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)

Eighteen children with pneumocystis carinii pneumonia diagnosed over a period of 16 years at a children's hospital are reviewed. All had an underlying disease, either congenital immunodeficiency or a malignancy. 15 patients were treated, 10 with pentamidine isethionate alone, 2 with both pentamidine and co-trimoxazole, and 3 with co-trimoxazole alone. 12 of the treated group recovered and the 3 untreated patients died. The 3 deaths after treatment occurred in children receiving pentamidine alone, and in whom secondary factors contributed. The side effects of treatment with pentamidine were high, and included local reactions, hypoglycaemia, and uraemia. However, our results confirm that pentamidine is an effective treatment for pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in childhood. Co-trimoxazole may be an effective and relatively nontoxic alternative treatment.
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PMID:Treatment of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in children. 30 Oct 10

In a 19-year-old female a pelvic kidney, on the left side, was removed because of recurrent urinary tract infections, severe abdominal complaints and a pathological isotope-nephrography. Following nephrectomy a severe uremia with cerebral edema and pneumonia developed based on a medial necrosis of the artery of the right kidney. After surgical correction the function of the right solitary kidney returned to normal.
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PMID:Renal arterial thrombosis after the contralateral removal of a pelvic kidney. 44 96

The results of 97 autopsy cases of lymphogranulomatosis showed the causes of death to be either progression of the disease (78 cases), complications of treatment (12) or other diseases (7). The immediate causes of death in the progression of the disease were toxicity (29%), pulmonary insufficiency (22%), pulmonary-cardial insufficiency (12%), hepatic insufficiency (21%), peritonitis (3.4%), sepsis (5.8%), uremia (3.4%), posthemorrhagic anemia (1.7%), cerebral edema (1.7%). The immediate causes of death in complications of therapy were secondary infection (5 cases), posthemorrhagic anemia (3), pulmonary insufficiency (3), cerebral edema (1). In 7 observations death was not due to lymphogranulomatosis: in 2 cases it was caused by disseminated hematogenic tuberculosis, in 2 pneumonia (with cured lymphogranulomatosis, in 1 myocardial infarction, in 1 uremia (aterosclerotic nephrosclerosis) and 1 patient died accidentally.
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PMID:[Causes of death in lymphogranulomatosis]. 45 24

Between 1967 and 1977, 1500 children with malformations of the urinary tract were operated upon at the paediatric surgical department of the University of Tubingen. Ten children died in the early postoperative period or later on: Two patients died after operative correction of bladder extrophy following pneumonia and pyelonephritis and uraemia and urinary infection respectively. One child with a myelomeningocele had an ileal conduit performed and died two days after operation of peritonitis and urinary ascites. Two older children with reflux died in spite of successful ureteroneocystostomy, one following a cerebral haemorrhage and the other because of hypertension and uraemia. Five children with mechanical urinary obstruction died after discharge of uraemia and urinary infection. The following reasons for the deaths could be found: -- In two cases wrong indication for operation. -- In one case a technical fault at operation. -- In two cases the diagnosis was made too late. -- In five cases the wrong type of operation was used.
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PMID:Malformations of the urinary tract. 52 62

Resistance to bacterial infection, particularly septicemia and pneumonia, is decreased in patients with uremia. Tests of monocyte function in 21 patients with chronic uremia and in 21 normal healthy subjects showed an increase in attachment rate, spreading activity and Nirtoblue-tetrazolium reduction in the uremic subjects. In contrast, phagocytosis of IgG-coated red cells was impaired.
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PMID:Impaired phagocytic activity of human monocytes in respect to reduced antibacterial resistance in uremia. 115 44

The optimal management of effusive pericardial disease remains controversial. Subxiphoid drainage has been criticized for a high recurrence rate while transthoracic procedures (window or pericardiectomy) are more invasive operations with greater potential for morbidity. We compared subxiphoid (SX group) and transthoracic (TT group) drainage in 131 patients (age range from 1 month to 81 years) treated from 1979 to the present. The etiology of effusion included cancer (38), uremia (24), infection (27), radiation (9), and other (33) causes. The two groups had similar age and sex distribution, etiology, and fluid volume. There was no difference in the operative mortality between the two groups (SX 15%, TT 13%, p = NS). Patients undergoing thoracotomy for treatment of effusive pericardial disease had a higher incidence of respiratory complications as defined by the presence of pneumonia, pleural effusion, prolonged ventilation, and need for reintubation (SX 11%, TT 35%, p less than 0.005). This may account, in part, for the longer mean hospital stay in transthoracic group (14.4 vs. 11.4 days). Nine patients were lost to follow-up after hospital discharge. The remaining 104 hospital survivors were followed for between 1 month and 11 years (mean 34 months, cumulative of 297 patient years). Three patients in each group experienced fluid recurrence and all but one were successfully treated by needle aspiration or percutaneous catheter placement. Following discharge, no patient required reoperation for effusive or constrictive pericardial disease or died from tamponade. There were no significant differences in 5-year actuarial survival (SX 54%, TT 49%) or actuarial freedom from recurrence (SX 89%, TT 93%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pericardial drainage: subxiphoid vs. transthoracic approach. 201 61

