Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (sore throat)
2,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The first symptoms of cancer of the oesophagus in 82 Xhosa patients were found to be dysphagia (43%), interscapular back pain (23%), sore throat (21%) and epigastric pain (11%). More than half of the patients in whom a sore throat was the first symptom of the disease described the simultaneous occurrence of oropharyngeal lesions (amaqhakuva). No correlation could be found between the first symptoms and the characteristics of the oesophageal carcinoma at the time of presentation.
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PMID:The first symptoms of carcinoma of the oesophagus, with particular reference to amaqhakuva. A report from the Republic of Transkei. 46 28

Men under 20 and over 50 years of age used a free walk-in clinic of the Navy more than women of the same age. Women 20-50 years old used it more than men in this age group. This appears to be a result of the distribution of Navy health care facilities in the study area. Teenagers used the clinic as much as patients over 50. Sore throat, skin rash, abdominal pain, earache, and backache were the five most common complaints (302 per 1,000 patients.) These complaints and 19 other problems were responsible for 822 patient visits per 1,000 in a study of 2,272 consecutive new patient visits. Eighteen percent of all visits were return visits for a specific complaint. An analysis of complaints by body system showed that 21.9 percent were otolaryngological, 18.8 percent musculoskeletal, 12.5 per cent gastrointestinal, 9.7 percent dermatological, 8.7 percent cardiopulmonary, 7.8 percent genitourinary, 9.0 percent general (fatigue, nervousness, malaise, or weakness), and 11.6 percent other system (neurological, hematological, and miscellaneous). These data indicate that a physician's time might be used more efficiently in a walk-in setting and that training for such a clinic must be different from traditional training for such fields as internal medicine.
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PMID:Chief complaints in a free walk-in clinic: a study of 3,009 consecutive patient visits. 84 87

Thirty-two patients with the onset of erythema chronicum migrans, Lyme arthritis, or both in mid-1976 were studied prospectively. The skin lesion (24 patients) typically lasted about 3 weeks, beginning as a red macule or papule that expanded to form a large ring with central clearing. Associated symptoms ranged from none to malaise, fatigue, chills and fever, headache, stiff neck, backache, myalgias, nausea, vomiting, and sore throat. Three patients had been bitten by ticks at the site of the initial lesion 4 to 20 days before its onset. Nineteen patients suddenly developed a monoarticular or oligoarticular arthritis 4 days to 22 weeks (median, 4 weeks) after onset of the skin lesion; eight developed arthritis without a preceding skin lesion. Seven of these 27 experienced migratory joint pains. Arthritis attacks, most commonly in the knee, were typically short (median, 8 days) but sometimes persisted for months. Other manifestations included neurologic abnormalties, myocardial conduction abnormalities, serum cryoprecipitates, elevated serum IgM levels, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rates. The diagnostic marker is the skin lesion; without it, geographic clustering is the most important clue.
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PMID:Erythema chronicum migrans and Lyme arthritis. The enlarging clinical spectrum. 86 48

A 65-year-old man had a 3-day history of sore throat, fever, rigors, back pain, abdominal discomfort, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. The patient's daughter had group A streptococcus pharyngitis. The patient was found to have a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. He underwent resection of the aneurysm and right axillary femoro-femoral bypass graft. The patient died 40 hours after admission. Gram stain of the aneurysm showed numerous gram-positive cocci. Group A streptococcus grew from cultures of blood, throat, and aneurysm. The group A streptococcus was M type 3, T type 3 and produced streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin A. This case is a very rare fatal complication of group A streptococcus pharyngitis.
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PMID:Group A Streptococcus septicemia and an infected, ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm associated with pharyngitis. 152 Aug 2

For many individuals undergoing routine surgical procedures, their satisfaction with the operation may depend upon their postoperative experience. We used the McGill Pain Questionnaire and the McGill Nausea Questionnaire to study the intensity of 5 common postoperative problems--sore throat, muscle pain, headache, backache, and nausea. We found that the questionnaires were able to determine the intensity of the postoperative problem but due to time pressures, a shorter version would be needed to study large numbers of patients. Using a discriminant analysis, we found that the 25 most frequently chosen words were able to distinguish between the 4 pain-related problems. As well the Present Pain Intensity (PPI) correlated highly with the standard form word choices and appeared to be measuring the same dimension of intensity for these complaints.
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PMID:Using the McGill Pain Questionnaire to study common postoperative complications. 253 40

