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

Pneumocystis carinii (PC) pneumonia is a frequent manifestation of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans and macaques. An unusual nodular type of PC pneumonia was observed in two simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-inoculated rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). These animals developed clinical signs of simian AIDS, including anorexia, weight loss, dyspnea, and collapse. Grossly, both animals had multifocal tan-white nodules 1-10 mm in diameter scattered throughout the lungs. One animal had similar nodules involving the diaphragm and thoracic wall. The lungs were characterized by severe PC pneumonia with numerous large nodules consisting of foamy material that compressed adjacent tissue. The nodules had central areas of necrosis and lysis of alveolar septa. Varying degrees of necrotizing vasculitis were observed in areas of nodular PC pneumonia. The presence of PC in intra-alveolar spaces and nodular lesions was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. No evidence of other agents, including viral inclusions, bacteria, fungi, and lung mites, was detected. The animal with the most severe nodular PC pneumonia had vascular involvement with extrapulmonary spread to the diaphragm, thoracic wall, and regional lymph nodes. This unusual type of nodular PC pneumonia has been rarely seen in human AIDS patients.
...
PMID:Nodular Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in SIV-infected macaques. 1049 Feb 19

Bronchoscopy is a useful tool in the evaluation and management of canine and feline respiratory diseases. Diagnostic indications include the evaluation of structural diseases (tracheobronchial collapse, stricture, intraluminal mass); inflammatory conditions (chronic bronchitis, pneumonia); and traumatic injuries. Several airway-sampling techniques are available with bronchoscopy; bronchoalveolar lavage has proved to be the most satisfactory specimen-collection technique. Therapeutic indications of bronchoscopy at this time in veterinary medicine are mainly limited to foreign body removal. As advances are made in veterinary bronchopulmonary medicine, other therapeutic applications of the bronchoscope may be realized.
...
PMID:Bronchoscopy in small animal medicine: indications, instrumentation, and techniques. 1065 37

A captive black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis) with a hoof abscess was treated with long-term antibiotic therapy. After 9 months of treatment, there was rapid deterioration, marked weight loss and reluctance to stand. Profuse, bilateral epistaxis developed accompanied by collapse and the animal was euthanased. Necropsy revealed pulmonary aspergillosis with concurrent Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. Though a well-recognized disease of black rhinoceros, fungal pneumonia has not been reported in this species in Australia. The cost and efficacy of treatment have been questioned, however, prophylactic antifungal drug administration will be considered in any further cases of chronic, debilitating illness in black rhinoceros at Western Plains Zoo.
...
PMID:Fungal pneumonia in a captive black rhinoceros. 1068 63

We report six cases of pulmonary dirofilariasis diagnosed at our laboratory with clinical and pathological features. The nodules of dirofilariasis were round in three cases as previously reported, however dumbbell-shaped in two cases. The nodule did not attach to the pleura in four cases. Microscopically, the nodules were granulomas composed of central coagulation necrosis and peripheral fibrosis with round cell infiltration, histiocytes, and multinucleated giant cells. Necrotic pulmonary artery with single or multiple sections of degenerated nematode was observed in the center of the nodule. Dilated bronchioles with inflammation were observed in the nodule in four cases. Collapse of the alveoli, organizing pneumonia, hemosiderin-laden macrophages were observed around the nodule. We suppose that the nodule is not an infarction but a granuloma caused by antigen released from the nematode. Because the pulmonary dirofilariasis is difficult to be differentiated from primary or metastatic lung carcinoma, and the inflammation exists around the nodule, the nodule should be removed surgically.
...
PMID:Human pulmonary dirofilariasis: report of six cases. 1073 66

A 65-year-old laundryman who suffered from cough, fever, and dyspnea was admitted to our hospital. Laboratory finding disclosed leukocytosis of peripheral blood, elevated CRP, and hypoxemia. Chest X-ray films showed diffuse interstitial nodular shadows in both lungs. The patient was given a diagnosis of pneumonia and treated with oxygen inhalation, antibiotics, and steroids. The abnormal findings disappeared rapidly, and the patient was discharged after 11 days. However, he was readmitted 3 days later with the same chest X-ray film findings as observed before. Examination of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid disclosed an increased neutrophil count. Transbronchial lung biopsy specimens revealed alveolar collapse, which was considered to have contributed to hypoxemia and ventilation perfusion mismatch. However, no signs of infiltration of inflammatory cells into alveolar walls, or of acute-phase interstitial edema, were observed. Environmental studies supported a strong relationship between the patient's symptoms and clothes waterproofing agent. From these findings, we reasoned that the inhalation of aerosol waterproofing agent containing fluoroplastics can induce respiratory failure.
...
PMID:[Acute respiratory failure due to inhalation of aerosol water proof agent]. 1097 90

From 10th September 1998 till 5th June 1999, the Paediatric and Cardiothoracic Surgery Units of Sultanah Aminah Hospital Johor Bahru managed three children with lung collapse secondary to pneumonia. The dominant initial clinical presentation in all three cases was acute abdominal pain. Basal pneumonia was diagnosed in two cases post-operatively after surgical contributory causes were excluded intra-operatively. Thoracotomy, evacuation of infected debris and decortication of the collapsed lung was done in all three cases. In children presenting with acute abdominal pain, basal pneumonia should be considered as a possible contributory cause.
...
PMID:Pneumonia presenting as acute abdomen in children: a report of three cases. 1122 Nov 69