Eleven neonates with oesophageal atresia and distal fistula were managed between July 1977 and January 1987. The male:female ratio was 1.2:1. The patients were aged between 1 to 14 days (median 7 days) and weighed 1.85 to 3.10 kg (mean 2.6 kg) at presentation. Associated anomalies were present in 5, pneumonia in 4 and uraemia (mean serum urea of 88 mg%) in all patients. A primary repair and simultaneous gastrostomy (omitted in 1) was done for all cases. There were 5 operative deaths. Fifteen postoperative complications occurred in 10 patients; including septicaemia in 3, wound infection in 3, anastomotic leak in 1 and tracheal mucus plug in 1. Statistical analysis indicated no difference between survivors and nonsurvivors on the basis of age, weight, degree of uraemia or presence of pneumonia. One of the 6 survivors (now 5 years after surgery) required bouginage after 26 months and has remained asymptomatic; the other 5 are well and without symptoms 3 to 11 months postoperative. The most significant determinants of survival are the effectiveness of pre- and postoperative managements of patients.
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PMID:Oesophageal atresia and tracheo-oesophageal fistula: review of a 10-year personal experience. 227 27

Fourteen foals less than four days of age were treated with the aminoglycoside, amikacin sulphate, and either penicillin or ampicillin for septicaemia, pneumonia, and/or failure of passive immunoglobulin transfer. Serum amikacin concentrations were determined at three times during an 8 or 12 h dosing interval. A 7.0 mg/kg bodyweight dose of amikacin every 8 h was appropriate. Prematurity did not influence mortality. All seven premature foals survived, whereas four of the seven full term foals died. Uraemia in three foals was caused by urinary bladder rupture; amikacin-induced nephrotoxicity was not recognised by clinical chemistries (elevations in serum creatinine or blood urea nitrogen concentrations) or post-mortem findings.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetics of amikacin in critically ill neonatal foals treated for presumed or confirmed sepsis. 229 86

A follow-up of 92 patients with diabetes mellitus, who were hospitalized at the Department of Pediatrics, University of Bergen, during the years 1950-63, was conducted in June 1986. The mean age of the 76 living patients was 38 years, and the mean duration of diabetes 30 years. Sixteen patients had died. According to the death certificates the causes of death were as follows: Myocardial infarction, uremia, pneumonia, diabetes not further specified, suicide, sudden death not further specified, ketoacidosis, accident to the head, and convulsions (epilepsy). The 39 patients living in the county of Hordaland (including Bergen) were invited to a clinical examination. Twenty-nine patients (mean age 37 years, mean duration of diabetes 29 years) accepted. In eleven, the disease had influenced the choice of occupation. Twelve experienced professional difficulties due to diabetes, and thirteen had major complaints due to the disease. Three used antianginal drugs, and a further three were receiving antihypertensive treatment. Four women had hypothyreosis. Twelve had proteinuria or pathologic microalbuminuria. Only two of 27 patients examined by means of fluorescein-angiography showed no retinopathy. Evidence of cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy was observed in ten patients. Since only three patients had used fast-acting insulin regularly during the last ten years, it should be possible to give patients with type 1 diabetes better treatment in the future.
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PMID:[Prognosis of diabetes mellitus type 1. A follow-up study]. 273 38

Kidney failure and pneumonia by Aspergillus flavus and A. fumigatus were found in a 56-year-old woman who had received antibiotic and corticoid treatment to control high fever. Her bloody tracheal secretion was a suspension of granule-like spore-free colonies of both Aspergillus species. Hemorrhages in mucous membranes and skin suggested a hematogenous dissemination of the fungi. Aspergillus spores in the soil of ornamental plants were assumed to be responsible for the inhalatory infection. The kidney function normalized rapidly under treatment by amphotericin B plus flucytosine and hemodialysis performed eight times. After 29 days of antimycotic treatment (amphotericin B 463 mg, flucytosine 150 g), besides normalization of the kidney function, healing of the pneumonia and bleeding from skin and mucal membranes took place. One and a half years later kidney function and blood parameters were found to be normal. In cases of Aspergillus pneumonia and kidney failure, a combined treatment by hemodialysis and amphotericin B plus flucytosine is recommended. In addition, there is discussion of the general importance of uremia and its influence on the mycotic infection.
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PMID:[Amphotericin B and flucytosine therapy of Aspergillus pneumonia and acute renal failure]. 310 58


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