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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Generalized but well-circumscribed lymphadenopathy and rash-like skin changes were observed in three men, aged 58 to 75 years. There was a reticular appearance in the chest X-ray. Dyspnoea,
weakness
, marked weight loss, changing but marked lymphopenia, markedly increased blood-sedimentation rate, and an always negative Tine test were present in all three. Despite antibiotics, cytostatic drugs and prednisolone the disease quickly ended fatally with high fever, general debilitation and
pneumonia
. Post-mortem examination revealed diffuse lymphatic hyperplasia with plasma-cell infiltration in the lymph nodes, tonsils and lymphatic tissue of the intestines, and diffuse hyperplasia of the endothelial venules, together with basophilic blast cells, eosimophilic granulocytes and reticulum cells with broad nucleoli. The spleen was normal or enlarged. Spleen, lung tissue and lymphatics, the skin in the area of the small vessels, hair follicles and sweat glands contained lymphocytes, plasma cells and eosinophilic leucocytes. The spleen, if enlarged, also had focal necroses in its periarteriolar septa. In two cases electrophoresis revealed beta-globulin poorly demarkated from gamma-globulin, doubling and increase. In the third case, IgA was markedly increased with one each monoclonal IgG1 und IgA, and corresponding shift in the chi/lambda relationship in serum. Immunohistologically, lymphocytes were made up of about 20 percent IgG-containing and about 25 percent IgA-containing cells. Lymphopenia, if present, was associated with markedly reduced blast transformation of peripheral lymphocytes to phytohaemagglutinin. The granulocytes were defective (intracellular killing of Candida albicans and Staphylococcus aureus), while the nitrobluetetrazolium test was normal. There was RBC phagocytosis in the macrophages of bone marrow and in Kupffer cells of all three cases.
...
PMID:[Rapidly debilitating disease with generalized lymphadenopathy, skin involvement and interstitial pulmonary infiltration (report of three cases)]. 23 37
In January 1977 an unsolved outbreak of infection at St. Elizabeth's Hospital (Washington, D.C.) that occurred in 1965 was linked with Legionnaires' disease. The link was made by fluorescent antibody testing with the bacterium isolated from tissues of persons with Legionnaires' disease in the 1976 outbreak in Philadelphia. In July and August 1965, an epidemic of severe respiratory disease characterized by abrupt onset of high fever,
weakness
, malaise, and nonproductive cough, frequently accompanied by radiographic evidence of
pneumonia
, affected at least 81 patients at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, a general psychiatric hospital. Fourteen (17%) of the affected patients died. Intensive epidemiologic and laboratory investigations in 1965 did not determine the etiology. The etiologic organism may have become airborne from sites of soil excavation.
...
PMID:An outbreak in 1965 of severe respiratory illness caused by the Legionnaires' disease bacterium. 36 97
Four cases of congenital, hypotonic-sclerotic muscular dystrophy are presented. The patients showed clinically prominent features described by Ullrich, i.e. congenital muscle
weakness
, hypotonia, and hyperextensibility of distal joints, contractures of proximal joints, high-arched palate, hyperhidrosis, posterior protrusion of calcaneus, and no progression. Muscle biopsies revealed dystrophic changes. Ullrich suggested that this condition was a new entity, but the disease has received little attention. In the present cases superior intelligence and tendency to recurrent upper respiratory tract infections were stressed as characteristics of this disorder. Insufficient cellular immunity was suspected and this may contribute to the recurrent upper respiratory tract infections and
pneumonia
often observed. This disease is considered a distinct entity of multisystemic involvement inherited as an autosomal recessive trait.
...
PMID:Congenital, hypotonic-sclerotic muscular dystrophy. 60 94
Twenty-four cases of Legionnaires' disease were diagnosed at the Wadsworth Veterans Administration Hospital during a 5-month period. All cases occurred in persons exposed to the hospital environment during the usual incubation period of Legionnaires' disease. The clinical illness was quite characteristic. All patients complained of
weakness
, malaise, anorexia, and cough. Rigors, diarrhea, and pleuritic pain were frequent symptoms. All patients had a maximum temperature of greater than or equal to 39.4 degrees C. Thirteen of 22 patients had relative bradycardia. Chest roentgenograms documented
pneumonia
in all patients. Leukocytosis, hyponatremia, hypophosphatemia, and abnormal liver-function test results were typical. Diagnosis was made by serologic criteria in 20 patients, postmortem examination of tissue in two, and both serology and tissue examination in two. Four patients in whom the disease was not suspected died of Legionnaires' disease. One patient died of unrelated causes. Fifteen of 19 survivors received erythromycin therapy. The presentation of Legionnaires' disease was characteristic enough to allow early, specific therapy.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease: clinical features of 24 cases. 68 39
For a number of years we have observed six patients whose illness began after inhaling high concentrations of mercury vapor in a single exposure. They all had symptoms of acute mercury poisoning with fever, chills, chest pain, and
weakness
. Three men had diffuse pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray suggesting chemical
pneumonitis
. Two of the men excreted large amounts of mercury in their urine two days after exposure following BAL therapy. Their chronic symptoms differed somewhat, but many complained of nervousness, irritability, lack of ambition, and loss of sexual desire. Chronic mercury poisoning is generally felt to follow only long periods of exposure. Although thess patients had symptoms which are not pathognomonic of chronic mercury poisoning, we feel the events described strongly suggest their relationship to a single brief exposure and represent a form of chronic mercurialism.
...
