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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cases of otitis media in infants under 12 weeks of age were reviewed to delineate the frequency, clinical features, and etiologic agents involved. Tympanocentesis was performed in 42 infants, 0 to 5 weeks of age, and in 17, from 6 to 11 weeks of age. The most common symptoms were irritability/lethargy (69%), fever (52%), cough (36%), vomiting (21%), diarrhea (20%), tachypnea (20%), and anorexia (18%). Associated illnesses were present in 33 (54%) of the patients, the most common being
pneumonia
(9),
bronchiolitis
(7), meningitis (6), conjunctivitis (4), and omphalitis (4). No peripartum infections or severe perinatal problems were found. Common respiratory pathogens were the predominant etiologic organisms, but coliform organisms were identified in 18% of the infants under 6 weeks of age. Cultures were sterile or grew organisms of questionable pathogenicity ("nonpathogens") in 39% of specimens. Since the signs and symptoms of otitis media in children less than 12 weeks of age are nonspecific and frequently associated with other major illnesses, the physician caring for these infants needs to be more aware of this disease and the therapeutic problems it presents.
...
PMID:Otitis media in children less than 12 weeks of age. 1 93
Acute lupus
pneumonitis
was the presenting manifestation of systemic lupus erythematosus in six of 12 cases in this series. The clinical picture was characterized by severe dyspnea, tachypnea, fever and arterial hypoxemia. Radiographic findings included an acinar filling pattern which was invariably found in the lower lobes and was bilateral in 10 of the cases. Studies failed to reveal evidence of infection as a cause of the acute pulmonary infiltrates. All patients were treated with oxygen and corticosteroids; seven received azathioprine. Six patients survived and are clinically well 14 months to four years following their acute illness. Three of these patients have residual interstitial infiltrates with persistent pulmonary function test abnormalities indicating progression to chronic interstitial pneumonitis. Histologic sections of the lungs available from four patients revealed hyaline membranes and interstitial edema (four cases), acute alveolitis (two cases), arteriolar thrombosis (one case) and a prominent lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis with organizing
bronchiolitis
(one case).
...
PMID:Pulmonary manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus: review of twelve cases of acute lupus pneumonitis. 12 38
The clinical, parasitological and pathological findings in a group of six donkeys naturally infected with D arnfieldi larvae are described. One animal had to be sacrificed at an early date because it developed
pneumonia
. The remaining five were unthrifty, showed mild clinical respiratory signs and had heavy strongyle infections. They had varying numbers of adult worms in the airways of the lungs and eggs were found coiled up in the smaller bronchi where they had apparently lead to an obstruction to airflow in that segment. The most striking gross pathological changes were circular discrete areas of over-inflation surrounding such bronchi. Histologically the infected bronchi exhibited a marked
bronchiolitis
with goblet cell hyperplasia and a mainly lymphoid inflammatory infiltrate. These areas also showed a localised bronchiolitus and overinflated alveolar tissue although true emphysema was not present. It is postulated that the parasite is well-adapted to its host and is able to survive for long periods within the lung without causing a debilitating amount of damage to the host. The immunological aspects of the infection are discussed briefly.
...
PMID:Lungworm: (Dictyocaulus arnfieldi) infection in donkeys. 15 90
A rapidly developing outbreak of
pneumonia
in young infants was documented in two isolated Artic populations in May 1972. These were studied virologically, serologically and clinically. In addition to the two stricken communities, one apparently unaffected with serious clinical illness and a fourth, in which are located the major hospital and airport in the eastern Arctic, were also studied. One hundred and twenty-four patients were studied serologically and 81 respiratory and other specimens were obtained for virus isolation from 40 of these patients. Clinical records were kept of the outbreak in each area and a detailed questionnaire was filled out for 140 children and their families. Respiratory syncytial irus (RSV) was cultured from eight ill children. Electron microscopy provided the first evidence of RSV infection. A seroconversion rate of approximately 50% was seen in both affected communities as well as in the clinically unaffected one. The epidemic in the first two communities was characterized by severe
pneumonia
and frequent hospitalization but no cases of
bronchiolitis
were seen. No evidence for other causes of this outbreak could be obtained by testing for antibodies to influenza A and B, parainfluenza 1, 2 and 3, adenovirus and herpes simplex viruses. Unusual features of this epidemic of RSV infection include the high attack rate, severe morbidity, illness manifest almost exclusively as
pneumonia
rather than
bronchiolitis
and the difference between the expression of disease in different communities. Historical data and clinical observations were inadequate to explain these unusual features.
...
PMID:An outbreak of severe pneumonia due to respiratory syncytial virus in isolated Arctic populations. 16 74
Both parainfluenza virus type 3 and respiratory syncytial virus may produce life-threatening
pneumonia
or
bronchiolitis
in infants less than 6 months old. Almost all infants in this age group possess passively acquired maternal antibodies to both viruses. It has been suggested that maternal antibodies may actually participate in the pathogenesis of these diseases in early infancy. This investigation examined the effect of moderate levels of passive antibody on the development of
pneumonia
in hamsters infected intranasally with parainfluenza virus type 3. The
pneumonitis
produced in this model was not enhanced by the presence of moderate levels of serum antibody to this virus. Furthermore, reinfection after an initial "sensitizing" infection under the cover of passive antibody did not result in a more severe
pneumonitis
. These studies do not support either of the two hypotheses that have been advanced to explain the pathogenesis of infections with respiratory syncytial virus in early infancy.
