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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We discuss the cases of two patients affected with chronic eosinophilic
pneumonia
(CEP) pleurisy and eosinophilia in pleural effusion, not previously mentioned in the literature, to point out their peculiarity, to consider differential diagnosis and the effect of steroid therapy. Both patients, a 57-year-old man and a 55-year-old woman, were atopic: they had been suffering from
allergic rhinitis
and asthma for several years when they suffered sudden onset of cough, dyspnea and thoracic pain. This symptomatology persisted for more than 6 weeks. Chest radiography highlighted pulmonary infiltrates, not fixed in the first case, fixed in the second. The laboratory features revealed eosinophilia in peripheral blood and in pleural effusion. These data conformed to the criteria suggested by Jederlinic et al. for the diagnosis of chronic eosinophilic
pneumonia
. Tuberculosis had been present in the remote history of the second case; the repeated research for mycobacteria was negative, and no improvement was seen after antitubercular chemotherapy for one month. We excluded the diagnosis of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis because of the absence of both precipitating antibodies against Aspergillus fumigatus and bronchiectasis. Neither vasculitis nor autoantibodies were found; possible drug-related correlations were excluded; culture data and serological researches for infections were negative in both cases; no involvement of other districts correlated to hypereosinophilia was evidenced. Clinical and radiological remission was obtained in both cases after steroid therapy for a month at the dosage of 1-2 mg/kg daily. No clinical recurrence was seen during a follow-up period of 6 months. Pleural effusion has already been reported in patients with CEP, while we have not found any references to pleural fluid eosinophilia in this disease; this finding has instead been already reported in patients affected with acute eosinophilic
pneumonia
or hypereosinophilic syndrome.
...
PMID:[Chronic eosinophilic pulmonitis with eosinophilic pleurisy. A report on 2 clinical cases seen by the authors]. 145 57
Serum high density lipoprotein cholesterol and total cholesterol were studied in 15 children with
allergic rhinitis
, 45 asymptomatic asthmatic children and 16 children with acute asthmatic attacks. The latter were also studied in their asymptomatic phase. Two control groups of children with minor anatomical defects and those with acute
pneumonia
with respiratory distress were also studied. The serum concentrations of high density lipoprotein cholesterol were significantly higher (p less than 0.001) and those of total cholesterol lower (p less than 0.001) in children with respiratory allergy when compared to controls. The concentration of high density lipoprotein cholesterol increased and that of total cholesterol decreased during acute asthma.
...
PMID:High density lipoprotein cholesterol and total cholesterol in children with asthma and allergic rhinitis. 151 59
A retrospective study of 44 patients who were involved in combination with chronic sinusitis and bronchiectasis provided better understanding of the etiology in the relationship between upper air ways tract and lower air way tract. The incidence of bronchictasis was found in 5%, 3 out of 60 cases with chronic sinusitis and that of chronic sinusitis in 45%, 44 out of 98 cases with idiopathic bronchiectasis. Both side involvements of the paranasal sinus and the lung were statistically high in sinobronchiectasis compared to chronic sinusitis or bronchiectasis involved alone. The past history of the patients with sinobronchiectasis showed high occurrence of bronchial asthma or
allergic rhinitis
, habitual angina of the throat, acute otitis media and
pneumonia
. A chest X. Ray evaluation of 70 patients with chronic sinusitis alone revealed relatively high incidence of abnormal fibro-nodular shadow in the lung compared to 70 patients without chronic sinusitis. It was thought that weakness of air-way tract to infection in the patients with sinobronchiectasis might play some role on break down of sino-bronchial syndrome, a combination disease of chronic sinusitis and chronic bronchitis.
...
PMID:[Correlation between upper airway tract and lower airway tract in the break down of sinobronchiectasis]. 229 49
From a national cohort of 8,806 children examined at ages seven, 11 and 16 years (National Child Development Study), data on asthma or wheezing illness (AW) were analyzed to describe its natural history in childhood and its risk factors. Factors found to predict the subsequent onset of asthma included male sex of child, mother's age at the child's birth,
pneumonia
, whooping cough, tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy,
allergic rhinitis
, eczema and periodic abdominal pain/vomiting attacks. A wide range of perinatal factors, including feeding practices, and social and family factors were shown to have no effect on natural history.
...
PMID:Risk factors for asthma up to 16 years of age. Evidence from a national cohort study. 358 54
The incidence and prognosis of childhood asthma and wheezing illness (AW) was studied using data obtained at ages 7, 11, and 16 from a national cohort of 8806 children born in 1958. By the age of 16, 24.7% were reported to have experienced at least one episode of AW. In 18.3% AW had started before the age of 8, but only 4.2% continued to have symptoms in later childhood. A further 3.6% began to have AW between the ages of 8 and 11, and 2.8% began between the ages of 12 and 16. Of those with AW at age 7, 28.3% had symptoms at 11 and 16.5% at 16; these proportions were about doubled if AW at 7 had been severe. The associations between natural history and a large number of perinatal, social, environmental, and medical factors were examined. Those which predicted the onset of AW after the age of 7 were: male sex of child; mother aged 15-19 at child's birth; history of
pneumonia
, whooping cough, throat or ear infections or tonsillectomy; eczema,
allergic rhinitis
; and periodic vomiting or abdominal pain.
...
PMID:The natural history of asthma in childhood. 374 73
Specific diseases associated with the agricultural environment were identified as
allergic rhinitis
and asthma,
pneumonitis
/alveolitis, the organic dust toxic syndrome and bronchitis. Diagnostic criteria were formulated and current research techniques, in terms of epidemiological studies were outlined. The workgroup summarized a priority for epidemiological studies to evaluate the incidence of the different diseases as well as the identification of predisposing host and environmental factors.
