Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040425 (tonsillitis)
1,594 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Group A beta-hemolytic streptococci were found in 38% of 257 young men in military service with acute tonsillitis. Of the 108 patients tested also for viral antibodies, 42% showed a 4-fold rise in antibody titers. Adenovirus was the most frequent (31%) nonstreptococcal agent, followed by Epstein-Barr virus (6%), and influenza virus (5%). Non-group A streptococci were isolated in about the same proportion (18%) as in healthy control subjects. Other data also suggested that these bacteria were carried and not true infecting organisms. Group A streptococci and adenovirus occurred in mixed infection in 9% of the 108 cases. In group A streptococcal tonsillitis compared to others, white blood cell counts were higher (13.3 vs. 8.3 x 10(9)/l, p less than 0.01), C-reactive protein was higher (70 vs. 48 mg/l, p less than 0.01), tonsillitis was more often non-exudative (p less than 0.05), and the duration of fever was shorter (2.2 vs. 3.5 days, p less than 0.01), while there was no difference in the height of the fever or erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
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PMID:Acute tonsillitis in young men: etiological agents and their differentiation. 254 62

The tonsils, paired structures which protect the pharynx, are frequently the target of infections, most often in pediatric patients. Etiology of tonsillitis may be viral (Adenovirus) as well as bacterial (Corynebacterium diphtheria, among others). Clinically, the disease may manifest congestive disturbance and exudative membranes, it may have local or systemic complications, and its treatment is symptomatic.
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PMID:[Tonsillitis]. 263 43

A prospective 1-year study of acute febrile exudative tonsillitis in 110 children was carried out. Viral infection was associated with 42% of the cases, beta-hemolytic streptococci with 31% (12% group A), Mycoplasma pneumoniae with 5%, and unknown cause with 35%. More than one agent was implicated in 14% of the cases. Adenovirus was the viral agent most frequently (19%) recorded. Other viruses involved were Epstein-Barr virus, parainfluenza, influenza A, herpes simplex, and respiratory syncytial viruses. The responsible agent was found by rapid viral antigen detection in 20% of all cases and by rapid test for group A streptococcal antigen detection in 10%. Age was the most important factor in predicting the causative agent. Viral tonsillitis was most common in children younger than 3 years of age and group A beta-hemolytic streptococci tonsillitis in children 6 years of age or more. Clinical analysis of the illness, WBC count, and ESR did not reveal differences that could help in differentiating bacterial from viral tonsillitis. All patients were treated with a regimen of oral penicillin. Fever associated with group A beta-hemolytic streptococci tonsillitis responded to penicillin therapy significantly more rapidly than fever associated with viral infections. These observations demonstrate the prominent role of viruses in the etiology of febrile exudative tonsillitis, especially in young children, and reinforce the benefit of rapid tests before antibiotic therapy is started.
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PMID:Febrile exudative tonsillitis: viral or streptococcal? 360 20

Adenovirus antigen was detected by radioimmunoassay in the nasopharyngeal specimens of 30 of 74 children with febrile exudative tonsillitis. In the other 44 children, the cause of tonsillitis was identified in 16 (beta-hemolytic streptococci or Epstein-Barr, parainfluenza, or herpes simplex viruses). The clinical picture of adenoviral tonsillitis was difficult to differentiate from that of streptococcal disease; 20 of the patients had originally been given antibiotics. In 68% of patients without complications, the serum concentration of C-reactive protein was less than 20 mg/L, suggesting a viral disease. No other hematologic test was found helpful in identifying the adenoviral tonsillitis. The rapid detection of adenovirus antigen permitted withdrawal of unnecessary and ineffective antibiotic treatment in most patients.
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PMID:Rapid diagnosis of adenoviral tonsillitis: a prospective clinical study. 632 57

We describe the clinical characteristics of 209 children younger than 15 years of age with positive pharyngeal cultures for adenovirus. The mean age of the children was 37 +/- 33 months, and the mean peak temperature was 39.2 +/- 0.76 degrees C. On physical examination, tonsillitis was found for 88% of children; 52% of them had exudative tonsillitis. Forty-eight percent of the patients who had a white blood cell count performed had >15,000 leukocytes per mm, and 25% had >20,000 leukocytes per mm. C-reactive protein concentrations were >7 mg/dL for 22.5% of the patients. Adenovirus pharyngeal infections in young children mimic severe bacterial infections.
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PMID:Clinical presentation and characteristics of pharyngeal adenovirus infections. 1609 32