...
PMID:Effect of passive antibody on parainfluenza virus type 3 pneumonia in hamsters. 18 24
In the past 6 years we have encountered 26 cases of fatal adenoviral
pneumonia
in six species of simian primates. O these, 22 animals were between 11 and 38 days old at the time of death, and
pneumonia
was the primary clinical disease. The spectrum of clinical disease varied from peracute fatal disease to inapparent disease with seroconversion. In one outbreak involving 4 infants housed together in an isolation unit, simian virus 11 was isolated from 3 of the infants and seroconversion occurred in all 4. At necropsy the lungs were voluminous, with firm gray areas of consolidation. On histopathologic examination, severe patchy necrotizing alveolitis and
bronchiolitis
were present. Variable edema and hyaline membrane formation, alveolar epithelial hyperplasia, and secondary bacterial pneumonia were also seen. Large basophilic intranuclear inclusions were present in bronchiolar and alveolar epithelial cells in all 26 cases. In 4 of 8 cases examined ultrastructurally typical intranuclear paracrystalline arrays of adenoviral virions were demonstrated. Intranuclear inclusion bodies were also observed occasionally in bile duct and pancreatic duct epithelium. Simian adenoviral
pneumonia
can be a spontaneous disease problem in laboratory-reared primates and offers excellent potential as an animal model of human adenoviral
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Simian adenoviral pneumonia. 20 47
In four outbreaks of indoor calf
pneumonia
, dyspnoea was a prominent clinical finding. At necropsy it was associated with
pneumonia
involving the cranial lobes of the lung and severe pulmonary emphysema. Histological examination of lung tissue revealed
bronchiolitis
and alveolitis with alveolar epithelial cell hyperplasia and multinucleate syncytium formation. Intraalveolar haemorrhage, intra-alveolar oedema and hyaline membrane formation were also noted. In all cases parainfluenza type 3 (PI3) virus was isolated from the lungs. In each of the four outbreaks there was evidence of PI3 virus and respiratory syncitial virus (RSV) infection.
...
PMID:Observations on outbreaks of respiratory disease in calves associated with parainfluenza type 3 virus and respiratory syncytial virus infection. 21 84
Twenty-nine cases of EHV1 infection occurred on a property, mainly in full term foals. Some foals were stillborn, some were born alive but weak and soon died and others were healthy at birth, became ill and died within 3 days of birth. Apart from voluminous, oedematous and atelectic lungs there were no gross lesions. Microscopically the lungs showed oedema,
pneumonitis
and
bronchiolitis
with intranuclear inclusions and, in many of the foals that survived over 6 hours, there was also hyaline membrane formation. Microscopic lesions were also seen in the liver, adrenal, thymus and spleen of some of these foals.
...
PMID:An outbreak of foal perinatal mortality due to equid herpesvirus type 1: pathological observations. 23 44
Lung tissue obtained from eight consecutive patients with systemic lupus erythematosus complicated by severe, acute pulmonary disease was studied by both light and immunofluorescence microscopy. Light microscopic examination disclosed interstitial pneumonia in four cases, cytomegalovirus
pneumonitis
in one case,
bronchiolitis
and peribronchiolitis in one case, pulmonary infarction in one case and focal atelectasis in the remaining case. Direct immunofluorescence examination revealed focally bound immunoglobulins or complement (C3) within pleural and/or pneumocyte nuclei in each specimen. Immunohistologic studies in these cases may thus suggest a diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosus with acute pulmonary complications, despite the lack of specificity of the pathologic changes seen by light microscopy.
...
PMID:Acute pulmonary complications in systemic lupus erythematosus. Immunofluorescence and light microscopic study. 33 72
Twenty-two infants under 9 months of age hospitalized with
bronchiolitis
or
pneumonia
due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were serially sampled to determine the pattern of secretory antibody response. Using double labeling techniques, we found several types of immunoglobulin in secretions: cell-free antibody to RSV of the immunoglobulin A (IgA), immunoglobulin G (IgG), and immunoglobulin M (IgM) classes; and immunoglobulins of all three classes bound to RSV-infected cells shed from the nasal epithelium (presumably cell-bound antibody to RSV). IgA attached to RSV-infected epithelial cells was almost always detected in the first available nasal sample (day 1 or 2 of hospitalization). In contrast, cell-free anti-RSV IgA first appeared an average of 3.5 days later at a time when virus antigen was disappearing from the secretion. IgG and IgM attached to RSV-infected cells appeared more irregularly. The titer of cell-free anti-RSV IgM was often higher than that of IgA early in the illness and declined as the infection resolved. Cell-free anti-RSV IgG was usually present earlier than IgA and rose during convalescence.
...
PMID:Cell-free and cell-bound antibody in nasal secretions from infants with respiratory syncytial virus infection. 42 41
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