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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The frequency and the possible age-related characteristics of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) were investigated in 195 consecutive elderly subjects (mean age 74 years), referred to endoscopy for abdominal symptoms or sideropenic anaemia. In the 105 of these patients in whom there was any suspicion of GORD, 24-hour pH monitoring was carried out. All the patients were interviewed before the examinations. Erosive or complicated (grade 2-4) oesophagitis was found in 18% of patients. The main symptoms in these patients were dysphagia, respiratory symptoms and
vomiting
.
Chronic cough
, hoarseness or wheezing were present in 57% of patients with oesophagitis compared with 33% of those without oesophagitis (p less than 0.001). The occurrence of heartburn and regurgitation did not differ significantly between patients with or without oesophagitis, although the mean symptom scores were higher in those with oesophagitis. Dyspepsia and chest pain were not typical symptoms in oesophagitis. Of patients with oesophagitis 29% had no typical symptoms of GORD; only 24% of patients with regurgitation had oesophagitis. In 24-hour pH monitoring, a significant increase in the occurrence of symptoms was not seen until total reflux time pH less than 4 exceeded 10%. The occurrence of heartburn did not correlate with the extent of reflux in the pH study. In conclusion, typical symptoms of GORD in the aged were regurgitation, dysphagia, respiratory symptoms and
vomiting
rather than heartburn.
...
PMID:Symptoms of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease in elderly people. 175 93
A questionnaire study was conducted to assess the prevalence and severity of symptoms suggestive of esophageal disorders in a general population. The study included 407 randomly selected subjects, evenly distributed in terms of sex and age, within the age span of 20-79 years. A total of 337 subjects replied (85%). Symptoms suggestive of gastroesophageal reflux were found among 25% of the participants. Cough on swallowing was common (27%), as was globus (16%) and chest pain (13%). In addition, dysphagia was reported by 10% and
vomiting
by 9%. The symptoms were usually mild, and moderate to severe symptoms were reported only occasionally (1-4%). No statistical correlation was found between esophageal symptoms and age, sex, or the reported consumption of tobacco, alcohol, or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The frequency of heartburn and/or acid regurgitation was twice as common among those with symptoms of respiratory disease as among those with no respiratory complaints. A stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that a
chronic cough
and/or breathing difficulties were significantly related to the presence of symptoms suggestive of gastroesophageal reflux.
...
PMID:The prevalence of symptoms suggestive of esophageal disorders. 200 1
Nine black children aged between 3 months and 30 months of age, with human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-I) infection are described to draw the attention of health professionals in southern Africa to special clinical characteristics useful for recognising this problem, which has many shared features with common diseases of infancy and childhood in the Third World. The main presenting complaints were
chronic cough
and persistent diarrhoea and
vomiting
. These children frequently had diarrhoea (8 of 9 patients), mucocutaneous candidiasis (8), pneumonia (7), hepatosplenomegaly (9), significant lymphadenopathy (5) and wasting (5). All were infected by common bacteria, such as Gram-negative organisms, Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Campylobacter jejuni, or by opportunistic infections such as Candida or cytomegalovirus (CMV), or by both bacterial and opportunistic organisms. A raised total serum globulin level, anaemia, lymphopenia and a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis were frequent findings. Incomplete data on parental HIV status suggest perinatal transmission. Three of the children were HIV-antigen positive. The diagnosis of full-blown acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), using the stringent Centers for Disease Control criteria, is difficult in our situation because of limited diagnostic resources; however, using these criteria, and the clinical case definition for AIDS recommended by World Health Organisation, it is thought that probably 4 of these children could be considered as having AIDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Some early observations on HIV infection in children at King Edward VIII Hospital, Durban. 223 85
Seventy-five infants and children presenting during the period December 1984 to December, 1987 with the clinical features of
vomiting
, failure to thrive,
chronic cough
, recurrent pneumonia and atypical asthma were evaluated for gastroesophageal reflux by standard barium esophagram. Fifty six cases (74.7%) and as many as 80% of the infants studied had gastroesophageal reflux; Grade II reflux was seen in 12 cases, Grade III in 30 and Grade IV in 14 cases. The patients with gastroesophageal reflux were put on medical treatment. All the patients had subjective improvement after 6 weeks to 6 months of conservative treatment and none of them developed further complications of gastroesophageal reflux during a follow-up period varying from two months to fifteen months. Anti-reflux surgery was not considered owing to the subjective improvement in all the patients on conservative treatment. We conclude that gastroesophageal reflux is very common in infants and children and urge the need to evaluate the patients presenting with the symptoms suggesting gastroesophageal reflux by barium esophagram; conservative treatment is the mainstay in the management of these children.
