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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (
sore throat
)
2,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 13-year-old girl was admitted to a hospital because of fever and
sore throat
. Staphylococcus aureus was obtained on blood culture, and she was treated with antibiotics under the diagnosis of sepsis and DIC. Echocardiography showed huge vegetation attached to the posterior leaflet of mitral valve and severe
mitral regurgitation
. CT scan revealed multiple heterogeneous high density areas in her brain. She was transferred to our hospital for further examination and treatment. Large verrucae on the mitral valve, severe regurgitation and repeated embolism urged us to the emergency mitral valve replacement. Debridement of abscess on the posterior wall of the left atrium and ventricle necessitated patch plasty of those structures and mitral ring as well. Operative and postoperative examination showed mycotic aneurysm of right coronary artery, multiple brain hemorrhage, arterial obstructions of extremities and splenic infarction. Sooner she recovered except for slight macular degeneration caused by retinal embolism.
...
PMID:[A case of infective endocarditis with multiple embolic complications]. 140 96
Thirty-seven cases of streptococcal rheumatic fever in adults (20 women and 17 men; mean age 33 years) are reported. Only 3 patients had a history of previous rheumatic fever. In 73% of the cases untreated
sore throat
had occurred 8 to 30 days before the condition developed. Throat swabs taken during the rheumatic attack were positive for Streptococcus haemolyticus in only 5 out of 22 patients. The joints most commonly affected were those of the lower limbs and the symptoms were severe; in 2 out of 3 patients other joints were subsequently involved. Five patients had stable
mitral regurgitation
of undetermined duration, with systolic murmur. ECG abnormalities were noted in 7 patients, including 5 with prolongation of the PR interval and 2 with moderate elevation of the ST segment; these abnormalities regressed in all cases. No specific skin lesions were observed. The streptococcal infection was associated with a rise in antistreptolysins in 73% of the cases, a rise in antistreptokinases in 80% and a rise in both types of antibodies in 97%. Response to antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs was satisfactory in all cases. Cure was achieved within less than one month in 57% of the patients, but the condition lasted three years in 3 patients.
...
PMID:[Streptococcal rheumatic fever in adults]. 717 15
We report our 8-year experience with the resurgence of acute rheumatic fever during the years 1985 through 1992. The records of 274 confirmed cases referred to Primary Children's Medical Center were reviewed. The clinical features including the presence of the Jones criteria, demographic data, preceding streptococcal infection, and the use of echocardiographic studies were tabulated and assessed. Patients came predominantly (84%) from middle-class families with access to medical care. Only 46 patients (17%) sought medical attention for a preceding
sore throat
. Carditis evident by auscultation was the dominant major manifestation in 68% of the cases. Echocardiography demonstrated
mitral regurgitation
that was not audible in 15 (47%) of 32 patients who had only polyarthritis at onset and in 30 (57%) of the 53 who had pure chorea. The incidence of acute rheumatic fever has been declining since the peak of the outbreak in 1985 but is continuing in the intermountain area at rates comparable to those of the 1960s.
...
PMID:Persistence of acute rheumatic fever in the intermountain area of the United States. 793 99
Infective endocarditis caused by Kingella denitrificans occurs rarely. A review of the literature reveals only 6 cases of endocarditis caused by the bacillus. K. denitrificans is normally a commensal of the upper respiratory airways, may exceptionally be responsible for endocarditis. A case of possible prosthetic endocarditis caused by K. denitrificans is presented. A 78-year-old male with Type II diabetes was admitted to the hospital complaining of fever, a
sore throat
and arthralgia. He underwent replacement surgery of a St. Jude medical prosthesis for aortic stenosis at the age of 75. The only physical findings at admission were a temperature of 38.2 degrees C and murmurs of mild
mitral regurgitation
. The liver and spleen were not palpable, and there were no skin or eye lesions. Laboratory findings were as follows: white blood cell count 9500/microliters with 77% neutrophils, erythrocyte sedimentation rate 71 mm/h (Westergren), blood urea nitrogen 50.2 mg/dl, serum creatinine 1.7 mg/dl and C-reactive protein 22.2 mg/dl. The Gram-negative bacillus isolated from the blood was identified as K. denitrificans by the identification system, namely ID test.FN-20 rapid (Nissui, Japan). Although an echocardiogram detected no vegetation, infective endocarditis was diagnosed because the same bacillus was detected by separate blood cultures and an obvious source of infection was not found other than the prosthetic valve. Initial treatment was flomoxef, which was changed to Ampicillin 2 g/day after K. denitrificans was identified. Ampicillin continued for 6 weeks. The clinical course was good and he did not require further surgery. He has been afebrile for 2 years after completing treatment. This case represents the first report of prosthetic valve endocarditis caused by K. denitrificans in Japan.
