonstrated bronchitis, pulmonary
emphysema
, atelectasis lung, degeneration of blood vessel, dust nodes and induction of
pneumoconiosis
due to dust fibrosis in the study of the effect of volcanic ashes on the respiratory organs.
...
PMID:Experimental studies on the effects of Mt. Sakurajima volcanic ashes on the respiratory organs. 650 11
The lungs of 450 coal miners who had been studied previously in a long-term epidemiologic project at 24 British mines have been examined post-mortem for signs of dust-related fibrosis and
emphysema
. Reliable estimates of cumulative (working-life) exposures to respirable mine dust were available for 342 of the men. The relative frequency of
emphysema
increased with age at death, and both panacinar and centriacinar
emphysema
occurred more frequently in smokers than in nonsmokers. The proportion of subjects with any
emphysema
was 47% in 92 men with no palpable dust lesions, 65% in 183 with small, simple pneumoconiotic lesions, and 83% in 175 miners with massive fibrosis (PMF). The chance of finding centriacinar
emphysema
in those with PMF increased significantly with increasing exposure to coal dust in life (p less than 0.025). A similar but less convincing relationship was found in those with simple
pneumoconiosis
(p less than 0.11), but in both groups, increasing amounts of ash with a given exposure to coal reduced the probability of finding centriacinar
emphysema
. The occurrence of centriacinar
emphysema
was associated also with increasing amounts of dust retained in the lungs. A preliminary exploration of this association did not support the hypothesis that emphysematous lungs clear dust less efficiently. We conclude that the association observed between exposure to respirable coal dust and
emphysema
in coal miners indicates a causal relationship. However, because it can be demonstrated only for men whose lungs show some dust-related fibrosis, it is suggested that the extent and nature of such fibrosis may be a crucial factor in determining the presence of centriacinar
emphysema
.
...
PMID:Emphysema and dust exposure in a group of coal workers. 671 95
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