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children. 275 28
One hundred and thirty out-patients, affected by acute and
chronic cough
caused by upper respiratory tract inflammation, took part in two clinical studies aimed at evaluating the efficacy and tolerability of glaucine , a new antitussive agent. The first study involved 90 patients in a double-blind comparative trial of glaucine and codeine: both treatments were administered as a syrup at a dosage of 30 mg 3-times daily for 7 days. The cough suppressant effect of the two treatments was checked by the physician and the patient using a 4-point scale (from absent to severe), and by the patient using a visual analogue scale. Mean scores of the physician's evaluation decreased from 3.0 to 1.10 after codeine and from 3.0 to 0.47 after glaucine (p less than 0.001 between treatments). Mean values of the patients' visual analogue scales decreased from 83 mm to 17 mm after codeine, and from 85 mm to 7 mm after glaucine (p less than 0.001 between treatments). Constipation and nausea were reported by 9 patients on codeine and by no patient on glaucine (p less than 0.01). One patient on codeine was withdrawn from the study after 3 days because of
vomiting
, constipation and nausea. The second study was an open trial in 40 patients who received glaucine capsules at a dosage of 30 mg 3-times daily for 28 days. The antitussive effect of the treatment was evaluated on the basis of the same criteria as in the first study. The mean score of the physician's evaluation decreased from 3.0 to 0.15 (p less than 0.001); the mean value of the patients' visual analogue scales decreased from 93 mm to 1 mm (p less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Efficacy and tolerability of glaucine as an antitussive agent. 637 56
An 80-year-old man presented with subjective fever,
chronic cough
occasionally producing scant yellow sputum, retrosternal pleuritic pain, and dyspnea on walking one block. Since symptom onset three months earlier, he had lost 20 pounds; he had had two loose stools a day, fatigue, malaise, and anorexia but not hemoptysis, nausea,
vomiting
, hematemesis, hematochezia, or melena. He denied paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea or orthopnea. As far as could be ascertained, he not recently been exposed to tuberculosis or any other infectious disease. He had previously been seen at another clinic and had completed a 10-day trial of erythromycin (500 mg p.o. q12 h) without apparent change in symptoms.
...
PMID:Pulmonary infiltrates in an elderly man. 1045 60
In non-smokers the underlying causes for chronic persistent cough (CPC) e.g.
chronic cough
without diagnostic chest X-ray or pulmonary function test--are usually as follows: several common upper airways diseases, bronchial (cough type) asthma, gastrooesophageal reflux or treatment with an ACE (angiotensin converting enzyme)--inhibitor. In 10% of CPC however the cause remains uncertain. We report a 30 year old non-smoker with severe coughing and repeated
vomiting
for two months. No laboratory or technical data could be collected suggestive of a common cause of CPC: Upper airways disease, bronchial flow limitation or hyperresponsiveness, ACE inhibitor medication, B. pertussis infection, gastrooesophageal reflux disease (by 24 hours pH-probe) were ruled out. Fiberbronchoscopic findings remained unremarkable, except for the bronchial biopsy specimen, which showed moderate eosinophilic inflammation of the mucosa and marked thickening of the subepithelial layer. Since the cough was non-productive, sputum induction with 3 ml nebulised 3% NaCl solution was performed. 28% of the granulocytes were eosinophil stained. A low quality morning sputum (< 1 ml) showed 21% eosinophilia. Thus, the diagnosis of eosinophilic bronchitis was established. 400 micrograms budesonide dry powder inhalations b.i.d. for one week resolved the cough, treatment was stopped after three weeks. No recurrence was seen two months later. Both the cough type asthma and the eosinophilic bronchitis could represent a form fruste of classical bronchial asthma beyond wheezing or dyspnoea, but with the common main symptom: cough. Since hyperresponsiveness and cough are phenotypic hallmarks of cough variant asthma, in eosinophilic bronchitis--beside cough--another two features of asthma are present: eosinophilic inflammation of the mucosa along with sputum eosinophilia and subepithelial layer thickening. Not surprisingly, eosinophilic bronchial inflammation could be shown in patients with cough variant asthma as well, who--up to 56% during a four year-period--develop classic asthma. The long-term outcome of eosinophilic bronchitis is not known, however. Thus, asthma, cough variant asthma and cough due to eosinophilic bronchitis can mirror different phenotypes or phases of the same entity. CPC due to either the cough type asthma or the eosinophilic bronchitis is like asthma fast responding to inhalative steroids. (Induced) sputum staining should be added to the diagnostic armamentarium of CPC.
