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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In patients with cardiomegaly and signs and symptoms compatible with CHF, unilateral right-sided or bilateral pleural effusions of similar size are likely to be due to left-sided CHF. Isolated right ventricular failure or chronic pulmonary hypertension is not usually associated with pleural effusions, and unrecognized or new-onset left ventricular dysfunction and other causes should be considered when a patient with cor pulmonale presents with a pleural effusion. Unilateral left-sided pleural effusions with cardiomegaly may be due to pericardial disease. Current hypotheses do not adequately explain the laterality of effusions in CHF or pericardial disease. Clinical and radiographic correlation is always required; however, the associations described occur often enough to make them useful in day-to-day clinical practice. When ascribing pleural effusions to CHF, clinicians must be sure the clinical signs and history "fit the picture," because pneumonia and pulmonary embolism may also cause pleural effusions in patients with heart failure. Typical pleural effusions in patients with uncomplicated CHF (demonstrated by small to medium-sized effusions and the absence of fever, leukocytosis, pleuritic chest pain, or marked asymmetry in bilateral effusions) do not require routine diagnostic thoracentesis for evaluation. A reasonable approach in such cases is treatment of the underlying CHF and follow-up radiography to monitor for resolution of the effusions. Prompt diagnostic thoracentesis is indicated whenever atypical features are present and other diagnoses are under consideration.
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PMID:Pleural effusions in cardiovascular disease. Pearls for correlating the evidence with the cause. 1088 42

Pneumococcal infections are the most common invasive bacterial infections in children in the United States. The incidence of invasive pneumococcal infections peaks in children younger than 2 years, reaching rates of 228/100,000 in children 6 to 12 months old. Children with functional or anatomic asplenia (including sickle cell disease [SCD]) and children with human immunodeficiency virus infection have pneumococcal infection rates 20- to 100-fold higher than those of healthy children during the first 5 years of life. Others at high risk of pneumococcal infections include children with congenital immunodeficiency; chronic cardiopulmonary disease; children receiving immunosuppressive chemotherapy; children with immunosuppressive neoplastic diseases; children with chronic renal insufficiency, including nephrotic syndrome; children with diabetes; and children with cerebrospinal fluid leaks. Children of Native American (American Indian and Alaska Native) or African American descent also have higher rates of invasive pneumococcal disease. Outbreaks of pneumococcal infection have occurred with increased frequency in children attending out-of-home care. Among these children, nasopharyngeal colonization rates of 60% have been observed, along with pneumococci resistant to multiple antibiotics. The administration of antibiotics to children involved in outbreaks of pneumococcal disease has had an inconsistent effect on nasopharyngeal carriage. In contrast, continuous penicillin prophylaxis in children younger than 5 years with SCD has been successful in reducing rates of pneumococcal disease by 84%. Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccines have been recommended since 1985 for children older than 2 years who are at high risk of invasive disease, but these vaccines were not recommended for younger children and infants because of poor antibody response before 2 years of age. In contrast, pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (Prevnar) induce proposed protective antibody responses (>.15 microg/mL) in >90% of infants after 3 doses given at 2, 4, and 6 months of age. After priming doses, significant booster responses (ie, immunologic memory) are apparent when additional doses are given at 12 to 15 months of age. In efficacy trials, infant immunization with Prevnar decreased invasive infections by >93% and consolidative pneumonia by 73%, and it was associated with a 7% decrease in otitis media and a 20% decrease in tympanostomy tube placement. Adverse events after the administration of Prevnar have been limited to areas of local swelling or erythema of 1 to 2 cm and some increase in the incidence of postimmunization fever when it is given with other childhood vaccines. Based on data in phase 3 efficacy and safety trials, the US Food and Drug Administration has provided an indication for the use of Prevnar in children younger than 24 months.
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PMID:American Academy of Pediatrics. Committee on Infectious Diseases. Technical report: prevention of pneumococcal infections, including the use of pneumococcal conjugate and polysaccharide vaccines and antibiotic prophylaxis. 1092 Jan 70

Pulmonary metastases from choriocarcinoma can very rarely give rise to a 'miliary' pattern on the chest X-ray. A 23-year-old woman with a diffuse nodular pattern on chest X-ray died due to acute respiratory failure and cor pulmonale. At autopsy, choriocarcinoma of the uterus was found. In the lungs, multiple macrovascular tumour emboli within branches of pulmonary muscular arteries in the region of segmental/subsegmental bronchi were detected. There was no evidence of pulmonary parenchymal metastases, pneumonia or tuberculosis. The 'miliary' pattern of pulmonary metastases described in cases of choriocarcinoma may be due to large vessel intra-arterial tumour emboli rather than disseminated parenchymal metastases.
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PMID:A case of pulmonary tumour embolism mimicking miliary tuberculosis. 1102 95