...
PMID:[Prosthetic endocarditis caused by Kingella denitrificans in a patient with diabetes mellitus]. 928 46
A previously healthy 19-year-old Asian female without significant past medical history presented to the emergency room complaining of a
sore throat
, difficulty in swallowing, fever, swollen neck, malaise, and myalgia for three to four days. The patient was initially seen at an outside hospital, evaluated by an ear, nose, and throat physician (ENT), and was found to have desquamative pharyngitis. The patient was transferred to our hospital after she continued to experience progressively worsening shortness of breath and went into acute respiratory distress. The patient was found to have laryngeal edema on exam with greenish-black, necrotic-looking tissue extending to the hypopharynx, nasopharynx, and oropharynx. A culture was taken. ENT was consulted for tracheostomy placement. The patient refused to have tracheostomy placed. She went into severe respiratory distress and required urgent tracheostomy. A cardiac consult was obtained. A 2D echocardiogram performed one day after admission revealed an ejection fraction (EF) of 10-20%, normal left ventricular cavity size, normal wall thickness, and severe global systolic dysfunction. There was mild to moderate
mitral regurgitation
and trace tricuspid regurgitation. The inferior vena cava was dilated and a 1 cm x 1.5 cm questionable mass or thrombus was seen. The patient's throat culture was positive for diphtheria. The CDC was contacted, and the patient was treated with antitoxin with prompt resolution of cardiac symptoms. A repeat echo done five days post-treatment showed improved EF of 65%, normal left ventricular thickness and function, with no clot visualized. She was treated with ceftriaxone and flagyl for ocular motor neuritis, otitis media, and strep. pneumonia with gradual improvement. These were all secondary to the diphtheria toxins, however, the patient continues to be followed as an outpatient by ENT for ongoing problems with swallowing, speech, and trach management.
...
PMID:Cardiac diphtheria in a previously immunized individual. 1452 57
Authors report the results of a retrospective study (January 1993-December 1996) concerning 56 patients. The aim of this study was to describe epidemiology, diagnosis, evolution and treatment of rheumatic fever during childhood in the Teaching Hospital of Brazzaville. The frequency of the disease was 1.17%. There were 36 girls and 20 boys (p = 0.02). The mean age was 10 years and 8 months. Past of
sore throat
and recurrences of acute rheumatic fever have been notified respectively in 27 (48.2%) and 11 cases (19.6%). Arthritis were observed in 3 patients (5.4%), and 7 others (12.5%) didn't have any carditis. Fourty nine patients (87.5%) presented carditis, among which
mitral regurgitation
was the commonest cardiac lesion. Heart failure was observed in 25 patients (44.6%). The inflammatory process was treated by corticoid drugs and penicillin. Surgery realized in 22 patients consisted in valvuloplasty (5), bioprosthesis replacing (12). Beyond mitral valve replacing, 3 children profited of: tricuspid commissurotmy (1), surgery of congenital heart disease (2). Two patients profited of aortic prothesis. Six patients(10.7%) died because of: cardiac failure(3), infectious endocarditis (2), probable thrombosis of mechanic aortic valve (1). Primary and secondary prevention of this severe affection are primordial in Congo.
...
PMID:[Acute rheumatic fever among children in the Republic of Congo: report of 56 cases]. 1577 95
A 62-year-old woman presented to a primary care doctor on January 2006 due to a
sore throat
and high fever, and had received medication for a common cold. She was referred to our hospital in February 2006 because of additional manifestations such as painful rashes on the lower limb similar to erythema nodosum and polyarthralgia on her feet, shoulder and finger joints. She was initially treated with an anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) for polyarthritis but the symptoms did not improved. In addition, the serum level of anti-streptolysin O antibody (ASO) was elevated at the second visit more than that at the first visit. She was diagnosed to have rheumatic fever (RF) based on the polyarthritis, inflammatory data and an increase of the ASO level. She was treated with 10 mg a day of prednisolone (PSL) and sultamicillin tosilate. However, a systolic murmur that had been never noticed by previous auscultation appeared after the third hospital day and the
mitral regurgitation
was also detected on echocardiogram. She was then treated with 40 mg a day of PSL because of an appearance of the carditis due to RF. The increased PSL dose promptly improved the systolic murmur as well as the arthritis. This report presented an RF case with carditis detected by an development of the systolic murmur in an adult female.
...
PMID:[Case of rheumatic fever complicating carditis detected by a newly-developed systolic murmur in an adult woman]. 2279 May 80