Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0231835 (tachypnea)
2,543 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Brachial neuritis with bilateral hemidiaphragmatic paralysis has been reported in two previous cases in the literature. We report a patient who experienced severe right shoulder discomfort three weeks prior to hospital admission which evolved to include both shoulders. Two weeks prior to admission he noticed the onset of discomfort in breathing in the supine position and shortness of breath with minor exertion. The admitting diagnoses were myocardial infarction due to significant ECG changes and idiopathic elevated bilateral hemidiaphragms. The patient had findings significant for tachypnea, dyspnea, decreased breath sounds at the bases bilaterally, impaired motion of the bilateral lung bases on inspiration and paradoxical respirations. Comprehensive medical testing and evaluation revealed bilateral elevated hemidiaphragms and vital capacity 40% of normal. Weakness of the proximal shoulder girdle and bicep musculature bilaterally was noted. Electromyography was significant for reduced recruitment pattern in the bilateral shoulder girdle musculature. Nerve conduction studies suggested bilateral phrenic neuropathy. This case is an unusual presentation of brachial neuritis affecting the bilateral shoulder girdle with phrenic nerve involvement. The differential diagnosis of acute shoulder pain associated with respiratory symptomatology should therefore include brachial neuritis.
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PMID:Brachial neuritis involving the bilateral phrenic nerves. 380 Jun 25

A 13-yr-old boy was scheduled for emergency appendicectomy because of abdominal pain. His preoperative medical history was complicated by a recent hospital admission for management of asthma. He had presented to hospital seven days earlier because of dyspnoea, tachypnoea and oxygen desaturation to 77% on room air. Following admission, he required intensive nonventilatory management of his asthma, including intravenous salbutamol, methylprednisolone, and aminophylline, as well as use of an ipratroprium bromide inhaler and 100% oxygen by mask. He was discharged to the ward, and continued on prednisone (delta-cortisone), beclomethasone inhaler, ipratroprium inhaler, and salbutamol inhaler. During his ICU stay, he complained of nonspecific abdominal pain, interpreted as gastro-oesophageal reflux. After four days, he was discharged to the ward. On his sixth hospital day, he began to experience right-sided lower abdominal pain and right shoulder pain. A surgeon was consulted, and the patient was found to have a very tender right lower quadrant with guarding and rebound pain. He was therefore scheduled for appendicectomy; antibiotic therapy with ampicillin, gentamicin, and metronidazole was initiated.
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PMID:Anaesthetic management of an asthmatic child for appendicectomy. 806 95