PMID:Chronic mercury poisoning from a single brief exposure. 69 Jul 36
The important otolaryngological manifestations of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC), which heretofore have not been described in otolaryngological and other specialty journals, are reviewed. Thirty-seven patients with AMC were studied. Nine of these patients with neurogenic AMC, had otolaryngological manifestations. Six of these had Pierre Robin-like syndromes. Seven patients had severe dysphagia and aspiration
pneumonitis
. Five patients had voice changes, and three of these required tracheotomy to relieve laryngeal obstruction and prevent aspiration. Two of these patients were aphonic and had laryngeal paralysis. Three of the nine patients who had laryngeal examination showed supraglottic narrowing similar to laryngomalacia. Six patients with otolaryngological problems were autopsied, and two had pharyngeal biopsies. The histological examination demonstrated normal laryngeal and pharyngeal musculature. The cricoarytenoid joints were found normal in all the larynges examined. Central nervous system dysfunction rather than simple muscle
weakness
, caused the dysphagia and respiratroy difficulties in patients with neurogenic AMC. Dysphagia with aspiration was the single most important cause of death in approximately 20% of patients with AMC. A tracheotomy and feeding gastrostomy appears essential for successful management of the otolaryngological complications of AMC.
...
PMID:Otolaryngological manifestations of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita. 94 54
An autopsy case of Cronkhite-Canada's syndrome characterized by diffuse gastrointestinal polyposis, alopetia, onychodystrophia and pigmentation of the skin is reported. The patient, 51 year-old-male, died with general
weakness
and
pneumonia
at 6 months after the first notice of alopetia anorexia and weight loss. Numerous and various sized polyps and polypoid lesions were revealed in the gastrointestinal tracts at the autopsy. The microscopic pictures of the lesions were composed of hyperplastic or papillary adenomatous polyps with hyperplasia of mucosa epithelium. In some of the lesions, the glands are cystically dilated containing mucous. Lymph vessels of thelamina propria and the submucosa benerked chronic inflammatory infiltrate was noted. The present report is described the histopathological findings of the gastrointestinal lesions with Cronkhite-Canada syndrome and discussed with literature.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of Cronkhite-Canada syndrome. 99 57
Virus-like crystalline structures in human skeletal muscles have been observed by many electron microspists, but no viruses have been isolated and identified in such cases. An 11-year-old girl who had had muscular
weakness
and physical retardation since early infancy died of
pneumonia
due to atrophy of diaphragmatic and intercostal muscles. Electron microscopy of these muscles revealed a heavy infiltration of picornavirus-like particles that measured 19 to 23 nm in diameter. Subsequent inoculation of primary human-amnion cells with a sonic-treated suspension of the patient's diaphragmatic muscle induced an enterovirus-like cytopathic effect. The isolate was identified with use of Lim-Benyesh--Meinick enterovirus typing serum pools as coxsackievirus Type A-9. This viral isolation supports the belief that the organized electron-dense particles in human muscle are indeed virions.
...
PMID:Chronic myopathy associated with coxsackievirus type A9. A combined electron microscopical and viral isolation study. 111 39
For the first time in Germany cases of a "centronuclear myopathy" are described in a 14-year-old boy and his 18-year-old sister. First symptoms in both patients appeared at 4 to 5 years of age with a "sleepy facial expression", clumsy gait and rapid fatigue. Within few years the disease progressed to generalized muscle
weakness
and atrophy, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia externa and areflexia.
Weakness
and atrophy were most pronounced in the distal muscles of the lower extremities. Both patients were free of epilepsy and the EEG recordings were normal. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities were normal. Repetitive stimulation of nerves revealed a normal transmission from nerve to muscle. Muscle biopsy showed a type I muscle fiber hypotrophy and a type II muscle fibre hypertrophy in addition to a predominance of type I fibres. Both fibre types showed central nuclei, sometimes appearing as chains in longitudinal sections. In most cells with central nuclei there persists a very small pericentral zone free of myofibrils but with increased activity of oxidative enzymes and phosphorylase. 2--3% of muscle fibres in cross sections showed a decreased of absent enzyme activity in the most peripheral fibre zone. Electron microscopy showed evidence of a centrally distinct myofibrillar disintegration. The father of both children had a ptosis at least from the 20th year of age. 5 years later generalized progressive muscle atrophy was recorded. Aged 51 years he died of
pneumonia
. Though not proved most probably the father suffered from the same disease as the children, pointing to an autosomal dominant inheritance in this family. The disease, according to the literature, seems to be genetically heterogeneous. The clinical picture seems to be independent of the mode of inheritance. Our patients showed a relatively rapid progression of symptoms. Pathogenetically the "centronuclear myopathy" may result from a disturbance of correlated nerve-muscle structures starting during early fetal life.
...
PMID:[Centronuclear myopathy with autosomal dominant inheritance(author's transl)]. 115 Feb 40
A Korean nurse was employed in Germany after having passed the routine medical checkup without discovery of apparent disease. Five months later she fell ill with fever due to
pneumonia
. Work was suspended for 8 days and then continued in an infants' ward for another 8 weeks. Because of increasing
weakness
the nurse was reexamined medically. This revealed an open Tuberculosis of the lung. The sputum culture was positive. The following treatment was successfull. No infant or other person with previous contact to the nurse contracted tuberculosis. The explanation for this is presumably given by the virtual speechlessness of the foreign nurse. --The importance of the tuberculin skin test for the diagnosis of tuberculosis is discussed with regard to the declining incidence of new infections, and practicability of mass screening for this disease.
...
PMID:[The significance of speaking for the transfer of bacteria, and of the tuberculin skin test for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (author's transl)]. 121 79
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