Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In defined-flora, barrier-maintained rats, radiation nephritis is the principle late toxicity seen after high dose-rate total body irradiation (TBI), when hematologic toxicity is prevented by bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Pneumonitis develops only if rats are placed in a conventional microbiological environment during and after BMT. Low dose-rate TBI gives qualitatively similar late toxicity, but at radiation doses twice as large. Fractionation of the TBI has little effect on the bone marrow ablation doses, but results in increased gastrointestinal and renal tolerance. The addition of immunosuppressive or cytotoxic drugs (cyclosporine-A, methotrexate, cis-platinum) after TBI and BMT greatly decreases the dose of TBI that can be tolerated. The use of a cyclophosphamide plus cytosine arabinoside conditioning regimen prior to TBI and BMT increases the bone marrow ablation dose, but has no effect on acute gastrointestinal toxicity or on renal toxicity. These results indicate that substantial late toxicity may be associated with the TBI conditioning regimens used for BMT even in the absence of cytotoxic and antibiotic drugs, immunosuppressive agents, infection and graft-versus-host disease; and that radiation may be a contributing factor in the nephritis sometimes observed after TBI and BMT.
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PMID:Late toxicity of total body irradiation with bone marrow transplantation in a rat model. 265

From 1980 to 1988 235 koalas were necropsied and 67 were found to have urinary tract disease. Six affected koalas out of 48 were derived from wildlife parks around Sydney while 61 of 187 were derived from free living populations on the central and north coasts of New South Wales. Sixteen had cystitis alone, 5 had cystitis and associated renal disease only, 16 females had cystitis with genital disease, 23 had urinary disease in combination with other systemic disease and 7 had renal disease only. Overall 49 animals had cystitis (30 females and 19 males; 47 being free living) with 12 of these having renal extension (all free living). Cystitis tended to be active but chronic while associated renal disease was mainly designated as hydronephrosis and pyelonephritis. Other forms of renal disease included lymphosarcoma, oxalate nephrosis, acute and chronic nephritis, and microabscessation related to septicaemia. Female genital disease associated with cystitis was commonly vaginitis and metritis. Paraovarian cysts were detected with and without metritis. Other diseases occurring with urinary tract disease included conjunctivitis, dermatitis/stomatitis, pneumonia and hepatic disease. The higher prevalence of urinary tract disease in free living koalas, especially cystitis, is in contrast to captive koalas and may reflect the interaction between disease cause and habitat.
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PMID:A survey of urinary tract disease in New South Wales koalas. 273 Apr 73

115 cases of immunocompromised patients complicated with fungal pneumonia treated during the period from April 1968 to December 1986 were retrospectively studied. 96 were male and 19 female. Their age ranged from 6 to 84. The incidence increased significantly in recent years especially after 1983. Severe liver disease was the underlying disease in 102 (88.7%) patients. 108 (93.9%) had received antibiotics and 55 (47.9%) corticosteroids. Fungi species isolated were candida in 107 (54.9%), aspergillus in 82 (36.9%), penicillium in 7 (3.6%), mucormycetes in 6 (3%) and reotrichum in 3 (1.5%). Fever, cough, expectoration, moist rales diminished breath sounds and increase of W. B. C. and neutrophils were the important clinical features. The roentgenologic findings vary with the nature and extent of the pathologic process. Disseminated mycoses were found in 9 of the 18 autopsied cases. The characteristic pathologic findings were inflammation, abscess formation, vasculitis, infarction and hemorrhage. Extrapulmonary features such as enteritis, purulent nephritis, abnormal EKG, encephalopathy and rash were present. 93 cases received antifungal therapy including garlicin, clotrimazole, amphotericin B, nystatine, miconazole, 5-fluctosine and ketoconazole. Because these drug combinations were so complex, it is difficult to evaluate their efficiency. However the survival rate was somewhat elevated in recent years. The mortality rate of this series was 80.9%.
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PMID:[A retrospective study of 115 cases of fungal pneumonia]. 273 37

Cardiac involvement in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is being reported with increasing frequency, although the factors responsible for the cardiac abnormalities are rarely identified. We report a case of sudden and unexpected death of an infant with AIDS in whom histologic and virologic studies documented generalized infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV), including pancarditis, sialitis, nephritis, colitis, hepatitis, prostatitis, orchitis, myositis, pneumonitis, and meningoencephalitis. CMV was isolated from four of five tissues cultured. Lymphocytic infiltration in the region of the sinoatrial node could have been responsible for the development of a fatal cardiac arrhythmia, and the autopsy failed to reveal any other cause of death in this infant. Children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) need to be closely monitored for cardiac complications bearing in mind that opportunistic infections in AIDS patients may cause cardiac involvement that is atypical or that is overshadowed by the primary manifestations of the infection.
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PMID:Unexpected death in an infant with AIDS: disseminated cytomegalovirus infection with pancarditis. 284 41

