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Query: UMLS:C0040425 (
tonsillitis
)
1,594
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The spontaneous development of a cytomegalovirus infection in a healthy adult is described. This illness manifested with fever, headache, malaise, an absolute lymphocytosis with atypical lymphocytes, and liver function abnormalities, but without
tonsillitis
, pharyngitis,
lymphadenopathy
, or splenomegaly. Aseptic meningitis also was present. The pathogenesis of cytomegalovirus mononucelosis and its relationship to other related syndromes are discussed.
...
PMID:Spontaneous cytomegalovirus mononucleosis-like syndrome and aseptic meningitis. 18 29
Neck masses in children most often represent benign lymphadenitis due to infection. The involved lymph nodes are usually small, shotty, diffusely distributed, and superficial. They may be tender and associated with an acute upper respiratory infection or with chronic infection of the tonsils and adenoids. Enlargement of the jugulodigastric node is most often associated with
tonsillitis
, and the spinal accessory group of nodes with adenoiditis. Acute viral diseases may be associated with
lymphadenopathy
; mononucleosis is the most striking example. The differential diagnosis must include deep neck-space abscesses, congenital cysts, and benign as well as malignant neoplasms. A diagnosis can be derived from a consideration of the history and physical findings, the age of the patient, and the location, size, and consistency of the mass. A careful otolaryngologic exam--including the nasopharynx, a chest radiograph, and appropriate blood studies--should be routine. When malignancy is suspected, a biopsy of the mass is indicated.
...
PMID:Neck masses in children: diagnosis and treatment. 95 41
The Rosai-Dorfman syndrome is a benign disease, one of its commonest affected sites being the cervical lymph nodes. This disease should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a cervical
lymphadenopathy
. The syndrome often begins with a chronic rhinitis, and is accompanied by sinusitis,
tonsillitis
or pharyngitis; blood tests indicate chronic infection. The pathogenesis of the disease is still unknown but may include infection or an abnormal autoimmune reaction. The diagnosis is established by the findings of characteristic histiocytes with haemophagocytosis. We report a female patient with persistent cervical lymph node swelling resistant to treatment. The cause was proved by histology to be a Rosai-Dorfman syndrome.
...
PMID:[Rosai-Dorfman syndrome. On the differential diagnosis of lymph node swelling]. 156 88
The efficacy and tolerability of morniflumate suppositories used together with phenoxymethylpenicillin were studied in a placebo-controlled, double-blind trial in 101 children with acute tonsillitis. Patients received a suppository containing 400 mg morniflumate or placebo twice daily for 4 days; all patients also received 1,500,000 IU/day phenoxymethylpenicillin. Response to treatment was assessed by clinical examination before and after 2 and 4 days' treatment. Efficacy was evaluated by resolution of oropharyngeal pain, congestion, fever, size and sensitivity of adenopathies, quality of life and duration of sleep. Body temperature fell rapidly after the start of treatment. There was also resolution of pharyngeal pain, earache, dysphagia and
adenopathy
. Spontaneous pharyngeal pain was present after 4 days in significantly (P = 0.03) fewer patients receiving morniflumate than receiving placebo. It is suggested that morniflumate combined with antibiotic therapy is an effective and well-tolerated treatment for
tonsillitis
in children.
...
PMID:Double-blind, placebo-controlled multicentre trial of the efficacy and tolerance of morniflumate suppositories in the treatment of tonsillitis in children. 211 May 37
Generalized
adenopathy
and splenomegaly developed in an 18-year-old youth after a severe
tonsillitis
followed by headache, tiredness and weight loss for several weeks. Infectious mononucleosis (acute Epstein-Barr virus infection) was confirmed by the demonstration of virus-specific antibodies. A reticulocytosis (24%), decreased haptoglobin concentration (0.6 mg/dl) and increased lactate dehydrogenase activity (657 U/l) indicated marked haemolysis. The bone marrow showed increased erythropoiesis with abnormal maturation. Antibodies against triosephosphate isomerase and against blood group marker "i" were demonstrated in the patient's serum. Antibodies against triosephosphate isomerase from the patient's serum were purified by affinity-chromatography. They strongly reacted with the patient's erythrocytes and under complement activation induced an increased 51Cr liberation from marked erythrocytes. No corresponding effect of anti-i-antibodies was noted at 37 degrees C. With the fall in antibodies against triosephosphate isomerase the haemolysis receded and the patient became free of symptoms after 7 weeks.
...
