Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (bronchitis)
6,902 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Middle lobe syndrome (MLS) is an uncommon lung disorder involving the right middle lobe and/or lingula and is characterized by a spectrum of clinical and pathological lesions ranging from recurrent atelectasis or pneumonias to bronchiectasis. Despite several series reporting the clinical features of MLS, histopathological descriptions are rare. We reviewed the clinical characteristics and pathological findings in 21 patients with MLS who underwent surgical resections. Six male and 15 female patients between the ages of 5 and 80 years (mean, 47 years) were studied. All patients were symptomatic and complained of chronic cough (8), hemoptysis (6), chest pain (4), dyspnea (3), or fever (2). The right middle lobe was involved in 11 patients, the lingula in four patients, and both right middle lobe and lingula in six patients. Chest radiographs, bronchograms, and/or computed tomography scans were available for review in 19 patients and showed consolidation (8), bronchiectasis (9), patchy infiltrates (5), and atelectasis (4) in various combinations. Pathological findings included bronchiectasis in 10 patients, chronic bronchitis/bronchiolitis with lymphoid hyperplasia in seven, patchy organizing pneumonia in six, atelectasis in five, granulomatous inflammation in five, and abscess formation in four. Three patients with granulomatous inflammation had associated atypical mycobacterial infection. Broncholithiasis was confirmed by pathological examination in one patient. No pathological cause for bronchial obstruction was identified in the remaining 20 patients, although one was thought to have had broncholithiasis on the basis of preoperative bronchoscopy. The presence of bronchiectasis, bronchitis or bronchiolitis, organizing pneumonia, or atelectasis in specimens from the right middle lobe or of lingula in the absence of an identifiable cause of bronchial obstruction should suggest a diagnosis of MLS.
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PMID:Middle lobe syndrome: a clinicopathological study of 21 patients. 789 Feb 82

To elucidate whether or not human T-lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) infected cells exist in the lungs of HTLV-I carriers, we examined bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells for the presence of HTLV-I proviral DNA by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. The cells were harvested from HTLV-I seropositive individuals with or without various respiratory diseases. The HTLV-I pX region was detected from separated BAL cells by dot blot hybridization after PCR in all 14 HTLV-I seropositive individuals tested. Four out of these 14 individuals were asymptomatic HTLV-I carriers, while the other ten had symptoms, including those of bacterial pneumonia, chronic respiratory tract infection, interstitial pneumonia, atypical mycobacterial infection, bronchitis, mediastinal lymphadenitis and bronchial asthma. HTLV-I proviral DAN was detected in BAL cells from patients with a normal proportion of lavage lymphocytes and a normal CD4/CD8 ratio. These findings suggest that HTLV-I infected cells may commonly exist in the lower respiratory tract and alveolar space without producing characteristic symptoms/signs, and that any causal relation to the pulmonary lesion must therefore be carefully elucidated, in HTLV-I carriers.
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PMID:[Detection of HTLV-I proviral DNA by PCR method from bronchoalveolar lavage cells of HTLV-I carriers]. 808 97