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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors present a cases of
acute chest syndrome
that was originally thought to be due to
pneumonia
, in which bone imaging obtained 4 weeks later for knee pain showed a secondary finding of multiple rib infarcts that clarified the etiology of the patient's chest manifestations and led to a change in the management of the patient. Bone scintigraphy should be considered in the work-up of patients with sickle cell anemia and concurrent chest symptoms.
...
PMID:Impact of bone scintigraphy on the clinical management of a patient with sickle cell anemia and recent chest pain. 881 62
Chest pain is the initial symptom of many life-threatening disease processes. Pain may arise from any structure located in the thoracic cavity. Cardiac causes of chest pain usually have anginal symptoms. Noncardiac causes have a variety of chest pain characteristics. Diseases that require immediate attention and intervention are myocardial infarction/unstable angina, dissecting aortic aneurysm, pericarditis, pulmonary embolism, pneumothorax,
pneumonia
, and
acute chest syndrome
. In order to evaluate a patient with the complaint of chest pain, the advanced practice nurse must be familiar with the differential diagnosis approach to acute chest pain.
...
PMID:Acute chest pain. 931 75
Sickle cell disease is the most common inherited disease in the African American population. Multiorgan pathologic features with a predilection for thoracic organs predominate. Acute cardiopulmonary diseases include
acute chest syndrome
,
pneumonia
, and left ventricular failure. Cardiomegaly, pleural effusions, pulmonary consolidation, pulmonary edema on chest radiographs, and ground-glass opacities on computed tomographs are characteristic. Chronic changes include sickle cell lung disease with lung fibrosis, pulmonary arterial hypertension, hyperkinetic circulation related to severe anemia, and thoracic skeletal abnormalities; the latter are H-shaped vertebrae, rib infarction, and extramedullary hematopoesis.
...
PMID:Thoracic manifestations of sickle cell disease. 955 90
Sickle cell disease is associated with frequent and often severe infections as a result of immune function impairment and functional asplenia. Also, infection can trigger a vasoocclusive crisis. Pneumococcal bacteremia and meningitis are so severe as to warrant prophylactic penicillin therapy, which has provided a dramatic decrease in early mortality. Bacterial pneumonia is common in patients younger than four years, with most cases being due to S. pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Chlamydia pneumoniae.
Acute chest syndrome
is both a difficult differential diagnosis and a common concomitant of bacterial pneumonia. Osteomyelitis is generally due to a salmonella, most often S. enteritidis; multiple foci are common and treatment is difficult, with some patients developing chronic osteomyelitis with sequestration. Parvovirus B 19 infection causes acute bone marrow failure. Malaria does not result in cerebral malaria but can lead to severe anemia or vasoocclusive crisis, and should therefore be effectively prevented. Antimicrobials are generally selected for efficacy against pneumococci (septicemia, meningitis), Salmonella (septicemia, meningitis, osteomyelitis), and mycoplasmas (
pneumonia
). Prophylactic therapy is of paramount importance and relies on long-term or lifelong penicillin therapy started at four months of age and on closely-spaced immunizations, most notably against pneumococci, the hepatitis B virus, S. typhi, and H. influenzae. Resistant pneumococcal strains have not been reported to cause prophylactic treatment failures. Conjugated pneumococcal vaccines are effective in protecting infants and should therefore be used in sickle cell patients.
...
PMID:[Infection and sickle cell anemia]. 1008 75
Acute chest syndrome
(
ACS
) is characterized by chest pain with dyspnea and recent radiologic abnormalities, and is an acute lung complication whose problem is one of etiology. Alveolar hypoventilation linked to infarcts of the thoracic ribs, thoracoabdominal trauma, subdiaphragmatic pain, the administration of analgesics causing respiratory depression, or sleep disturbance, is a frequent cause of
ACS
. Bronchoalveolar lavage has revealed the frequency of fat embolism following infarcts in the long bones. Pulmonary vascular occlusion, due to thrombosis or emboli, is rare, as are the infectious
pneumonia
and pulmonary edema. The pathogenetic mechanisms consist of an alteration of the rheological properties of the blood, the existence of an hypercoagulability state, specific interactions between the abnormal sickle cells and the vascular endothelium, and a dysregulation of the vascular reactivity. Research centered around NO biology has led to an expanded understanding of the critical interdependence of NO, hemoglobin, and the microvasculature. An anemic patient with
ACS
suffers from loss of pulmonary scavenging and hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and loss of peripheral NO delivery. Interruption of this cycle by transfusing normal (hemoglobin A-containing) erythrocytes might improve all the abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Respiratory distress and drepanocytosis]. 1079 55
Acute chest syndrome
is a major cause of death and hospitalisation in children with sickle cell anaemia. It is often initiated by an infection, particularly
pneumonia
. Microbial agents previously not associated with
acute chest syndrome
are becoming increasingly important. Group A beta-haemolytic Streptococcus (GABHS) is thought to be an uncommon cause of
pneumonia
in children with sickle cell anaemia. We report a 15-year-old African-American girl who presented with an acute chest event characterised by fever, cough, chest pain, shortness of breath, right upper abdominal quadrant pain, jaundice and otitis media. Chest radiograph showed multi-lobar pneumonia with left pleural effusion. Group A beta-haemolytic Streptococcus was isolated from culture of pleural and middle ear fluids. She responded to therapy that included antibiotics, exchange blood transfusion, oxygen, thoracotomy chest tube drainage and decortication. In a child with sickle cell anaemia presenting with fever and an acute chest event,
pneumonia
should be considered and GABHS recognised as a possible aetiological agent. In addition, a chest X-ray should be obtained and antibiotics against agents causing community-acquired
pneumonia
instituted.