This study clinically and molecularly characterizes an adenovirus epidemic that broke out in Taiwan in April 2004. Clinical data on 325 children diagnosed with acute illness were collected between April 2004 and April 2005, and a diagnosis of adenovirus was confirmed by viral isolation. Polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism were used to identify the adenovirus genotypes in 267 patients. There was a seasonal variation, with a peak incidence between November 2004 and January 2005 (p < 0.001). The median age was 52 months, range 1-210 months. Most cases (90.8%) were younger than 7 years old. Male-to-female ratio was 1.56:1. The most common clinical diagnosis was exudative tonsillitis (50.8%), followed by bronchitis/bronchiolitis (29.9%), conjunctivitis or pharyngoconjunctival fever (22.5%), and acute otitis media (16.3%). Adenovirus type 3 was found in 215 patients (80.5%). The other 52 patients had other genotypes: type 2 (10.1%), type 1 (6.0%), type 5 (1.9%), type 7 (0.7%), type 4 (0.4%), and type 6 (0.4%). Patients with type 3 were significantly older [age >52 months, adjusted odds ratio (OR) 8.55, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.84-40, p = 0.006), their family members had a higher incidence of illness (adjusted OR 8.77, 95% CI 1.55-50, p = 0.01), they coughed (adjusted OR 6.37, 95% CI 1.54-26.3, p = 0.01), and they had a higher C-reactive protein (CRP) level (>2.87 mg/dL, adjusted OR 3.64, 95% CI 1.06-12.3, p = 0.04) than the 52 cases with other genotypes. In conclusion, this adenovirus outbreak, from late autumn to winter, was predominately caused by adenovirus type 3. Patients with this genotype were significantly older, had a higher incidence of cough and family transmission, and had higher CRP levels than those with other genotypes.
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PMID:Molecular and clinical characteristics of adenoviral infections in Taiwanese children in 2004-2005. 1787 5

Adenovirus (ADV) is one of the most common causes of acute respiratory infections for infants and children. The objective of this study was to understand the prevalence of ADV in acute respiratory infections in infants and children in Beijing and the types of the circulating ADVs. Clinical specimens were collected from patients with acute respiratory infections in a consecutive period of 10 years from Jan 2003 to Dec 2012. ADVs were detected from the collected clinical specimens by tissue culture and/or immunofluorescence assay and typed by nested-PCR based on the sequence of hexon gene for ADV types 3 and 7. For those strains which could not be typed by the nest-PCR, the gene fragment was amplified by a universal primer pair for all ADV types from group A to F and the PCR products were sequenced directly and analyzed with sequence comparison. Out of 39214 clinical specimens collected, including 7198 throat swabs from outpatients and 32016 nasopharyngeal aspirates from hospitalized patients, 884 were ADV positive by tissue culture and/or immunofluorescence assay, the overall positive rate was 2.25% (884/39214). The positive rate of ADV from the hospitalized was 2.08% (665/32016), while from the outpatients was 3.04% (219/7198). The ADV positive rate for year 2010 was 3.69%, which was the highest among the 10 years. The types of the ADVs were tested for 848 out of the 884 patients by using the nest-PCR and sequence analysis. It was showed that AD3 was the most prevalent with the rate of 53.18% (451/848), followed by AD7 36.79% (312/848), AD2 3.78% (32/848), AD55 2.24% (19/848), AD1 2.0% (17/848), AD5 0.94% (8/848), AD14 0.47% (4/848), AD6 0.35% (3/848) and AD4 0.24% (2/848). AD3 was the most predominant in most of the years among these 10 years, except 2012, 2003 and 2007. AD7 was the most predominant in 2012, and AD3 and AD7 were co-circulated in 2003 and 2007. Among 26 ADV infected severe pneumonia cases with pulmonary failure, 23 (88.5%) were AD7 positive, while 12 ADV associated tonsillitis, 11 (91.7%) were AD 3. The ADV positive rates from age groups 0-3 years were higher than age groups older than 4 years. The ratio for ADV positive males to females was 1.9 to 1. Adenovirus is still an important pathogen of acute respiratory infection in infants and young children. Most of the ADV associated acute respiratory infections in children in Beijing from 2003 to 2012 were AD3 and AD7. Most of the severe lower respiratory infections were associated with AD7. AD55 generated by recombination of AD11 and AD14 emerged in 2006.
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PMID:[Identification and typing of adenovirus from acute respiratory infections in pediatric patients in Beijing from 2003 to 2012]. 2452 Jul 67