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)

Sweet's syndrome is an uncommon and dramatic skin disease associated with systemic symptoms such as fever, headache and arthralgia. Since it is also accompanied by an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate and leukocytosis, it may be confused with severe systemic infections and other systemic illnesses. We describe a 30-year-old woman who presented with typical features of the disease. They included high fever, headache, sore throat, increased sedimentation rate, and a painful violaceous, nodular and papular rash on her limbs and upper trunk. Histologic features included dense neutrophilic infiltration and edema of the dermis, with foci of leukocytoclasia, but without leukocytoclastic vasculitis. There was a dramatic repose to treatment with prednisone.
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PMID:[Sweet's syndrome in a young woman]. 145 3

For six months after bone marrow transplantation (BMT) there is a risk of 5 to 15% to suffer from interstitial pneumonia due to pneumocystis carinii (PcP). Prophylaxis with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazol is therefore routinely and successfully applied. However myelotoxicity, allergic reactions, augmentation of the risk of nephrotoxicity with cyclosporine A and noncompliance may be serious problems. Since the prophylaxis of PcP with pentamidine-aerosol proved to be effective in patients with AIDS, we conducted a prospective trial with regular inhalations of pentamidine. The aim of this study was to evaluate the toxicity, safety, practicability and possible resorption of pentamidine when applied as aerosol. The first of 43 patients were treated with 60 mg pentamidine on two days before, at the day of BMT and 14 days after BMT. Starting four weeks after BMT, 300 mg pentamidine were given every four weeks up to six months. After the study, the four 60 mg inhalations were replaced by two 300 mg inhalations before BMT, because this proved to be more convenient for the patients. There was no pneumonia due to pneumocystis carinii. The only noteworthy side effects observed were cough (19.8%), salivation (9.6%) and sore throat (5.7%). In general pentamidine was well tolerated and well accepted by the patients. Pentamidine could only be detected in the serum of 40 to 60% of all patients. In those patients the serum levels were 7.5 to 9 ng/ml and similar to concentrations found in comparable patients with AIDS. We conclude, that pentamidine-aerosol has only minor side effects, is well tolerated and safe and is therefore an attractive alternative for PcP-prophylaxis after BMT.
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PMID:[Risk factors and prevention of pneumocystis carinii pneumonia after bone marrow transplantation]. 146 Dec 27

In a total of 511 patients with T3,N0-3,M0 laryngeal carcinoma, 24 possible prognostic factors were analyzed retrospectively. The factors were age, sex, mode of treatment, duration of several clinical symptoms, the presence of sore throat, otalgia, dyspnea, and dysphagia, previous tracheotomy, tumor extension, lymph node status (five items), histologic grading, smoking habits, and alcohol intake. For 300 patients in whom surgery was part of the primary treatment, pathologic staging of the primary tumor and of lymph nodes in neck dissection specimens, cartilage invasion, radicality of the operation, differentiation grade, and subglottic extension ware also evaluated. In a univariate analysis for the whole group, tumor extension (limited to the glottic region), lymph node status (clinically palpable lymph nodes, cytologically confirmed positive lymph nodes), level of lymph node metastasis (high and midjugular site), histologic grading (poor differentiation grade), and treatment modality (planned combined therapy) were considered to be prognostic factors of corrected actuarial survival. In the group that underwent surgery, all factors derived from specimens of the larynx and neck dissections had prognostic significance. Multivariate analysis revealed that the glottic site of the tumor, the presence of cyto- and histopathologically proven metastatic lymph nodes, pretreatment tracheotomy, positive resection margins, and planned combined treatment had a significant influence on corrected actuarial survival.
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PMID:Prognostic factors for survival in patients with T3 laryngeal carcinoma. 146 24

