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Query: UMLS:C0040586 (
tracheobronchitis
)
449
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have presented a case of
tracheobronchitis
due to C pseudodiphtheriticum in a patient with COPD who was treated with prednisone and apparently was not otherwise immunocompromised. Chronic lung disease seems to predispose to infection with C pseudodiphtheriticum; it can also occur in the immunocompetent host. This organism, when isolated in pure culture, should not be dismissed as a contaminant, but must be considered a possible etiologic agent. Sensitivity of diphtheroids to antibiotics is extremely variable. We believe vancomycin should be used in respiratory tract infections caused by diphtheroids, including C pseudodiphtheriticum, until the results of in vitro antibiotic susceptibility tests are available.
...
PMID:Tracheobronchitis due to Corynebacterium pseudodiphtheriticum. 201 40
Necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
(NT) associated with conventional mechanical ventilation or high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) is a lesion reported most often in neonates. In most cases, a specific cause is not identified. We describe a case of NT in an adult that occurred during HFJV and was attributable to inadequate humidification.
...
PMID:Overwhelming necrotizing tracheobronchitis due to inadequate humidification during high-frequency jet ventilation. 206 Mar 63
For bronchoalveolar lavages (BAL) after lung transplantation in the rat two different tubes for creation of a permanent tracheostoma were devised and tested. Typ I was of plastic material and required closure of the trachea oral of the tube thus excluding the upper respiratory tract for breathing. All these animals deprived of their sense of smell and direction died within 50 hours despite optimal husbandry. Typ II was a T-shaped metall tube allowing normal nasal breathing. This tube was well tolerated by the animals and facilitated repeated BAL. BAL on day 3 following tracheotomy with 5% lymphocytes, 2% polymorphonuclear leukocytes and 95% alveolar macrophages was considered to be normal when compared with human findings. An increase in polymorphonuclear leucocytes and epithelial cells together with bacteria on day 6 was believed to be due to
tracheobronchitis
. This assumption was supported by the fact, that both cell types and the number of bacteria significantly decreased 3 days later. A steady increase of lymphocytes seems to be associated with repeated BAL.
...
PMID:[Permanent tracheostomy in rats]. 209 55
Branhamella catarrhalis is now recognized as an important cause of lower respiratory tract infections, especially in the elderly. In most instances, pathogenicity is presumed by recovery of the organism in a sputum culture, a method that is less than conclusive. In order to better diagnose B. catarrhalis infections, an enzyme-linked immunoassay has been developed using P-protein as antigen to measure antibodies to B. catarrhalis. In 17 elderly patients with B. catarrhalis pneumonia and 12 with
tracheobronchitis
, acute-phase serum antibody titers to P-protein were found to be significantly increased when compared with those of normal subjects (both p less than 0.02). There were no differences in antibody titers between patients with pneumonia and
tracheobronchitis
. Antibody titers of convalescent-phase sera increased over those of acute-phase sera in 46 percent of pneumonia patients and 50 percent of
tracheobronchitis
patients. The results demonstrated that lower respiratory tract infections with B. catarrhalis promote a significant elevation in antibody response to P-protein of B. catarrhalis.
...
PMID:Antibody response to P-protein in patients with Branhamella catarrhalis infections. 211 Oct 89
A piglet model of acute respiratory failure was used to determine whether necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
(NTB) produced during high-frequency pneumatic flow interrupter (HFFI) ventilation could be attenuated by prior administration of 2 mg/kg hydrocortisone IV. Fourteen piglets (means age 3.6 days, means wt 1.4 kg) were anesthetized and paralyzed before saline lung lavage. The animals were randomly assigned to either placebo (P) or hydrocortisone (H) group. Continuous HFFI (10 Hz) was interrupted five times per minute by a 1-second deflationary pause. All animals were kept on 1.0 FI02 with ventilators adjusted to maintain adequate arterial blood gases. Airway pressures were similar for both groups. After 8 hours of ventilation the animals were sacrificed and their lungs inflated with formalin to 40 cm H2O. Sections were obtained from trachea, carina, main stem, and peripheral bronchi. A total airway injury (TAIS) was calculated by a pathologist unaware of treatment assignment. There was a significant difference (p less than 0.01, Wilcoxon rank sum) in TAIS scores between P (means 21.3) and H (means 7.8). In five out of seven P animals and in one out of seven H animals, NTB was severe and extended to the hilar bronchi. Although NTB is multifactorial in origin, the prior use of hydrocortisone may decrease the severity and extent of lesions by modifying the inflammatory response to this specific airway injury.
