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)

Plastic bronchitis is generally associated with some type of pulmonary disease and improves either spontaneously or with medical therapy. We present a case of plastic bronchitis with no known cause. The patients' symptoms were not responsive to medical therapy but were relieved after right middle lobectomy.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis. 873 27

Mucoid impaction and plastic bronchitis are relatively rare disorders caused by the formation of obstructive airway plugs. We observed from February 1999 to June 2000 seven patients with mucoid impaction and one with plastic bronchitis. In the group of mucoid impaction there were 4 patients with bronchial asthma and 3 without history of lung disease. At the admission to hospital all patients suffered from cough, chest pain and effort dyspnea. Two of them expectorated during cough "bronchial casts". The chest X-ray of 5 patients revealed atelectasis of one of the lung's lobes and diffuse opacities in 2 others. In 4 cases during bronchoscopy one bronchus and in another three--numerous bronchi were obstructed with mucoid casts. Removing of the casts caused both the improvement of the patients' condition and withdrawal of atelectasis in 4 cases. In 5 patients the final diagnosis was allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and in two mucoid impaction in the course of asthma without aspergillosis. Plastic bronchitis was observed in 44 years old man, who expectorated white, branching, bronchial casts for three months. On admission he was in respiratory failure. The chest X-ray revealed diffuse alveolar infiltrates and HRCT glass-ground opacities in both lungs and bronchiectasis in the middle lobe. The bronchofiberoscopy disclosed diffuse tracheobronchitis with casts occluding the middle lobe bronchus. Microscopic examination of the removed casts showed aggregates of mucus, macrophages, neutrophils and cells of respiratory epithelium. Precipitins against Aspergillus fumigatus were not found. Staphyloccocus coagulase (-) was cultured from urine and sputum specimens. We administered Vancomycin with Netylmycin, acetylocysteine, oxygen therapy and humid inhalation and the patient recovered. HRCT made six months after admission revelated total withdrawal of glass-ground opacities. The pathogenesis of plastic bronchitis in this case was unclear.
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PMID:[Plastic bronchitis and mucoid impaction--uncommon disease syndromes with expectoration mucus plugs]. 1147 59

Plastic bronchitis is a condition in which large, bronchial casts with rubber-like consistency develop in the tracheobronchial tree and cause airway obstruction. We describe a 4-year-old girl who had Fontan physiology and who developed plastic bronchitis and report for the first time the use of aerosolized tissue plasminogen activator for treatment of this condition. The literature is reviewed with emphasis placed on the occurrence of this disorder in patients with single ventricle physiology.
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PMID:Treatment of plastic bronchitis in a Fontan patient with tissue plasminogen activator: a case report and review of the literature. 1192 40

Plastic bronchitis is characterized by marked obstruction of the large airways by bronchial casts. We reviewed our experience and the literature to determine whether mortality rates are determined by underlying disease or cast type. We present 3 children with obstructive bronchial casts. One 3-year-old patient with Noonan's syndrome developed respiratory failure following surgery for tetralogy of Fallot requiring support with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) the first such case. There were 42 cases in the literature of children with plastic bronchitis. Casts may be divided into two types. Type I casts are inflammatory, consisting mainly of fibrin with cellular infiltrates, and occur in inflammatory diseases of the lung. Type II, or acellular casts, consist mainly of mucin with a few cells, and usually occur following surgery for congenital cardiac defects. Patients categorized by underlying disease included 31% with asthma or allergic disease, 40% with underlying cardiac defects, and 29% with other diseases. Mortality was 16%, but increased to 29% in patients with cardiac defects. Deaths occurred as long as 1 year after surgical repair for underlying defects. There were no deaths in patients with asthma. Life-threatening events were statistically higher in patients with cardiac defects (41%) than in those with asthma (0%, P = 0.02). Higher mortality in patients with type II casts compared to type I casts did not reach statistical significance (28% vs. 6%; P = 0.06). In conclusion, patients presenting with plastic bronchitis are at high risk for serious complications, especially with underlying cardiac disease.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis in children: a case series and review of the medical literature. 1242 47

Plastic bronchitis is a rare disorder characterized by the formation of branching mucoid bronchial casts. Several pathophysiologic conditions are associated with development of these intrabronchial casts, including congenital heart defects. The management of plastic bronchitis presents an unusual and interesting bronchoscopic challenge. We describe a patient who underwent a Fontan procedure for correction of a congenital heart defect and subsequently developed respiratory distress secondary to plastic bronchitis on two occasions. In both cases, endoscopic intervention was required to remove these casts. A review of the literature, including the proposed etiologies, diagnosis, and current medical and surgical management, is also undertaken.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis: an unusual bronchoscopic challenge associated with congenital heart disease repair. 1269 58

