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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A high proportion of Cree and other North American Indian children have a chronic cough and many have bronchial wall thickening on radiographs, reminiscent of white children with asthma, mild cystic fibrosis, or immune deficiency. When compared to postmortem studies, radiographs underestimate the degree of bronchial wall thickening present. As compared to white children, Indian children in the first two years of life are more susceptible to recurrent bronchitis and pneumonia, are much more likely to develop pneumonia with rubeola and pertussis, and are more likely to develop chronic lung disease after adenovirus infections. Staphylococcal complications with pneumatocele formation are more common. A greater number acquire pneumonia while in hospital with other medical or surgical problems. Indian children with pneumonia recover more slowly, and some continue to deteriorate even after admission to hospital.
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PMID:Native children's lung. 51 94

The availability of acellular pertussis vaccines, which appear to be both safe and immunogenic in adults, will require that vaccine advisory groups make recommendations regarding their use. Pertussis in adults has negligible mortality but is responsible for about one-quarter of cases of chronic cough syndrome in young adults. Parents and other infant caregivers are important transmitters of pertussis to infants, the group who have the highest morbidity and mortality. Assuming that further studies confirm the immunogenicity and safety profile of acellular pertussis vaccines in adults, recommendations can be made for its use for universal immunization of adolescents, epidemic control, and strongly considered targeted adults who give care to infants. Factors that mitigate against including acellular pertussis vaccine in the recommended decennial tetanus-diphtheria toxoids booster include the short duration of the immune response to the acellular pertussis vaccine, increased cost and reactogenicity, and the lack of vaccine delivery systems to most adults. The elderly and the infirm, who are the current focus of adult immunization programs, are unlikely candidates for pertussis immunization. Therefore, recommendations for use of acellular pertussis vaccine in adults should be selective, rather than universal.
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PMID:Indications for acellular pertussis vaccines in adults: the case for selective, rather than universal, recommendations. 1044 31

The human respiratory tract pathogen Bordetella pertussis is the major cause of whooping cough in infants and young children, and also causes chronic cough in adults. B. pertussis infection damages ciliated epithelium in the respiratory tract. However, the interaction of the bacterium with the respiratory mucosa is poorly understood, and previous studies have either utilized animal tissue which may not be appropriate, or isolated cell systems which lack the complexity of the respiratory mucosa. We have studied the interaction of B. pertussis strain BP536 with human nasal turbinate tissue in an air-interface organ culture over 5 days. We have also compared infection by BP536 with two other strains, Tohama I and CN2992, to determine whether the interactions observed with BP536 are consistent, and, in both nasal turbinate and adenoid organ cultures at 24 h, to determine whether there were differences between tissue from different parts of the respiratory tract. BP536 adhered to cilia, most commonly at their base, and disorganized their spatial arrangement, they also adhered to damaged tissue and mucus, but very rarely to unciliated cells. Within the first 24 h there was a five-fold increase in bacterial density on ciliated cells, and the total number of adherent bacteria increased up to 96 h. Infection caused increased mucus at 24h and an increase in damaged epithelium from 72 h which involved both ciliated and unciliated cells. The number of residual ciliated cells did not decrease after 72 h. The three different strains of B. pertussis exhibited similar interactions with the mucosa, and there was no tissue specificity for adenoid or turbinate tissue. We conclude that B. pertussis adhered to multiple sites on the mucosa and caused hypersecretion and epithelial damage which are the pathological changes described in vivo.
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PMID:Interaction of Bordetella pertussis with human respiratory mucosa in vitro. 1095 56

Cough is one of the most common complaints causing patients to seek medical attention, and chronic cough, defined as a cough period of at least three weeks, accounts for more than a third of referrals to a chest physician. Cough is an important factor in the spread and survival of microorganisms, but until recently little attention has been given to Bordetella pertussis (B. pertussis) in patients with chronic cough. This review summarizes the B. pertussis diagnostic methods--culture--polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and serology--and surveys the literature on B. pertussis and chronic cough in adults. There is growing evidence that B. pertussis is an important cause of persistent cough in adults; thus prevalence of pertusssis of 12.4-26% has been reported in studies from US, Australia and Germany. Recently we found evidence of pertussis as the cause of chronic cough in 16% of otherwise healthy adults in Denmark. Therefore, patients with chronic cough should be examined for B. pertussis infection. The demonstration of B. pertussis in an adult patient with chronic cough has two advantages: 1) the patient can be reassured that symptoms will disappear spontaneously, why more or less invasive examinations and empirical therapeutic trials can be omitted, 2) the source of infection can be eradicated, and contact persons, particularly non vaccinated infants in whom pertussis might be very severe, can be treated in order to avoid or attenuate clinical symptoms.
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PMID:Bordetella pertussis in the aetiology of chronic cough in adults. Diagnostic methods and clinic. 1141 22