...
PMID:Necrotizing tracheobronchitis following high frequency ventilation: effect of hydrocortisone. 212 25
During the autumn of 1988 an outbreak of canine infectious
tracheobronchitis
, which seemed to be more infectious than usual, occurred throughout Scandinavia. Paired serum samples and bacterial swabs were collected from 52 dogs with clinical signs of infectious
tracheobronchitis
in three districts of Norway. The results revealed a fourfold or greater rise in the titre of antibodies against canine parainfluenza virus in 79 per cent of the cases, strongly suggesting that the virus was of aetiological importance in the outbreak. Bordetella bronchiseptica was not isolated from the diseased dogs, and they showed no rise in the titres of antibodies against influenza virus, reovirus or adenovirus.
...
PMID:Serological, bacteriological and clinical observations on an outbreak of canine infectious tracheobronchitis in Norway. 216 80
The nature of acute lower respiratory tract infection (ALRI) in hospitalized children and of the associated viral agents was assessed in a study of 601 children less than 5 years old over a 24-month period. Of these children, 80% were less than 24 months of age and the ratio of boys to girls was 1.7:1. Pneumonia (86.5% of cases) was the most frequently observed clinical manifestation. Shedding of virus was detected in 21.1% of the children; the highest rate occurred in infants 0-5 months old (27%) as compared with a rate of only 12.5% in children 25-60 months old. Virus was detected in 33.3%, 32.8%, 21.2%, and 20% of the cases of
tracheobronchitis
, bronchiolitis, pneumonia, and croup, respectively. Among the viruses detected, 78% were respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) (91% of infections with this virus occurred in children less than 2 years old) and 14.4% were influenza virus types A and B. Of the RSV infections, 61% occurred in infants less than 1 year old. The case-fatality rate was 6.8% overall and was 4.8% in virus-associated cases. No consistent pattern of seasonal occurrence of viral infections was discerned. RSV was detected throughout the year, with increased prevalence from January to April.
...
PMID:Acute lower respiratory tract infection due to virus among hospitalized children in Dhaka, Bangladesh. 217 37
The type of lung disease caused by metal compounds depends on the nature of the offending agent, its physicochemical form, the dose, exposure conditions and host factors. The fumes or gaseous forms of several metals, e.g. cadmium (Cd), manganese (Mn), mercury (Hg), nickel carbonyl (Nl(CO)4, zinc chloride (ZnCl2), vanadium pentoxide (V2O5), may lead to acute chemical pneumonitis and pulmonary oedema or to acute
tracheobronchitis
. Metal fume fever, which may follow the inhalation of metal fumes e.g. zinc (Zn), copper (Cu) and many others, is a poorly understood influenza-like reaction, accompanied by an acute self-limiting neutrophil alveolitis. Chronic obstructive lung disease may result from occupational exposure to mineral dusts, including probably some metallic dusts, or from jobs involving the working of metal compounds, such as welding. Exposure to cadmium may lead to emphysema. Bronchial asthma may be caused by complex platinum salts, nickel, chromium or cobalt, presumably on the basis of allergic sensitization. The cause of asthma in aluminium workers is unknown. It is remarkable that asthma induced by nickel (Ni) or chromium (Cr) is apparently infrequent, considering their potency and frequent involvement as dermal sensitizers. Metallic dusts deposited in the lung may give rise to pulmonary fibrosis and functional impairment, depending on the fibrogenic potential of the agent and on poorly understood host factors. Inhalation of iron compounds causes siderosis, a pneumoconiosis with little or no fibrosis. Hard metal lung disease is a fibrosis characterized by desquamative and giant cell interstitial pneumonitis and is probably caused by cobalt, since a similar disease has been observed in workers exposed to cobalt in the absence of tungsten carbide. Chronic beryllium disease is a fibrosis with sarcoid-like epitheloid granulomas and is presumably due to a cell-mediated immune response to beryllium. Such a mechanism may be responsible for the pulmonary fibrosis occasionally found in subjects exposed to other metals e.g. aluminium (Al), titanium (Ti), rare earths. The proportion of lung cancer attributable to occupation is around 15%, with exposure to metals being frequently incriminated. Underground mining of e.g. uranium or iron is associated with a high incidence of lung cancer, as a result of exposure to radon. At least some forms of arsenic, chromium and nickel are well established lung carcinogens in humans. There is also evidence for increased lung cancer mortality in cadmium workers and in iron or steel workers.