Plastic bronchitis is characterised by the formation of large bronchial casts, which develop in the tracheobronchial tree and can cause airway obstruction. It has been increasingly encountered in more recent years as a serious complication of the Fontan operation with a reported mortality of up to 50% [Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 155 (1997) 364]. We report a case of a 4-year-old girl with Fontan circulation who developed plastic bronchitis and was successfully treated.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis; a serious complication of the Fontan operation. 1590 28

Plastic bronchitis is a rare, potentially life-threatening condition in which protein casts form within and occlude the bronchus, resulting in pulmonary failure, and has been identified as a complication after the Fontan procedure. We present a case of a 5-year-old girl who had undergone an extracardiac fenestrated Fontan repair as a component of staged palliation for tricuspid atresia. Six weeks following surgery, the patient presented with airway obstruction, coughing a bronchial cast. Medical therapies to optimize heart function and attempt to control cast formation were implemented, with little clinical impact. Following cardiac catheterization to stent open the fenestration, the symptoms of plastic bronchitis resolved. Cast expectoration recurred following spontaneous closure of the stented fenestration and again resolved with recreation of the baffle defect. Fenestration of the Fontan circuit alters hemodynamics, thereby providing an additional therapeutic option for this devastating disorder.
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PMID:Fenestration of the Fontan circuit as treatment for plastic bronchitis. 1613 80

Plastic bronchitis is a rare disease in which there is the formation of large gelatinous or rigid branching airway casts. The history of the disease is reviewed and a classification system is proposed based on our current understanding. This system classifies plastic bronchitis by clinical disease association and cast histology. A summary of the medical literature is included together with guidelines for treatment. The evidence for these treatment decisions is reviewed.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis: new insights and a classification scheme. 1629 13

Plastic bronchitis is an unusual clinical scenario of unknown cause and occurs in multiple clinical settings. The disease is characterized by the development of arborizing, thick, tenacious casts of the tracheobronchial tree that results in airway obstruction. Patients with congenital heart disease who have undergone a Fontan operation are at high risk for having this problem develop. Management of this distressing situation is difficult with only palliative options being available, such as repeated bronchoscopies, inhaled heparin, tissue plasminogen activator, inhaled bronchodilators, or azithromycin. The patients with Fontan circuits have a myriad of unique complications develop, such as atrial arrhythmias, recurrent pleural effusions, chylothoraces, protein-losing enteropathy, and plastic bronchitis. High intrathoracic lymphatic pressures with nondemonstrable lympho-bronchial fistulas were believed to be the cause for the development of these recurrent bronchial casts in plastic bronchitis. Faced with recurrent plastic bronchitis resistant to medical management in 2 Fontan patients with normal Fontan pressures on cardiac catheterization, we decided to explore a surgical solution by performing a thoracic duct ligation. This resulted in complete resolution of the formation of casts in both patients, who were discharged home and remain asymptomatic on continued follow-up. Thoracic duct ligation provides a surgical cure for plastic bronchitis by decreasing intrathoracic lymphatic pressure and flow.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis: is thoracic duct ligation a real surgical option? 1673 Nov 70

Plastic bronchitis is an uncommon and underdiagnosed entity, characterized by recurrent expectoration of large, branching bronchial casts. We describe a 39-year-woman with no prior lung disease who had episodic wheezing, severe dyspnea with expectoration of large and thick secretions, branching in appearance, which she described as resembling squid. A comprehensive evaluation revealed no specific cause and a diagnosis of idiopathic plastic bronchitis was made. In plastic bronchitis the bronchial casts may vary in size from small segmental casts of a bronchus to casts filling the airways of an entire lung. Plastic bronchitis can therefore present as an acute life-threatening emergency if mechanical obstruction of major airways occurs. The casts are differentiated into type I, inflammatory casts, or type II, acellular casts. The type I inflammatory casts are often associated with bronchial disease and often have an acute presentation. The acellular type of cast production is often chronic or recurrent. Numerous systemic illnesses are associated with plastic bronchitis, but often, as in our patient, no underlying cause can be identified. The treatment of plastic bronchitis includes acute therapy to aid the removal and expectoration of casts, and specific short- or long-term treatments attempting to address the underlying hypersecretory process. The therapeutic options are supported only by anecdotal evidence based on case reports as the rarity and heterogeneity of plastic bronchitis confounds systematic investigations of its treatment. Improved understanding of the regulation of mucus production may allow for new treatment options in plastic bronchitis and other chronic lung diseases characterized by hypersecretion of mucus.
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PMID:Plastic bronchitis: a management challenge. 1827 30


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