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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (
sore throat
)
2,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:[Minor sequelae of ambulatory anesthesia]. 345 85
Retropharyngeal calcific tendinitis is an inflammation of the longus colli muscle tendon, which is located on the anterior surface of the vertebral column extending from the atlas to the third thoracic vertebra. Five cases of acute retropharyngeal calcific tendinitis seen in the emergency department (ED) over a 15-month period are reported. In addition, a retrospective review of four cases diagnosed as retropharyngeal abscess and admitted to the hospital revealed that two of these cases actually represented retropharyngeal calcific tendinitis. A review of the literature and potential differential diagnoses are presented. For those primary care physicians who must evaluate patients with acute cervical
pain
,
sore throat
, or odynophagia, an x-ray study of the neck revealing retropharyngeal calcium deposition should raise the question of the diagnosis of acute retropharyngeal tendinitis. Clinical characteristics of this entity include a painful condition which is treatable and is often mistaken for retropharyngeal abscess, pharyngitis, or peritonsillar abscess. In our opinion, this condition may be more prevalent than the literature suggests.
...
PMID:Retropharyngeal calcific tendinitis: report of five cases and review of the literature. 346 Oct 65
A clinical analysis of 68 patients diagnosed as suffering from Ernest's syndrome revealed: Injury to the stylomandibular ligament is a real and frequent disorder causing craniomandibular
pain
. Ages and sex differences, although variable, correspond to those reported elsewhere in the literature for craniomandibular
pain
. A diagnosis of Ernest's syndrome may be based on an adequate history, palpation of the insertion of the stylomandibular ligament, and a diagnostic local anesthetic block of the affected ligamentous insertion. Symptoms of Ernest's syndrome, in decreasing order of occurrence, are: TMJ and temporal
pain
, ear and mandibular
pain
, posterior tooth sensitivity, eye pain, and
throat pain
. In addition, shoulder pain may be involved. Of the patients in this study, 77.94% were treated successfully via nonsurgical management of their complaints. Resolution of this disorder is usually accomplished by a combination of a diagnostic injection of local anesthetic at the insertion of the ligament, localized injection of cortisone substitute, and placing the patient on a soft diet. Surgical management, if necessary, is best accomplished by a radiofrequency thermoneurolysis procedure in the involved ligamentous insertion.
...
PMID:Ernest syndrome as a consequence of stylomandibular ligament injury: a report of 68 patients. 347 63
Lyme disease typically begins with a unique skin lesion, erythema chronicum migrans (ECM) (stage 1). Patients with this lesion may also have headache, meningeal irritation, mild encephalopathy, multiple annular secondary lesions, malar or urticarial rash, generalized lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, migratory musculoskeletal
pain
, hepatitis,
sore throat
, non-productive cough, conjunctivitis, periorbital edema, or testicular swelling. After a few weeks to months (stage 2), about 15% of patients develop frank neurologic abnormalities, including meningitis, encephalitis, cranial neuritis (including bilateral facial palsy), motor or sensory radiculoneuritis, mononeuritis multiplex, or myelitis. At this time, about 8% of patients develop cardiac involvement--AV block, acute myopericarditis, cardiomegaly, or pancarditis. Throughout this stage, many patients continue to experience migratory musculoskeletal
pain
in joints, tendons, bursae, muscle, or bone. Months to years after disease onset (stage 3), about 60% of patients develop frank arthritis, which may be intermittent or chronic. Recently evidence suggests that Lyme disease may also be associated with chronic neurologic or skin involvement. Thus, Lyme disease occurs in stages with different clinical manifestations at each stage, but the course of the illness in each patient is highly variable.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of Lyme disease. 355 39
In a broom manufacturing factory the authors performed microclimatic measurements, measurements of sulfur dioxide concentration and dust content. Workers (n = 190) were polled regarding discomforts characteristic of sulfur dioxide effects. Sulfates were determined in urine of 56 subjects, and methemoglobin and sulfhemoglobin were determined in blood. Sulfates were determined in 43 controls and methemoglobin and sulfhemoglobin were determined in 39 controls. Sulfur dioxide concentration in work environment ranged from 17.1 to 149.4 mg/m3 in winter and from 0 to 0.75 mg/m3 in summer. The exposed workers complained most often of coughing (94.2%), dyspnea (91.0%), burning in nose, eyes and throat (from 74.7 to 83.7%), substernal
pain
(75.3%),
sore throat
(74.7%), tearing (64.7%), etc. Sulfate concentrations were found to be statistically significantly higher (P less than 0.01) in urine of workers exposed to sulfur dioxide than in the controls. Methemoglobin concentrations were also significantly higher in blood of the exposed workers, whereas no difference was found in concentrations of sulfhemoglobin.
...