...
PMID:Metal toxicity and the respiratory tract. 217 66
The advent of high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) as an alternative method of respiratory support for newborns has been implicated as a causative agent of necrotizing
tracheobronchitis
(NTB). We conducted a controlled trial of prolonged HFJV and conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV) in adult cats to determine effects on airway injury related to mode of ventilation and placement of the jet injector (proximal vs distal trachea). Fifteen cats were randomly assigned to either high-frequency positive pressure ventilation, proximal injection jet ventilation, or distal injection jet ventilation. The animals were ventilated for more than 33 hours. Post mortem, the trachea and respiratory tree were removed en bloc and fixed in formalin. A pathologist, unaware of the mode of ventilation, examined tracheobronchial histology and assigned scores using a technique previously described. Lung parenchymal tissue was also assessed using a similar grading system. Statistical analysis (Kruskal-Wallis analysis of variance) demonstrated no significant differences between tracheobronchial or lung parenchymal histopathology regardless of the mode of ventilation. We conclude that (1) the adult cat serves as a useful model for evaluating histopathologic effects of prolonged ventilation, (2) the etiology and pathogenesis of airway injury appears to be multifactorial, and the mode of ventilation is only one of many contributing variables, and (3) previously demonstrated differences between CMV and HFJV may be related to a much shorter duration of ventilation.
...
PMID:Tracheobronchial and pulmonary histopathology following conventional and high-frequency jet ventilation. 217 88
A comparative, prospective study was made of the incidence of infection in the lower airway (purulent
tracheobronchitis
and pneumonia) in long-term patients who were mechanically ventilated due to respiratory failure of noninfectious origin. Twenty-eight patients were randomly allocated into a study group (A, n = 13) in which a nonabsorbable paste containing 2% tobramycin, 2% amphotericin B, and 2% polymyxin E was administered locally to decontaminate the oropharynx, and a control group (B, n = 15) in which a paste without antibiotics was also applied to the oropharynx. We studied the effectiveness of the prophylactic technique in decontaminating the oropharynx and trachea of organisms potentially pathogenic for the respiratory system. Decontamination was successful in ten of 13 patients in group A vs. one of 15 patients in group B (p less than .001). The results demonstrated a lower rate of infection in the lower respiratory tract in the study group (three patients with
tracheobronchitis
and no pneumonias) than in the control group (three patients with
tracheobronchitis
and 11 with pneumonia), the difference between both being highly significant (p less than .001). Two (15%) patients in group B developed sepsis of pulmonary origin. None of the patients on prophylactic treatment developed this complication. Although the overall mortality was similar in both groups (group A, 30% vs. group B, 33%), we believe that infection contributed to a great extent to the death of two of five patients in group B. We conclude that nosocomial pneumonia, which is a frequent complication in critically ill patients on mechanical ventilation, could be prevented by local application of nonabsorbable antibiotics to the oropharynx.
...
PMID:Prevention of nosocomial lung infection in ventilated patients: use of an antimicrobial pharyngeal nonabsorbable paste. 222 93
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