...
PMID:[Eosinophilic bronchitis without asthma--an additional rare cause for chronic persistent cough (CPC)? A 30-year old patient with severe CPC due to eosinophilic bronchitis without asthma or hyperreactivity]. 1144 11
We describe a case of Acanthamoeba encephalitis in a 45-year-old Caucasian male with acute myelogenous leukemia, who was 140 days status post partially mismatched related donor peripheral blood stem cell transplant. The patient had been transplanted with a highly T-cell-depleted graft, and was not taking any immunosuppressive drugs, and had no history of graft-versus-host disease. He complained of nausea,
vomiting
, and occasional episodes of confusion; he also had a
chronic cough
since transplantation. Physical examination was unremarkable except for orthostatic hypotension. Neurologic examination was within normal limits. Laboratory values including electrolytes, white blood cells and platelet counts were normal. Computed tomographic scan of the brain showed a pansinusitis and a hyperdense lesion along the corona radiata suggestive of a fungal abscess. Magnetic resonance imaging showed multifocal areas with mass effect in the posterior fossa and parietal and occipital lobes. The patient had worsening respiratory failure and died three days after admission. At autopsy, specific immunofluorescent staining identified Acanthamoeba castellani in the brain and lungs.
...
PMID:Acanthamoeba castellani encephalitis following partially mismatched related donor peripheral stem cell transplantation. 1498 4
A 4-year-old girl was evaluated for hair loss of a few weeks' duration. History of the present illness, medical history, and review of systems were obtained from the parents, who described progressive diffuse hair loss with hair dryness and brittleness, with no change in the child's eating habits or any other unusual symptoms. No fever, weight loss, diarrhea,
vomiting
, abdominal pain,
chronic cough
, dyspnea, change in appetite, change in bowel habit, or urinary symptoms were noted. On further questioning, her nutritional history revealed that she always favored cow's milk in her diet. The patient has been healthy with no significant medical history, surgical history, psychiatric history, or history of hospitalization. She was taking no medications. Her mother's pregnancy and the child's birth history were uneventful. The child was up-to-date on her vaccinations. Her physical examination showed a healthy-appearing child who was at 50% on the height chart and 70% on the weight growth chart. She was afebrile with a respiratory rate of 24 breaths per minute, pulse rate of 110 beats per minute, and pulse oximetry of 99% on room air. Skin examination revealed interstitial diffuse patchy alopecia with very dry hair and nonscarred, normal-appearing scalp. The hair pull test was normal, with 4 hairs extracted. Results of examination of her eyes (including visual acuity) and lungs were normal, and no abnormalities were found on heart, abdominal, musculoskeletal, and neurologic examinations. Laboratory workup showed normal electrolytes, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, and blood sugar levels. Her complete blood cell count with differential was normal, ferritin concentration level was 110 ng/mL (reference, 40-200 ng/mL), iron level was 75 microg/dL (reference, 35-175 microg/dL), and total iron-binding capacity was 310 microg/dL (reference, 245-400 microg/dL). Levels of liver enzymes, total bilirubin, serum protein, and albumin were normal, as were the results of urinalysis. Thyroid function test results were normal and levels of vitamins A and D were also normal. Low levels of serum zinc were measured repeatedly at 48 and 61 microg/dL (reference, 66-144 microg/dL) at 2 different laboratories. She was started on zinc supplement (50 mg daily) for 6 months and her diet was modified. The hair loss stopped in 3 weeks. Follow-up in 4 months showed no evidence of alopecia, with normal-looking hair.
...
PMID:Diffuse alopecia in a child due to dietary zinc deficiency. 1761 80
Achalasia is a rare motility disorder of the esophagus which results from lack of enervation of the lower esophageal sphincter muscles and leads to dilatation of proximal esophagus. Patients with achalasia presents typically with dysphagia,
vomiting
of undigested food and failure to thrive. Cough can be present in achalasia patients due to aspiration of food or due to airway compression by the dilated esophagus. We report two cases of achalasia presenting primarily with prolonged cough. Diagnosis of achalasia in both cases was delayed due to this atypical presentation. This highlights the importance of recognizing achalasia as a potential cause of
chronic cough
in order to avoid delayed diagnosis and mismanagement.
...
PMID:Achalasia: unusual cause of chronic cough in children. 1865 83
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