...
PMID:Group A beta-haemolytic streptococcal acute chest event in a child with sickle cell anaemia. 1147 Dec 64
Sickle cell anaemia is a chronic disease which evolves on the background of a basal state punctuated by critical periods, often with complications requiring overall treatment. The management of both periods must be well integrated into the treatment programme. In order to treat occlusive crisis, medical staff must be well trained and equipped for the complicated clinical diagnoses involved in drepanocytosis: bone infarction or osteomyelitis,
pneumonia
or
acute chest syndrome
, multifocal crisis or severe infectious disease. Neonatal diagnosis is the best way for early treatment by preventing severe pneumococcal diseases, ensuring sufficient hydration and appropriate surveillance, as well as providing family education. Much progress has been made over the last decade in the early treatment of retinitis, biliary lithiasis, and aseptic hip necrosis. It is also important to ensure accurate prescriptions for hydroxyurea. Specialised centres for drepanocytosis treatment are now a growing necessity and should be encouraged in order to provide treatment for dispersed patients against a relatively little known disease.
...
PMID:[Sickle cell disease: from childhood to adolescence. Management in 2001]. 1147 33
Splenectomy is frequently required in children with various hematologic disorders. The reported advantages of laparoscopic splenectomy (LS) include less pain, shorter hospital stay, and improved cosmesis. This report evaluates the outcome of children undergoing LS at a single children's facility. One hundred twelve children underwent LS by the lateral approach between August 1995 and February 2001. Indications for LS were hereditary spherocytosis in 58, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura in 21, sickle cell disease in 19, and other conditions in 14. LS alone was completed in 89 children and LS and cholecystectomy (LSC) in 20. Three required conversion to open splenectomy. Accessory spleens were identified in 19. Complications included ileus (four),
acute chest syndrome
(four), bleeding (two),
pneumonia
(one), and diaphragm perforation (one). There was no mortality. An accessory spleen was missed in one child with recurrent anemia. Average operative time for LS was 106 minutes and for LSC 135 minutes. Operative time for LS decreased with experience but the difference was not significant. Average length of stay was 1.51 days (range 1-11) and was longer in sickle cell disease (2.47 days) versus hereditary spherocytosis (1.29 days) and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (1.16 days). We conclude that LS is safe and effective in children with hematologic disorders and is associated with minimal morbidity, zero mortality, and a short length of stay.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic splenectomy has become the gold standard in children. 1189 57
The
acute chest syndrome
is a generic term for pulmonary complications of sickle cell diseases with heterogeneous etiologies that include
pneumonia
, vaso-occlusion of pulmonary arterioles, rib infarction, and fat embolism syndrome. My review summarizes these etiologies, the evidence, and pathophysiology supporting the hypothesis that infarction of segments of ribs by the same vaso-occlusive process responsible for the acute episodes of pain (characteristic of the sickle cell diseases) is often involved in the acute chest structure. Inflammation associated with the infarct then causes splinting, hypoventilation, and hypoxia and further vaso-occlusion. The relationship with adult respiratory distress syndrome and fat embolism is also discussed. Use of the incentive spirometer combined with effective analgesia when chest pain is present is advocated for prevention of the pulmonary infiltrates. Newer understanding of the role of nitric oxide in regulating oxygen transport and its relationship to blood transfusions used in therapy of the
acute chest syndrome
are discussed.
...
PMID:The role of rib infarcts in the acute chest syndrome of sickle cell diseases. 1267 38
Bacterial infections remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality among young children with sickle cell disease. Susceptibility to infections is mainly observed in homozygous sickle cell disease. The incidence of bacteremias in children under 3 years of age is approximately 8 events/100 patient-years among homozygous subjects and approximately S events/100 patient-years among those with SC hemoglobinopathy. Pneumococci and Salmonellae are the most frequently isolated bacteria. Severe clinical manifestations include septicemia, meningitis, osteomyelitis and
pneumonia
. M. Pneumoniae and C. Pneumoniae infections may be severe and may induce
acute chest syndrome
. The high incidence and severity of bacterial infections in these children justify prevention efforts by antibiotic prophylaxis and vaccination. The efficacy of oral penicillin prophylaxis against pneumococcal infections has been well demonstrated and is now recommended from 3 months of age. The antipneumococcal conjugate vaccine has been shown to be safe and immunogenic in young infants.
...
PMID:[Infections and antibiotic prophylaxis in sickle cell disease]. 1513 1
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