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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The incidence of Pneumocystis carinii infection of the lung was determined in 100 consecutive autopsies on patients with hematologic malignancies and in a control group of 50 patients with acute myocardial infarction and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Thirteen instances of infection were found in the study group and one instance in the control group. Of the 14 patients with P. carinii infection, five were classified as uncomplicated P. carinii
pneumonia
with typical host response and five had no evidence of any host response to the presence of the organisms. Four cases were impossible to assess because of complicating bacterial, viral, or fungal
pneumonia
. The five patients with the typical histologic response to the presence of P. carinii organisms all showed diffuse pulmonary densities on the chest radiographs in accordance with the classic descriptions of P. carinii
pneumonia
. The five without any evidence of host response to the presence of P. carinii organisms showed no evidence of parenchymal disease on chest radiographs. The finding of P. carinii organisms in the lung is not necessarily an indication of clinically significant disease and, from this study, it seems that chest radiography is of considerable importance in determining the significance of such
infestation
.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii infection of the lung: radiologic and pathologic correlation. 10 38
Adenoviral infection was established in imported specialized meat strains of sheep Ile de France and Romni marsh. The disease followed a course typical of chronic interstitial progressive
pneumonia
with reduced tonus, loss of body weight, and high lethality. The disease was serologically proven by the discovery of specific complement binding antibodies in dynamics against the adenovirus. Titers varied from 1 : 2 to 1 : 32. The
infestation
was reproduced on sheep and lambs by tracheal infection with ultrafiltrate of changed lung tissue and bronchial lymph nodes. Morphologically the infection manifests itself by considerable hypeplastic processes in the lungs and less pronounced ones in the liver and kidneys. The typical changes indicated are accumulation of lymphoid cells and histocytes in the interstitial tissue, as well as adenomatous expansion of alveolar and bronchial epithelium. Considerable cell polymorphism is observed in the alveoles along with presence of gigantic cells and cell syncytia of desquamous epithelial cells, alveolar macrophages and intranuclear inclusions in some of these cells. Complications of Past. Haemolytica with developing catharalsuppurative
pneumonia
were observed in some cases.
...
PMID:[Chronic progressive interstitial pneumonia in sheep (adenovirus pneumonia)]. 23 87
When a group of 3-month-old pigs was moved to another location, several died from internal bleeding. Two pigs that were necropsied had large esophagogastric ulcers, hepatic fibrosis with "milk spots" and swollen edematous lungs. The ulcers involved the full thickness of the gastric mucosa with pronounced eosinophilic infiltration and perivascular cuffing of the submucosal vessels. There was an acute interstitial and granulomatous
pneumonia
with an inflammatory exudate composed mainly of eosinophils. Ascarid larvae were recovered from the lungs. Gastric ulceration could have resulted from a second exposure to Ascaris suum
infestation
because pigs not removed from their original location did not develop ulcers.
...
PMID:Esophagogastric ulcers associated with Ascaris suum infestation in swine. 68 83
Of 21 newly-imported rhesus monkeys, 11 showed a typical macular rash and 13 developed a 4-fold or greater rise in antibody titre to measles. 5 animals died, 4 of them with extensive
pneumonia
, pleurisy and pericarditis. Although measles was involved in each case, there were contributory causes of death, namely Diplococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus infection, and
infestation
with Oesophagostomum (nodular worm) larvae.
...
PMID:A measles epizootic with 5 deaths in newly-imported rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). 81 18
The most common form of lower airway disease (LAD) in dogs is chronic bronchitis, whereas in cats a syndrome resembling chronic bronchial asthma in humans is commonly reported. In most cases, the cause(s) of LAD remains unproven. The primary symptom of LAD in dogs and cats is chronic cough, although many cats are free of symptoms between episodes of acute, life-threatening bronchoconstriction. Diagnosis is based on a careful history, physical examination, and diagnostic tests designed to rule out other causes of cough and dyspnea such as
pneumonia
, heartworm
infestation
, and congestive heart failure. More sophisticated tests, such as bronchoscopy, flow volume loops, and radioisotope ventilation scans are available to define the extent of the disease process better. Glucocorticoids remain the mainstay of chronic therapy for most dogs and cats with LAD. Bronchodilators are indicated for most cats with symptoms of acute bronchoconstriction, whereas a smaller number of dogs may respond to bronchodilator administration and demonstrate an increase in exercise capacity and a decrease in cough frequency. LAD in dogs and cats is a progressive disorder, and prognosis is guarded. Nevertheless, with aggressive medical management many of these animals can live relatively symptom-free lives.
...
PMID:Chronic lower airway disease in the dog and cat. 164 17
This article has outlined the features of the major types of infections encountered in pulmonary allograft recipients. Virtually any pathogen can cause infection in these immunocompromised subjects, and there is a distinct propensity for these organisms to invade the transplanted lung. As is the case with other major organ recipients, there is a temporal sequence in the types of infection lung allograft recipients contract. Bacteria are the most frequent cause of
pneumonia
in the first postoperative month. After this period, infection with CMV, particularly CMV
pneumonitis
, becomes most common. Following the "window" for CMV infection, the risk for
infestation
with P. carinii becomes the primary concern. The latter two types of infection pose a double risk for the recipient: (1) morbidity and mortality from the infection itself and (2) chronic rejection following on the heels of these infections and producing morbidity and mortality on its own. Pulmonary allograft recipients are also susceptible to fungi, particularly C. albicans. Although these infections rarely produce an overwhelming
pneumonia
, they nonetheless carry a grave prognosis because they usually become widely disseminated. Better selection of donor lungs and prophylactic measures such as the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics and amphotericin B in the early postoperative period, the use of CMV-negative blood products in seronegative recipients, and the chronic administration of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole have reduced the rate of infection with bacteria, fungi, CMV (primary infections only), and P. carinii, respectively. Despite these relative successes, however, the risk for infection of the allograft remains high because the defense mechanisms in the lung allograft are breached by the effects of surgery, the "allogeneic environment" in the allograft and systemic immunosuppression, and the fact that chronic rejection causes structural changes that predispose to bacterial colonization of the airways and the need for increased levels of immunosuppression. Despite the formidable barrier that infection of the lung allograft poses, the procedure of pulmonary transplantation clearly holds sufficient promise that all efforts possible should be made to hurdle this barrier. Achieving such a goal would ensure a place for pulmonary transplantation in the armamentarium of treatment for irreversible pulmonary disease.