PMID:[Infectious mononucleosis: hemolysis by autoantibodies against triosephosphate isomerase]. 217 94
Throat cultures were performed throughout 2 school years to determine whether non-group A beta-hemolytic streptococci (NGA BHS) could be isolated more frequently in 232 college students who had symptomatic pharyngitis than from 198 age-matched controls with noninfectious problems. Duplicate throat swabs were inoculated onto plates that contained sheep blood agar, one plate being incubated in a 5% CO2 atmosphere and the other in an anaerobic environment. The BHS were grouped using latex agglutination. Among the NGA BHS, only those from group C were isolated significantly more often among the patients compared with the controls (26% vs 11%). Quantitative colony counts of isolates of group C BHS were generally higher among patients than controls. Patients with group C BHS had fever, exudative
tonsillitis
, and anterior cervical
adenopathy
significantly more frequently than did patients who had throat cultures that were negative for group C BHS. Group C BHS were epidemiologically associated with endemic pharyngitis in this college student population.
...
PMID:Association of group C beta-hemolytic streptococci with endemic pharyngitis among college students. 204 95
In 2 previously healthy groups of 14 children and 17 adults with cytomegalovirus mononucleosis, significant clinical differences were observed. Cervical
lymphadenopathy
, hepatomegaly and lymphocytosis (greater than 5000/microliter) were more common in children and protracted fever more common in adults. Exudative
tonsillitis
indistinguishable from infectious mononucleosis was sometimes seen in children but never in adults.
...
PMID:Cytomegalovirus mononucleosis in children and adults: differences in clinical presentation. 299 73
The histological changes in cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection were first described by RIBBERT in 1881, and for years the virus was dreaded as the agent of infection in newborns. An infectious mononucleosis-like disease with negative heterophil antibodies in otherwise healthy adults was described in 1965. We present six previously healthy adults with CMV mononucleosis observed in 1984. The diagnosis was established by CMV-IgM-ELISA. All patients were febrile for an average of 20 days. The general state of health was reduced in three patients; one patient suffered from headache and another from abdominal pain. Physical examination showed splenomegaly and mild
tonsillitis
in one patient each, but in no case
lymphadenopathy
. All patients had lymhocytosis with reactive forms (virocytes). Elevation of transaminases was seen in four cases. Compared to Epstein-Barr virus mononucleosis, fever in CMV mononucleosis lasts significantly longer and
lymphadenopathy
is evidently rarer. The combination of fever of unknown origin, a negative heterophil antibody titer and the presence of virocytes prompts suspicion of CMV mononucleosis.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects of cytomegalovirus infection in nonimmunosuppressed adults]. 301 71
Infectious mononucleosis has been known for a long time to be a common infection in young adults. It also infects children. In particular, children under the age of 2 years may not express the illness clinically. Diagnostic criteria vary but in young adults usually include the symptoms of fever, exudative
tonsillitis
, and cervical
lymphadenopathy
. Usually, there is a relative and absolute lymphocytosis, with 10 to 20 per cent or greater atypical lymphocytes. Rapid slide tests are accurate and economical and support the diagnosis when positive. False-positive results are known to occur with several other important disease processes; therefore, the clinical presentation and laboratory results must be interpreted in their appropriate context. Quality control is essential even for the rapid slide tests, and experienced examiners are required to review blood smears. The morphology of atypical lymphocytes varies greatly. In addition, morphology interpretation can be hampered by problems in preparation of slides or the holding of blood samples awaiting slide preparation. EBV-specific serodiagnosis has significantly enhanced our ability to study further and differentiate heterophil-negative syndromes that share clinical features with infectious mononucleosis. Acute, past, chronic, and no EBV infection can now be differentiated. Further diagnostic tests for other etiologic agents are necessary when all EBV tests are negative and the clinical situation requires appropriate diagnosis.
...
PMID:The diagnosis of mononucleosis in the office laboratory. 302 3
Mononucleosis is defined as atypical lymphocyte proliferation which causes clinical symptoms such as
tonsillitis
,
lymphadenopathy
, or hepatosplenomegaly. Mononucleosis syndrome is caused by cytomegalovirus (CMV), Toxoplasma, hepatitis virus, adenovirus, or other agents as well as by Epstein-Barr virus. The syndrome is immunologically characterized by the proliferation of activated T cells (HLA-DR+ T cells). We encountered three infants with hepatosplenomegaly who were diagnosed as primary CMV infection by the detection of anti-CMV IgM antibody. Although the patients were otherwise asymptomatic, analysis of lymphocyte subpopulations showed a decreased ratio of CD4+ to CD8+ T cells and augmented expression of HLA-DR antigen on T cells characteristic of infectious mononucleosis. We conclude that inapparent CMV disease may affect the immunologic status of infected children even if it is asymptomatic.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood lymphocyte subpopulations in three infants with hepatosplenomegaly caused by cytomegalovirus infection. 764 91
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