The obstetrical anaesthesia experience of the Winnipeg Women's Hospital from 1975 to 1983 was reviewed (n = 22,925 infants). Use of narcotics in labour for analgesia decreased from 38.7 to 18.3 per cent of the deliveries. For analgesia during spontaneous vaginal deliveries, epidural anaesthesia increased from 6.0 to 24.0 per cent, inhalational analgesia decreased from 53.7 to 3.2 per cent while "no anaesthetic intervention" rose from 40.3 to 72.8 per cent. Use of epidural anaesthesia for Caesarean section increased from 58.7 to 82.6 per cent. The most common acute complications of anaesthesia were hypotension and inadvertent dural puncture during epidural catheterization. The incidence of hypotension decreased from 28.3 to 17.4 per cent during the nine-year period. Dural puncture decreased from 4.7 to 1.1 per cent of all epidural administrations. Postpartum complaints (that were thought to be related to anaesthesia) were mainly headache, back pain and sore throat. The incidence of these complaints also decreased over the study period.
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PMID:Obstetrical anaesthesia at Winnipeg Women's Hospital 1975-83: anaesthetic techniques and complications. 288 48

Voluntary abortions in day hospitals fulfill the need for shorter hospital stays and minimal interference with patient activities; on the other hand, it makes it more difficult to evaluate the possible complications of anesthesia. 1820 patients who received general anesthesia for voluntary abortion were given a questionnaire before they were discharged; items queried included drowsiness, headache, dizziness, nausea or vomiting, sore throat or mouth, abdominal cramps, pain at IV site, backache or muscular cramps, inability to perform daily activities. Only 465 patients returned the questionnaire. The most frequent complaint was sleepiness or drowsiness (19.8%), headache (7.1%), dizziness (15.1%), nausea or vomiting (8.2%), abdominal cramps (24.7%), and backache (16.7%). There seems to be less nausea or vomiting with the use of pentothal rather than alothane. Ketamine was never used on its own. The findings seen to suggest that the simplest combinations of drugs result in fewer and less severe complications than the use of several drugs.
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PMID:[Minor sequelae of ambulatory anesthesia]. 345 85

A prospective study of health service utilization carried out in the Correctional Services of Canada (CSC), Pacific Region, is reported. Health service encounters occurring at the six Regional Institutions with on-site health care centers between May 29th and June 28th, 1984 were surveyed using a health clinic encounter form. There were 7,449 encounters during the study period. The mean rate of encounters was 5.2 per inmate. Seventy-two percent of these encounters occurred at wickets, and 28% occurred at clinics. Physician visits occurred at a mean estimated annual rate of 6.7 visits per year. This is 2.4 times higher than the mean annual physician visit rate for non-institutionalized men in Canada. The reason for visits was new illness (57%), chronic illness (31%), injuries (5%), psychosocial problems (2%), and administrative (5%). The encounter rate per 100 inmates varied from 19.7 to 1,203.6 across the institutions studied. Overall 89% of all visits were seen by health service nurses, while 11% were seen by physicians. Using ICHPPC-2 Defined, the ten most common complaints presented to the health service were headache, sore throat, stomach complaint, other respiratory complaint, tension headache, limb pain, other/not codable, medical examination, back pain and upper respiratory tract infection. These ten complaints accounted for 4896 (59%) of the total complaints recorded. The majority of visits took less than five minutes, were most often treated with medication, and did not require scheduled follow-up. The 50 most frequent visitors, those making 25 or more visits during the study period, while only 3.5% of the study population, accounted for 25% of all encounters.
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PMID:Prison health services: a utilization study. 358 36

An outbreak of Influenza A, subtype H3N2 occurred in Delhi during July-August, 1993. Both urban and rural areas were affected. Attack rates in children and adults were found to be similar; the mean age of patients from whom the virus was isolated was found to be 21 years. The disease was of acute onset, mild in nature and about one week in duration. Main symptoms included fever, chills, cough, sore throat, bodyaches, backache and headache. Complications were absent. About 82 per cent of the affected house-holds had only a single case. Influenza A subtype H3N2 virus was isolated from 12 of 15 throat swabs collected from PUO cases.
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PMID:An outbreak of influenza A (H3N2) in Delhi, 1993. 796 77

Sickness absence records were reviewed for all employees of King Khalid University Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia over a 3 year period from 1989 to 1991. The result showed a sickness absence rate of 7.7% with an average of 0.24 spells of sickness and duration of 1.24 days per absentee per year. The biological characteristics of the absentees showed no differentials in the spell rate of sickness, but nurses and junior workers had higher duration of sickness absence than other categories of workers. Acute respiratory and upper tract infections, sore throat, chickenpox, septicaemia, and diseases of the musculoskeletal system (mainly back pain) were the leading conditions resulting in absenteeism. This study revealed the need to improve the sickness absence records of the hospital to make it a valuable source of information for the management.
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PMID:The rate of sickness absenteeism among employees at King Khalid University Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 826 74


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