...
PMID:Infectious complications in pulmonary allograft recipients. 218 64
Mortality rates and the prevalence of disease were assessed in 115 flocks of traditionally managed sheep and goats in two Divisions of the North West Province of Cameroon by means of a questionnaire to the owners. The mortality rate was significantly higher in sheep than in goats and also higher in young stock than in adults. Tethering the animals during the day resulted in significantly lower mortality in both adult and young sheep and also in kids. Disease problems of small ruminants, identified on the basis of signs reported by their owners, included intestinal parasitism, especially helminthiasis, tick infestation and associated diseases,
pneumonia
, goat plague (peste des petits ruminants) and Oestrus ovis
infestation
. Treatment of sick animals was only practised on a very small scale, often by possibly ineffective traditional methods. The owners identified tick infestation and diarrhoea as common causes of death. Recommendations are made on control measures suitable for application in this area.
...
PMID:Disease and mortality in small ruminants in the North West Province of Cameroon. 279 46
Pneumonia due to Pneumocystis carinii (PCP) is regularly encountered in organ allograft recipients who are immunosuppressed to prevent rejection. Recipients of lung/heart allografts may be particularly prone to pulmonary infection due to systemic immunosuppression and the fact that defense mechanisms in the transplanted lung may be further impaired through tissue incompatibility and the effects of surgery. In this study, we monitored 16 lung transplant recipients for infection with Pneumocystis carinii using serial bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and found the prevalence of Pneumocystis infection of the lung to be 88%. Six episodes were associated with the usual symptoms of
pneumonia
, whereas 10 episodes were associated with minimal or no symptoms. In 3 of the 6 symptomatic episodes, a concurrent bacterial infection was also found. The total number of cells recovered from the lung by BAL, the proportion of T-lymphocytes, and the number of cytotoxic/suppressor and helper/inducer cells were elevated during infection with Pneumocystis compared to before and after. Spontaneous and interleukin-2-induced proliferation of BAL cells in vitro was also higher during infection, suggesting that there was an increased number of activated T-lymphocytes in the airspaces of the infected allograft. BAL cells cultured with irradiated spleen cells from the donor proliferated at higher levels when obtained after Pneumocystis infection than when obtained before or during infection even for subclinical infections. These results indicate that in the absence of prophylaxis, the prevalence of Pneumocystis
infestation
is very high after lung/heart transplantation. Impaired defense of the transplanted lung does not seem to stem from the inability of activated T-lymphocytes to accumulate in the allograft.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Unexpectedly high incidence of Pneumocystis carinii infection after lung-heart transplantation. Implications for lung defense and allograft survival. 314 96
Laboratory findings in an adult bull terrier presented with a history of anorexia and weight loss included the following: severe anaemia, leukocytosis, neutrophilia, lymphopaenia, thrombocytopaenia, Ehrlichia canis morulae in monocytes, hypergammaglo-bulinaemia, a bleeding tendency, icterus and proteinuria. In addition, a high Haemobartonella canis parasitaemia, non-encapsulated yeasts on urinalysis and a localised Demodex canis
infestation
were present. Treatment for ehrlichiosis was initiated but the dog died. Lesions found were a severe cryptococcal granulomatous
pneumonia
and cryptococcal colonies in the lungs, bronchial lymph nodes, kidneys, liver, spleen, heart, meninges, eyes and thoracic cavity. In addition, hyphal forms resembling Filobasidiella neoformans, the teleomorph of Cryptococcus neoformans, were seen in lung fine needle aspiration smears, impression smears and lung sections. C. neoformans was cultured from urine, lung and liver. Lung and kidney also yielded Salmonella typhimureum. Cortical atrophy with T-cell depletion of lymph nodes as well as splenic lymphoid follicular atrophy, typical of chronic ehrlichiosis-induced cell mediated immunosuppression, could have predisposed to the fatal disseminated cryptococcis.
...
PMID:Fatal disseminated cryptococcosis and concurrent ehrlichiosis in a dog. 350 65
Caseous lymphadenitis was the most frequently encountered pathological condition in 3,720 feral goats examined during routine meat inspection procedures. Among 9 separate consignments of animals, the prevalence of infection averaged 7.4% (range 0.3% to 18.8%). The majority of lesions were seen in lymph nodes draining superficial body areas although many also occurred in internal nodes and organs. Corynebacterium ovis was isolated from 25 of 32 lesions submitted for bacteriological examination. Other conditions regularly encountered included
pneumonia
, cysticercosis, sarcosporidiosis and lice
infestation
, while myonecrosis, pleurisy, pericarditis, nephritis, hepatitis, cirrhosis and mite infestation were only occasionally found. A total of 171 serum samples were collected and tested against 17 antigens. Samples from 57.9% and 51.5% of goats showed positive serological reactions to the antigens for sarcosporidiosis and Q fever respectively.
...
PMID:An abattoir survey of diseases of feral goats. 680 55
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