Sparganosis has a world wide distribution, but only a few patients have pulmonary involvement. The term sparganosis is defined as an infection by the larva of parasitic tapeworms of Spirometra species. We present here-in a patient, who was infected by this parasite and had pulmonary symptoms. The chest roentgenography revealed diffuse multiple nodular infiltration with cavitations. Bronchoscopy with a transbronchial lung biopsy was nondiagnostic. Finally, open lung biopsy was performed, and the histologic examination revealed plerocercoid larva of sparganum. The patient was treated with mebendazole 40 mg/kg/day for 6 months and his symptoms and pulmonary function improved. In the 5th year of follow-up, he presented with more progressive dyspnea and developed cor pulmonale, and finally died from pneumonia with sepsis. The objective of this report was to present a rare manifestation of sparganosis and it's clinical course. Currently, there is no known effective treatment for this disease.
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PMID:Pulmonary sparganosis: a case report with five years follow-up. 1128 92

Signs of ascites were observed in only nine of 1863 cattle examined over a period of five years. The ascites was most commonly associated with either primary or secondary cardiac disease; cattle with ascites have a poor prognosis because the condition is usually assocaited with terminal disease. Two animals had cor pulmonale with chronic pneumonia, three had cardiomyopathy, one had bacterial endocarditis, two had thrombosis of the caudal vena cava and one had diffuse abdominal epithelioid mesothelioma.
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PMID:Observations on ascites in nine cattle. 1131 93

Acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis (AECB) is a very common condition, which presents with deteriorating sputum production and dyspnoea in a patient with pre-existing COPD or chronic bronchitis. As these symptoms are relatively non-specific and also the presenting feature of a wide range of other conditions, the physician should carefully consider the differential diagnosis before deciding on whether or not a patient indeed has AECB. The differential diagnosis can be summarised as pneumonia, pneumothorax, cardiac failure/cor pulmonale, bronchiectasis, asthma, tuberculosis, sinusitis and other forms of upper respiratory tract sepsis, diffuse panbronchiolitis, lung cancer, gastro-oesophageal reflux, the presence of a foreign body in the airway, melioidosis, and lung abscess. This article aims to discuss these conditions, with brief presentation of clinical cases, in the evaluation of differential diagnosis of AECB.
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PMID:Solutions for difficult diagnostic cases of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. 1158 3

Pneumonia is one of the commonest infections in elderly patients. The pathogens responsible for pneumonias in the elderly are the same as in younger adults. Because of associated cardiopulmonary disease and/or impaired host defenses, pneumonia in elderly patients is associated with increased mortality and morbidity compared to younger patients. The clinical importance of pneumonias in the elderly relates to age-dependent and pathologic changes in the immune system as well as the lungs. Pneumonias in the elderly may be classified, for clinical purposes, according to their location of acquisition, i.e. community-acquired pneumonias, nursing home-acquired pneumonias, or hospital-acquired pneumonias. The clinical presentation of pneumonias in the elderly may be difficult, due to pre-existing cardiopulmonary disease that mimics pneumonia. This review discusses the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to elderly patients with pneumonia.
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PMID:Pneumonia in the elderly. 1173 82

In this paper we report 163 cases of senile cardiopulmonary disease. Among them, 60 sustained multi-system organ failure(36.9%). Of those 60, 19 patients died(death rate 31.7%). We believe that most of the acute attacks of senile cardiopulmonary disease were induced by pneumonia. Therefore it is very important to control infection while treating respiratory-circulation failure, pulmonary encephalopathia, shock, acid-base imbalance, and other complications.
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PMID:[Acute flare-up of senile cardiopulmonary disease and multi-system organ failure]. 1208 Jul 27

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by worsening airflow obstruction. In its late stages, patients experience decreased physical function and increased incidents of pneumonia, pulmonary hypertension, cor pulmonale, and chronic respiratory failure. Patients who regularly participate in moderate exercise experience greater control of symptoms and increased functional capacity compared with those being treated by pharmacologic measures alone. Guidelines for a comprehensive exercise program are provided. The Seven Step Approach is discussed as a means of motivating older adults with COPD to incorporate physical exercise into their daily activity. Encouraging exercise in older adults with COPD will help these individuals reach and maintain their highest level of function and quality of life.
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PMID:Exercise intervention in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (CE). 1271 61

In two young children with leukaemia, a girl and a boy aged 5 and 4 years, respectively, an invasive infection due to Moraxella catarrhalis was diagnosed at the time of granulocytopenia. They were treated with antibiotics. The first child developed pneumonia and recovered, the other developed severe septic shock and died. M. catarrhalis is a Gram-negative diplococcus, frequently colonising the upper respiratory tract in young children. In childhood this pathogen mainly causes infections such as otitis media and sinusitis, while in adults it primarily causes laryngitis, bronchitis and pneumonia. Immunocompromised patients or patients with chronic cardiopulmonary disease have an increased risk of severe infections.
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PMID:[Invasive infection with Moraxella catarrhalis in two children with lymphatic leukemia and granulocytopenia]. 1282 23


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