Patterns of mortality among members of the Seneca Nation of Indians between January 1, 1955, and December 31, 1984, were investigated. The study cohort consisted of all members of the Seneca Nation residing in New York State who were listed in the tribal rolls as of January 1, 1955 (n = 3,262). Deaths among cohort members were identified through a computer match against New York State vital records files. Sex-specific standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) were calculated on the basis of mortality patterns exhibited by the general population of New York State, exclusive of New York City. Seneca Nation males demonstrated an excess of deaths from all causes (SMR = 124), while all-cause mortality among Seneca Nation females did not differ from that expected (SMR = 106). Both males and females exhibited excess mortality from infectious diseases, diabetes mellitus, cirrhosis of the liver, and accidents and injuries. Excess mortality was also noted among males for deaths due to atherosclerosis and hernia/intestinal obstruction and among females for deaths due to pneumonia, chronic nephritis, and homicide. Both sexes exhibited a deficit of deaths due to malignant neoplasms and circulatory diseases. Findings from this study will be useful to those responsible for the planning and implementation of health care programs among the Seneca Nation of Indians and other Native American groups.
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PMID:Mortality in a northeastern Native American cohort, 1955-1984. 292 27

Sputum cultures are not helpful in the immediate management of patients with bacterial pneumonia. Sputum Gram stains may provide a presumptive identification of an etiologic agent; this procedure, however, is insensitive (approximately 50%). Consequently, during the last decade, other more sensitive and specific methods of providing a rapid etiologic diagnosis have been sought. This article discusses data on antigen detection in various body fluids by counterimmunoelectrophoresis and agglutination tests. Results from our own laboratory as well as those reported in the literature are presented. The best estimates of antigen detection rates, by the most sensitive assays, in pneumococcal pneumonia, are as follows: serum, 45%-80%; urine, 50%-64%; and sputum, 75%-100%. There is less information for Haemophilus, Klebsiella, and Pseudomonas pneumonias, but the diagnostic yield is approximately 50%-100%. Data will also be presented on the association between free and complexed antigens and morbidity and mortality in pneumococcal pneumonia. Indicators of morbidity discussed include disseminated intravascular coagulation, duration and severity of illness, and occurrence of nephritis.
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PMID:Antigen detection in the diagnosis and in the prognostic assessment of bacterial pneumonias. 293 73

The in vivo infection of neonatal dogs by the microsporidian protozoan parasite, Encephalitozoon cuniculi, was studied. Microscopic examination of tissues from infected animals showed granulomatous nephritis, meningoencephalitis, hepatitis, and pneumonitis. A large component of the inflammatory infiltrate consisted of plasma cells and lymphocytes. In addition, hyperplasia of B-lymphocyte-dependent regions of lymph nodes and erythrophagocytosis were consistently seen in infected dogs. Infected dogs developed lymphocytosis, hypergammaglobulinemia, anti-encephalitozoon antibodies, and an antigen-specific blastogenic response to E. cuniculi spores. Lymphocyte blastogenic responses to the lectin phytohemagglutinin A (PHA) were depressed compared to controls. Dogs dying during the 2-month experimental trial were bacteremic. The findings of these experiments suggest that postnatal infection results in a demonstrable although seemingly ineffective immune and inflammatory response without detectable clinical disease.
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PMID:Experimental encephalitozoonosis in neonatal dogs. 310

Skin rash, fever, and eosinophilia developed in a previously healthy 35-year-old woman three weeks after starting carbamazepine. Fulminant respiratory and renal failure ensued. Autopsy showed pneumonitis, nephritis, serositis, pancreatitis, hepatitis, and carditis, characterized by an infiltrate of eosinophils and lymphocytes. The severity, duration, and extensive organ involvement of the reaction make this case unique.
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PMID:Carbamazepine-induced severe systemic hypersensitivity reaction with eosinophilia. 322 45

In defined-flora, barrier-maintained rats (WAG/RijMCW males), radiation nephritis is the principal late toxicity seen after high-dose-rate, total-body irradiation (TBI) when hematologic toxicity is prevented by bone marrow transplantation. Pneumonitis develops only if rats are exposed to a conventional environment during and after bone marrow transplantation. Low-dose-rate TBI gives similar toxicity at doses twice as large. Rats surviving for 9 months after TBI show decreased tolerance for cisplatin. This decreased tolerance is related to dose and dose rate and is seen for radiation doses that show little or no renal toxicity. Evidence suggests that the decrease in renal tolerance is due to decreased renal platinum clearance in the irradiated kidneys.
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PMID:Effect of total-body irradiation with bone marrow transplantation on toxicity of cisplatin. 328 Oct 32

The article deals with the diagnosis of somatic diseases in cases where stroke-stimulating cerebral symptoms come to the fore. On the basis of the investigation of 56 patients admitted with the diagnosis of acute impairment of cerebral circulation the authors present the criteria of the differential diagnosis of pneumonia, thromboembolism of the pulmonary artery, myocardial infarction, abscessed nephritis, visceral cancer, and cerebral stroke. The causes responsible for the appearance of focal symptoms in the absence of morphological changes in the brain and the pathogenesis of cerebral disorders in somatic diseases are discussed.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis of stroke from somatic diseases]. 342 67


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