...
PMID:Health effects of organic dusts in the farm environment. Report on diseases. 376 53
Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS) is a disease characterised by hypereosinophilia and systemic vasculitis occurring in patients with asthma and
allergic rhinitis
. In the course of CSS three phases may be distinguished. The prodromal phase, which may persist for many years, consists of allergic disease. The second phase is characterised by peripheral blood eosinophilia and eosinophilic tissue infiltrates that produce a clinical picture diagnosed as Loeffler's syndrome, chronic eosinophilic
pneumonia
or eosinophilic gastroenteritis. The third phase is dominated by systemic vasculitis in which skin, cardiovascular system, gastrointestinal tract and peripheral nervous system are frequently involved. Renal disease in CSS is less common and generally less severe than that classical polyarteritis nodosa and Wegener's granulomatosis. Genitourinary tract may be involved, too. In the postvaculitic phase,
allergic rhinitis
and asthma usually persist and clinical picture is characterised by the consequences of the vasculitic illness, most commonly in form of neuropathy and hypertension. The pathogenesis of CSS is unknown but its association with asthma and
allergic rhinitis
may indicate an abnormal immune reactivity. The recently reported association with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies with antimyeloperoxidase specificity may suggest a their role in the pathogenesis of the disease. An important role may be played by eosinophils, too. The main therapy is that with corticosteroids, possibly in association with immunosuppressive drugs.
...
PMID:[Churg-Strauss syndrome. Personal caseload and review of the literature]. 793 57
To investigate the factors associated with asthma in school children, a case-control study of 203 asthmatic and 203 non-asthmatic children (103 males and 100 females in each group) aged 6 to 18 years, was organized during the period September 1992 to May 1993 in Al Ain city, United Arab Emirates. Cases comprised known asthmatic children who were regularly receiving medication for asthma and were confirmed as asthmatics by a physician. Cases and controls were matched by age and sex. A questionnaire was used to obtain information about respiratory illnesses (
pneumonia
, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, sinusitis and croup); atopy (
allergic rhinitis
and atopic dermatitis) and familial allergic diseases (parental asthma and atopy). Information about socioeconomic status and limitations to children as a result of asthma were also obtained. Logistic regression analysis showed that bronchitis, atopy (
allergic rhinitis
and atopic dermatitis), croup, parental asthma and parental atopic dermatitis were significant risk factors for childhood asthma after adjusting for other confounding covariates. The model also showed that parental asthma (p < 0.0001) is much more influential than parental atopic dermatitis (p = 0.01) as a risk factor for asthma. Although
pneumonia
and sinusitis were significant risk factors when analyzed univariately, they were not significant after adjusting for other covariates. Bronchiolitis, smoking and socioeconomic status were beyond the reach of statistical significance as risk factors to asthma in our sample.
...
PMID:Factors associated with asthma in school children. 898 17
Chronic eosinophilic pneumonia (CEP) is a disorder, characterized by a history of
pneumonia
(> 2 months) and eosinophilic pulmonary infiltration without any organic causes. We describe a 28-year-old woman who presented with cough, dyspnea and fever for 2 months. She was diagnosed with mild asthma and
allergic rhinitis
2 years before being diagnosed with CEP. For a period of 9 months she took no medication. Her chest roentgenogram at this admission revealed patchy infiltration in both upper lung fields. Laboratory data revealed blood eosinophilia (4,284/mm3), and her serum IgE was mildly elevated (245.8 IU/ml). A computerized tomography of the chest did not show bronchiectasis. CEP was diagnosed from significant eosinophilia in bronchoalveolar larvage fluid and transbronchial biopsy revealed eosinophilic infiltration without any demonstrable infectious agent. The patient was treated with prednisolone 45 mg/day. Her symptoms disappeared and her chest roentgenogram showed nearly complete resolution in 2 and 4 days, consecutively.
...
PMID:Chronic eosinophilic pneumonia: a case report. 1099 53
In order to determine the prevalence of childhood allergic diseases, infectious diseases, and the relationship between them, 8723 children from three junior high schools in Tou-Cheng City, Taipei County, were studied using questionnaires developed according to the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) criteria combined with supplementary questions about infectious diseases. Students and their parents completed the questionnaires at home. The age of the children ranged from 10 to 18 years old (14.12 +/- 0.89 years), the majority (96.03%) was aged from 13 to 15 years old. The 12-month prevalences of self-reported allergic disease symptoms were: asthma symptom 8.2%,
allergic rhinitis
symptom 39.6%, and atopic dermatitis symptom 5.9%. The prevalences of diagnosis of the allergic diseases were: asthma 8.7%,
allergic rhinitis
24.1%, and atopic dermatitis 3.9%. The 12-month prevalences of diagnosis of infectious diseases were:
pneumonia
0.6%, bronchitis 7.2%, sinusitis 7.2%, purulent conjunctivitis 2.5%, otitis media 4.3%, encephalitis or meningitis 0.4%, gastroenteritis 14.5%, acne 23.9%, purulent dermatitis 1.3%, and other infectious diseases 1.2%. Lifetime admission rates of children due to infectious diseases were:
pneumonia
1%, bronchitis 1.8%, sinusitis 0.3%, purulent conjunctivitis 0.2%, otitis media 0.3%, encephalitis or meningitis 0.3%, gastroenteritis 2.1%, and other infectious diseases 0.6%. The prevalence of infectious diseases was significantly higher in children with allergic disease symptoms (defined as asthma,
allergic rhinitis
, or atopic dermatitis). These results demonstrated the presence of a link between allergic diseases and infectious diseases, which may have some important clinical implications.
...
PMID:Prevalence and relationship between allergic diseases and infectious diseases. 1132 Nov 29
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