The Alaska Supreme Court has ruled that a woman misdiagnosed with HIV can seek damages against her doctor for causing emotional distress, but said the doctor cannot be held liable for the collapse of the woman's marriage or his breach of her confidentiality. A battery of lab tests, including an HIV-antibody test, were ordered for [name removed] after she went to the hospital in February 1989 for treatment of a persistent bout of pneumonia and gastritis. The initial test, an Elisa screen, indicated the presence of antibodies, but the lab cautioned that further tests would have to be performed to establish an HIV diagnosis. [Name removed], the admitting room physician, informed [name removed]'s husband that she was HIV-positive. After discharge, the couple obtained her medical records, which stated "False positive HIV test." A retest proved [name removed] was HIV-negative. She sued [name removed], alleging that he did not have her informed consent to test her for HIV antibodies. She also charged that [name removed] had violated her confidentiality by informing her husband of the test results before telling her. As a result, she suffered damages, including emotional distress. The judge concluded that in the absence of physical injury, [name removed] could not as a matter of law or policy claim emotional damages. On appeal, the Supreme Court decided that its formulation of assessing emotional distress without physical injury needed reappraisal. The court reversed the lower court's directed verdict. [Name removed] lost on all other claims.
...
PMID:Doctor who misdiagnosed HIV must face patient's damage claim. 1136 28

Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease of worldwide distribution caused by spirochetes of the genus Leptospira. Humans are infected through direct contact with infected animals or through exposure to fresh water or soil contaminated by infected animal urine. Leptospirosis is characterized by acute fever that can be followed by a more severe, sometimes fatal illness that may include jaundice and renal failure (Weil's disease), meningitis, myocarditis, hemorrhagic pneumonitis, or hemodynamic collapse. To identify potential risk factors for leptospirosis in Thailand, we conducted a matched case-control study in Nakornratchasrima Province of the northeastern region. Fifty-nine cases and 118 controls were included in the study. Four activities in the two weeks prior to illness were independently associated with leptospirosis infection: walking through water (odds ratio [OR] = 4.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.7-14.1), applying fertilizer in wet fields for more than 6 hr a day (OR = 3.4, 95% CI = 1.5-7.8), plowing in wet fields for more than 6 hr a day (OR = 3.5, 95% CI = 1.1-11.6), and pulling out rice plant sprouts in wet fields for more than 6 hr a day (OR = 3.1, 95% CI = 1.02-9.3). Identification of these risk factors on admission might prove useful for early diagnosis and treatment of leptospirosis in Thailand.
...
PMID:Risk factors associated with leptospirosis in northeastern Thailand, 1998. 1138 16

Aspergillosis is a serious pathologic condition caused by Aspergillus organisms and is frequently seen in immunocompromised patients. At computed tomography (CT), saprophytic aspergillosis (aspergilloma) is characterized by a mass with soft-tissue attenuation within a lung cavity. The mass is typically separated from the cavity wall by an airspace ("air crescent" sign) and is often associated with thickening of the wall and adjacent pleura. CT findings in allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis consist primarily of mucoid impaction and bronchiectasis involving predominantly the segmental and subsegmental bronchi of the upper lobes. Aspergillus necrotizing bronchitis may manifest as an endobronchial mass, obstructive pneumonitis or collapse, or a hilar mass. Bronchiolitis is characterized by centrilobular nodules and branching linear or nodular areas of increased attenuation ("tree-in-bud" pattern). Obstructing bronchopulmonary aspergillosis mimics allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis at CT and manifests as bilateral bronchial and bronchiolar dilatation, large mucoid impactions, and diffuse lower lobe consolidation caused by postobstructive atelectasis. Characteristic CT findings in angioinvasive aspergillosis consist of nodules surrounded by a halo of ground-glass attenuation ("halo sign") or pleura-based, wedge-shaped areas of consolidation. Although imaging findings in pulmonary aspergillosis may be nonspecific, in the appropriate clinical setting, familiarity with the CT findings may suggest or even help establish the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Spectrum of pulmonary aspergillosis: histologic, clinical, and radiologic findings. 1145 56

Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is a disease caused by production of abnormal hemoglobin, which binds with other abnormal hemoglobin molecules within the red blood cell to cause rigid deformation of the cell. This deformation impairs the ability of the cell to pass through small vascular channels; sludging and congestion of vascular beds may result, followed by tissue ischemia and infarction. Infarction is common throughout the body in the patient with SCA, and it is responsible for the earliest clinical manifestation, the acute pain crisis, which is thought to result from marrow infarction. Over time, such insults result in medullary bone infarcts and epiphyseal osteonecrosis. In the brain, white matter and gray matter infarcts are seen, causing cognitive impairment and functional neurologic deficits. The lungs are also commonly affected, with infarcts, emboli (from marrow infarcts and fat necrosis), and a markedly increased propensity for pneumonia. The liver, spleen, and kidney may experience infarction as well. An unusual but life-threatening complication of SCA is sequestration syndrome, wherein a considerable amount of the intravascular volume is sequestered in an organ (usually the spleen), causing vascular collapse; its pathogenesis is unknown. Finally, because the red blood cells are abnormal, they are removed from the circulation, resulting in a hemolytic anemia. For the patient with SCA, however, the ischemic complications of the disease far outweigh the anemia in clinical importance.
...
PMID:Sickle cell anemia. 1145 73


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>