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.
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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

Only in some particular cases chronic cough requires special investigations. Respiratory diseases linked to environment are frequent in children. Cough is the most common symptom in child asthma and usually occurs during sleep or exercise. Environmental tobacco smoke exposure may concern up to 30% of families. Questioning should systematically check for parental smoking in children with chronic cough since avoidance is the only effective treatment. The incidence of whooping cough appears to be increasing and the diagnosis may be difficult among already immunized children in whom symptoms are often nonspecific. Nowadays Bordetella pertussis can easily be detected on nasal smears (ELISA, PCR, cultures). Swallowing dysfunction may cause productive cough in toddlers, most often related to functional dyspraxia, yet possibly due to aerodigestive tract malformation. Unrecognized bronchial foreign body is a well-known pitfall particularly between 9 and 36 months of age. Bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis are responsible for chronic productive cough in toddlers and older children. In teenagers, psychogenic coughing is difficult to manage and usually requires psycho- and speech therapy.
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PMID:[Chronic cough in children: signs of serious disease and investigations]. 1168 88

Three cases of pertussis (whooping cough) identified in a military emergency department are reported. Two of these cases involved infants with typical presentations. One of these infants was too young to have received immunizations, and the other child was only partially immunized. The third case involved an active duty soldier with a chronic cough. Pertussis has become increasingly important as a cause of chronic cough in adults. As a result of the infectivity of this organism, close-quarter situations, such as day care centers and military barracks, create the opportunity for substantial person-to-person transmission. Typical and atypical clinical presentations of pertussis are discussed, with an emphasis on currently available diagnostic modalities. The epidemiology and pathophysiology of this disease are also reviewed. The medical management of active duty soldiers and their dependents (both pediatric and adult) with this largely underappreciated infection and their close contacts is presented.
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PMID:Pertussis in a military and military beneficiary population: case series and review of the literature. 1190 69

Although France has had a vaccination program for 40 years, since 1990, an increase in whooping cough cases with parent-infant transmission has been observed. This study prospectively assessed the frequency of Bordetella pertussis infection in adults who consulted general practitioners for a persistent cough without an evident diagnosis. Among 217 patients, 70 (32%) confirmed whooping cough cases were identified. One case was culture positive, 36 were polymerase chain reaction positive, and 40 had increases or decreases of > or =2-fold in anti-pertussis toxin IgG titer between serum samples collected during the acute and convalescent phases. The median duration of cough in confirmed cases was 49 days (range, 13-123 days). Of the patients, 60% reported vaccination, and 33% reported whooping cough in infancy. Pertussis should be considered for diagnosis of acute and chronic cough in adults. Future studies should evaluate the public health interest of booster doses of pertussis vaccine in adults.
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PMID:Evidence of Bordetella pertussis infection in adults presenting with persistent cough in a french area with very high whole-cell vaccine coverage. 1213 39

Pertussis, once a serious respiratory disease in children, has recently been identified as a common cause of chronic cough in adults. Military personnel are known to be vulnerable to this disease. After a training barracks exposure to pertussis, routine arrangements for contact prophylaxis with erythromycin failed. This experience is reported here as well as that of our subsequent aggressive attempts using directly observed prophylaxis (DOP) with standard erythromycin regimens. No secondary cases occurred. However, many contacts (35%) could not finish a 14-day course despite DOP, mostly because of nausea (85%) or diarrhea (72%). Seventeen (18%) soldiers missed classes because of erythromycin side effects; five required emergency department visits or hospital admission for the same. Sixteen (17%) soldiers were switched to azithromycin because of side effects; all were able to complete a 14-day course without symptoms. High adherence rates with erythromycin administration using DOP are attainable but may trigger unacceptable toxicities; alternative prophylactic regimens should be considered for active duty personnel.
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PMID:Experience with directly observed prophylaxis using erythromycin in military trainees exposed to pertussis. 1528 68

Coughing that lasts >3 weeks is generally considered chronic. The causes of chronic cough are many. Most often, chronic cough is due to postnasal drainage, asthma, and/or gastroesophageal disease. However, other causes such as laryngopharyngeal reflux, vocal cord dysfunction, occult sinusitis, pertussis, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor should be considered. Even rarer entities will be discussed as well as some of the pathophysiology associated with the cough reflex.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of chronic cough. 1645 May 67


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