PMID:Discomforts and laboratory findings in workers exposed to sulfur dioxide. 365 97
Sixty 3- to 14-year-old outpatients with positive streptococcal group A bacterial cultures and clinical signs and symptoms of pharyngitis were treated with a single intramuscular (IM) injection of penicillin G benzathine/penicillin G procaine in a multicenter study. At the first follow-up visit, usually within 48 hours of the injection, 60 children had negative cultures, and the mean body temperature had decreased from 100.2 +/- 1.6 degrees F to 98.5 +/- 0.5 degree F (P less than 0.05). At this time, the investigators rated 77% of the children clinically cured and the remaining 23% improved; major signs and symptoms (
sore throat
, difficulty swallowing, lethargy, and cervical node enlargement and tenderness) had disappeared in nearly all of the children. Initial injection site
pain
, noted in only 15% of the children 48 hours later, probably was secondary to the injection and not drug related. Most other adverse reactions (in seven children) also were injection related, were mild or moderate, and required no countermeasures. At the second follow-up visit approximately 10 days after injection, all children were considered clinically and bacteriologically cured. Thus, the combination of IM benzathine and procaine penicillin not only is safe and effective but eliminates compliance concerns.
...
PMID:Rapid symptomatic relief of streptococcal pharyngitis in children. 379 63
A prospective case-control study of Lassa fever was established in Sierra Leone to measure the frequency and case-fatality ratio of Lassa fever among febrile hospital admissions and to better delineate the clinical diagnosis and course of this disease. Lassa fever was responsible for 10%-16% of all adult medical admissions and for approximately 30% of adult deaths in the two hospitals studied. The case-fatality ratio for 441 hospitalized patients was 16.5%. We found the best predictor of Lassa fever to be the combination of fever, pharyngitis, retrosternal
pain
, and proteinuria (predictive value together, .81); of outcome, the best predictor was the combination of fever,
sore throat
, and vomiting (relative risk of death, 5.5). Complications included mucosal bleeding (17%), bilateral or unilateral eighth-nerve deafness (4%), and pleural (3%) or pericardial (2%) effusion. Lassa fever is endemic in this area and is a more-common cause of hospital admission and death than has previously been described; this disease must be considered when diagnosing febrile illness in West Africa.
...
PMID:A case-control study of the clinical diagnosis and course of Lassa fever. 380 72
A 10-year-old boy had a
sore throat
, followed in 4 weeks by acute rheumatic fever and in 6 weeks by atlanto-axial dislocation. Reduction of the dislocation by means of a halo vest relieved his
pain
, but the cervical spine remained unstable after 3 months of immobilization and required an occiput-C1-2 fusion and rib graft to stabilize the atlanto-axial joint. This is the eighth reported case of atlanto-axial dislocation associated with acute rheumatic fever. The features of previous cases are summarized and the clinical aspects, mechanisms, diagnosis, and treatment of atlanto-axial dislocation are reviewed.
...
PMID:Atlanto-axial dislocation in acute rheumatic fever. Case report. 380 10
A double-blind, randomized clinical study was undertaken to determine the analgesic and antiinflammatory effectiveness of benzydamine in patients with radiation-induced mucositis of the oropharynx. Of the 67 patients in the study, 37 patients were on benzydamine and 30 patients on a placebo. The results of the study showed that benzydamine possessed a significant analgesic activity as evidenced by relief of mouth and
throat pain
induced by radiation therapy. It is also noted that the patients on benzydamine exhibited a cumulative relief of oral pharyngeal
pain
and discomfort over the time of treatment, as compared to those on the placebo. These effects of benzydamine in the present study might be a result of the antiinflammatory property of the drug. The cumulative and prolonged effectiveness of benzydamine makes it of distinct value compared with the commonly available local anaesthetics such as lidocaine. Benzydamine appears to provide a useful addition to the therapeutic armamentarium for alleviating the symptoms of oral pharyngeal mucositis.
...
PMID:A clinical study of benzydamine for the treatment of radiotherapy-induced mucositis of the oropharynx. 389 70
Forty-four patients with
sore throat
participated in a placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial of benzydamine hydrochloride administered as a gargle. After medical evaluation and throat culture, 21 patients were treated with a solution containing benzydamine and 23 patients with a placebo solution. Statistical analysis of scores from patients' diaries showed that benzydamine solution afforded significantly greater (P less than 0.001) relief of
pain
and dysphagia at 24 hours than did the placebo solution. Physician evaluations at 24 hours showed that the benzydamine solution had significantly greater effect than did placebo on hyperemia (P less than 0.004) and edema (P less than 0.005). Side effects were minimal and of no clinical significance. The findings indicate that benzydamine hydrochloride is safe and effective therapy for the signs and symptoms of
sore throat
.
...
PMID:Double-blind study of benzydamine hydrochloride, a new treatment for sore throat. 390 41
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