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)

This report presents the results of the clinical observation of 96 children under ten years of age with acute otitis media (107 ears) who visited our out-patient clinic from May 1986 to August 1987. The patients were classified into the following three groups according to clinical course: Group 1: 25 cases (26.0%) in which acute inflammatory findings rapidly disappeared and otitis media was cured within two weeks with no evidence of effusion; Group 2: 62 cases (64.6%) in which acute inflammatory findings rapidly disappeared but obvious accumulation of effusion which resolved gradually was observed and in which otitis media was cured from two weeks to three months after onset; Group 3: 9 cases (9.4%) in which persistent accumulation of effusion for more than three months was observed and which required myringotomy and insertion of a ventilation tube and in which a diagnosis of otitis media with effusion was made. The presence or absence of allergic diseases, adenoid symptoms, and otorrhea, or history of tonsillitis had no affect on the prognosis of acute otitis media. However, patients with a history of acute otitis media were at a significantly higher risk of developing the disease chronically. At the time of the resolution of the tympanic redness, abnormal findings in the tympanic membrane and tympanogram (TG), suggestive of the presence of middle ear effusion, were observed in approximately 80% of the patients. Approximately 20% of the patients who showed Type Cs or B in TG at that time developed otitis media with effusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical observation of acute otitis media in children]. 275 23

In a prospective study, 69 children admitted for adenoidectomy were divided into 4 subgroups according to their symptomatology. These were: nasal obstruction alone; glue ear; recurrent ear aches and probable otitis media; and recurrent sore throats and probable tonsillitis. The adenoids removed were bacteriologically analysed to assess both the spectrum of organisms present and the colony counts per gram of adenoid tissue (10(5) organisms per gram was regarded as representing infection). There was no significant difference between the subgroups with regard to either the presence of infection or the spectrum of organisms grown. We conclude that while infection in the adenoid bed must be involved in the pathogenesis of bacterial otitis media, the concentration of organisms present in the adenoids is unimportant and other factors must be responsible for the migration of organisms up the Eustachian tube.
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PMID:Adenoid infection: its relationship to otitis media, glue ear and tonsillitis. 366 35