Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A questionnaire relating to smoking habits, respirator symptoms, and health attitudes was administered to 10 498 secondary schoolchildren in 1975. The results reported in this paper indicate that children who smoke regularly have a higher prevalence of upper respiratory tract infections and a higher incidence of the respiratory symptoms, cough, phlegm production with a cold, and shortness of breath, compared with non-smokers. Children are aware of the risks of lung cancer when smoking, but less aware of the other more immediate health risks, and this is particularly so in the younger age groups. It is suggested that health education should be directed towards younger children and that more use should be made of the fact that smoking clearly makes them less healthy.
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PMID:Cigarette smoking among secondary schoolchildren in 1975. Prevalence of respiratory symptoms, knowledge of health hazards, and attitudes to smoking and health. 26 90

A 63-year-old man with pulmonary sarcoidosis, diagnosed by mediastinal lymph node biopsy in 1977, was admitted in Feb. 1987 because of shortness of breath and cough. Chest X-ray showed bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy and a tumor shadow in the right lung field. Histological examination of specimens biopsied from the right lung revealed small cell carcinoma (S.C.C.). Bronchoalveolar lavage was performed to evaluate the disease activity of sarcoidosis, and the total number of cells and T-lymphocytes; the ratio of CD4+ cells to CD8+ cells was not increased. He was treated with combination chemotherapy, however, he died of respiratory failure after 7 months. An autopsy was performed, and the lesions were examined histologically. The sarcoid lesion in a lymph node obtained at autopsy was not active, in contrast to that obtained by mediastinal lymph node biopsy. Lung cancer and sarcoidosis are both common diseases, but their coexistence in the same patient is not common, and autopsied cases are rare. In this case, an autopsy was performed, and BAL had been performed prior to his death. The relationship between the BAL findings and the histology of sarcoidosis was examined. Based on the results of autopsy and BAL, the sarcoidosis was inactive prior to death, but had been histologically active 10 years previously. Therefore, this is a very interesting case, since we can examine the relationship between the two diseases, and the progression of each disease. This case also provides an interesting example of differentiation of sarcoidosis from S.C.C. Metastatic invasion of the hilar lymph nodes without bronchial stenosis and changes secondary to stenosis may often occur in patients with small cell lung cancer. Such metastatic invasion closely resembles the bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy of sarcoidosis; therefore, in some cases, it may be extremely difficult to differentiate the two diseases.
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PMID:[A case of small cell lung cancer associated with pulmonary sarcoidosis]. 166 44

Pulmonary function is known to be related inversely to incidence of coronary heart disease, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive lung disease, lung cancer, and death from all causes. Reasons for some of these associations are poorly understood. Relationships between cardiovascular disease risk factors and pulmonary function were examined in 5,115 18- to 30-year-old black and white male and female participants in the study of Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA). Forced expiratory volume in 1 s adjusted for height (FEV1/Ht2) was significantly lower in smokers than nonsmokers and in persons who reported shortness of breath; FEV1/Ht2 was correlated positively with a history of strenuous physical activity, duration of exercise on the treadmill, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. It was associated negatively with skinfold thicknesses, serum triglycerides, fasting serum insulin, and the Cook Medley scale of hostility. The association between pulmonary function and heart disease risk may reflect associations with physical fitness, vigor, fatness, and lipid profiles, as well as with cigarette smoking.
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PMID:Pulmonary function and cardiovascular risk factor relationships in black and in white young men and women. The CARDIA Study. 198 78

Six patients receiving CDDP, MMC, and CPM chemotherapy for adjuvant chemotherapy after a resection due to lung cancer developed interstitial pneumonia. They were re-admitted for dyspnea, shortness of breath, and dry cough from 80 to 118 days from start of their treatment. On re-admission, their chest radiographs showed reticular infiltrates, and their laboratory data showed severe hypoxemia. The pathological findings of a transbronchial lung biopsy showed a thickening of the alveolar septa. Steroid therapy resulted in a complete resolution in one patient and a partial resolution the 5 others. One year later, two patients had died, one patient remains in complete resolution, but a shortness of breath still exists in the remaining three patients. Considering the disadvantages of that shortness of breath can cause to daily life, we should be more cautious about administering antineoplastic agents for adjuvant chemotherapy to patients with a cancer in an early stage.
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PMID:[Interstitial pneumonia after CMC (CDDP, MMC, CPM) therapy]. 312 31

A 48-year-old white man with a multiprogrammable Intramedics 259-01 pacemaker was treated for inoperable lung cancer with a course of cobalt-60 radiotherapy (total 3,500 rad). Several weeks subsequent to his last radiation treatment, the patient presented to the emergency department with chest and abdominal pain, shortness of breath, hypotension, and tachycardia. A paced tachycardia was noted, and application of a magnet over the pacemaker completely inhibited its function, allowing a normal sinus rhythm to ensue and the patient's symptoms to be relieved. Pacemaker failure probably was a complication of radiotherapy.
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PMID:Pacemaker failure associated with therapeutic radiation. 317 52

In 1962 a cohort of 4604 Finnish men were interviewed about their smoking habits and cardiorespiratory symptoms. The cohort was followed up for deaths and incidence of lung cancer from 1963 to 1980 in order to study the effect of smoking and respiratory symptoms on the risk of lung cancer. The joint effect of smoking, age and respiratory symptoms on the risk of lung cancer was studied using a log-linear modelling technique. When analysed simultaneously with smoking, the symptoms of phlegm, shortness of breath and wheezing were all significantly associated with increased lung cancer risk. The joint effect of smoking and phlegm as well as that of smoking and wheezing was close to being multiplicative. Even if smoking is a causative factor in both these symptoms and in lung cancer, the symptoms seem to have a separate role as predictors of lung cancer risk.
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PMID:The joint effect of smoking and respiratory symptoms on risk of lung cancer. 344 Jun 61

In 1962, a cohort of 4604 Finnish men was interviewed about their smoking habits and cardiorespiratory symptoms. The cohort was followed up for deaths and incidence of lung cancer from 1963 to 1980 in order to study the effect of smoking and cardiac symptoms on the incidence of lung cancer. When analyzed simultaneously with smoking, the symptoms of angina, possible infarction and shortness of breath were all significantly associated with increased lung cancer risk. For example, the RR of lung cancer among those with possible infarction was 2.4, when age and smoking were adjusted for, and 1.8, when additionally shortness of breath and angina-like chest pain were adjusted for. Among smokers of greater than or equal to 15 g/day, those with symptoms of angina displayed a considerable excess risk (RR 2.5). A broad range of impairments of the cardiopulmonary functions seem to be associated with the carcinogenic processes invoked by smoking.
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PMID:Smoking and cardiac symptoms as predictors of lung cancer. 368 Apr 70

A patient receiving mitomycin and vindesine chemotherapy for lung cancer developed abrupt onset of shortness of breath following vindesine administration. Pulmonary function tests both before and after rechallenging him with vindesine showed an acute obstructive pattern, which resolved with bronchodilator therapy; persisting lung damage was evident by arterial blood gas analysis. A record review of the 126 patients placed on the same chemotherapy regimen uncovered an additional 6 patients with possible lung toxicity. These seven patients (5.5%) had a variable clinical picture, from acute, reversible shortness of breath temporally related to vindesine administration to a progressive, fatal interstitial infiltrate. Physicians administering the combination of mitomycin and a vinca alkaloid should be aware of potential lung toxicity with variable clinical expression and be prepared to take appropriate action should they encounter it.
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PMID:Mitomycin C and vindesine associated pulmonary toxicity with variable clinical expression. 391 66

Several types of neoplastic conditions are included in the differential diagnosis of pneumonia. Bronchial obstruction with cancer can produce obstructive pneumonia that results in intractable infection. Bronchogenic carcinoma and metastatic cancer involving the airways may produce this clinical presentation. Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma is a relatively common form of primary lung cancer that characteristically presents as a chronic infiltrate associated with cough, hypoxemia, shortness of breath, and mucus hypersecretion. This cancer has two distinct histological types with markedly different prognosis. The mucinous variety is much more likely to be multicentric and rapidly progressive whereas the nonmucinous variety may be localized. Lymphoproliferative diseases may also present in an infiltrative appearance. Kaposi's sarcoma infiltrating the lungs, particularly associated with acquired immune deficiency syndrome, presents a diagnostic dilemma because of the high incidence of pulmonary infection in these patients.
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PMID:Neoplastic mimics of pneumonia. 748 Nov 27

The ten most frequently reported pretreatment symptoms on the Rotterdam Symptom Checklist, which was completed by more than 650 patients entering two MRC Lung Cancer Working Party multicentre randomised trials, included general symptoms (tiredness, lack of appetite) and psychological distress (worry, anxiety) in addition to disease-related chest symptoms (cough, shortness of breath). Although the number and severity of symptoms increased with worsening performance status, the commonest symptoms were found to be virtually the same for patients with small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) and non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and for different grades of performance status. Women with NSCLC reported more psychological symptoms than males, but this difference was much less evident in patients with SCLC. Thus, in order to assess fully the benefit of palliative treatments in patients with lung cancer, account must be taken of all symptoms at presentation, in addition to the traditionally recognised chest symptoms.
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PMID:Symptoms at presentation for treatment in patients with lung cancer: implications for the evaluation of palliative treatment. The Medical Research Council (MRC) Lung Cancer Working Party. 753 20


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