Streptococcal myositis (SM), is a very serious condition with a high mortality rate. The port of entry of the infection is often unknown. We present here a case report concerning a 68-year-old patient with fulminant SM preceded by symptoms of an upper respiratory tract infection. Haemolytic streptococci of group A were found in the blood, muscle tissue and throat. The patient survived after massive therapeutic interventions including intensive care with intravenous antibiotics, fasciotomy, plasma exchange, controlled respiratory ventilation and exarticulation through the shoulder. The patient's wife fell ill at the same time with a sore throat and the same type of streptococci (T-type 3) was found in both patients.
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PMID:Streptococcal myositis. 146 86

Most sore throats are caused by viral infections; bacterial infections should be ascertained by laboratory testing and treated aggressively. The wide variety of etiologies demands a thorough history and physical examination to identify unusual causes of sore throat.
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PMID:Office evaluation and management of the sore throat. 147 Apr 42

A 71-year-old woman was transferred to Kushiro City General Hospital because of fever, sore throat, diffuse neck swelling and dyspnea. She had received right mastectomy for breast cancer under general anesthesia 6 days before the admission. The lateral X-ray film of the neck revealed abscess in the retropharyngeal space and the retroesophageal space. CT scan revealed mediastinitis. Next day she received neck dissection for drainage of the abscess under general anesthesia. Although the posterior pharyngeal wall was swollen, endo-tracheal intubation was not difficult. Brown tinged and purplish pus was aspirated from the interspace of carotid sheath and trachea, the retropharyngeal space, and the superior mediastinal space. The infected site was irrigated with a lot of peroxide and saline and draining tubes were placed in each interspace. Tracheostomy was not done but the patient was admitted to the ICU with her trachea intubated. The day after operation, she was extubated. Three days after the operation chest X-ray revealed pyothorax and chest tube was inserted for drainage. Seven days after the operation she was transferred to the ENT ward. Thereafter her recovery course was uneventful. It seems that the deep neck infection was probably caused by the injury on endotracheal intubation at the first operation in this case. Although this patient was cured of mediastinitis following deep neck infection, which is still lethal, early diagnosis and surgical drainage of the abscess are necessary.
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PMID:[Deep neck infection following endotracheal intubation]. 147 68

A prospective evaluation was made of an algorithm for a selective use of throat swabs in patients with sore throat in general practice. The algorithm states that a throat swab should be obtained (a) in all children younger than 15 years; (b) in patients aged 15 years or more who have pain on swallowing and at least three of four signs (enlarged or hyperaemic tonsils; exudate; enlarged or tender angular lymph nodes; and a temperature > or = 38 degrees C); and (c) in adults aged 15-44 years with pain on swallowing and one or two of the four signs, but not both cough and coryza. Group A streptococci were found by laboratory culture in 30% of throat swabs from 1783 patients. Using these results as the reference, the algorithm was 95% sensitive and 26% specific, and assigned 80% of the patients to be swabbed. Its positive and negative predictive values in this setting were 36% and 92%, respectively. It is concluded that this algorithm may be useful in general practice.
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PMID:An algorithm for a selective use of throat swabs in the diagnosis of group A streptococcal pharyngo-tonsillitis in general practice. 148 Aug 70

Sphenoid sinus mucoceles are uncommon and difficult to diagnose clinically owing to the inaccessibility of the sphenoid sinus to clinical examination. A case of infected sphenoid mucocele in which the patient complained of chronic sore throat and in which routine intranasal endoscopy contributed significantly to the diagnosis is presented. The pathology of mucocele and endoscopic sinus surgery as the treatment for sphenoid sinus mucocele is discussed.
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PMID:Sphenoid mucocele: detection and surgery by intranasal endoscopy. 148 71

The cardiovascular response to fiberoptic oral intubation under total intravenous anaesthesia with propofol or a balanced volatile technique with thiopentone/enflurane was compared in 50 patients of physical status ASA 1 and 2 who were scheduled for elective ear, nose and throat surgery. Patients were randomly assigned to receive propofol or enflurane. There was no significant difference between the two anaesthetic techniques in haemodynamic profile either before, during or after fibreoptic intubation (the study design was adequate to detect a 20% difference with > 90% statistical power), in incidence of postoperative sore throat or in time taken for intubation. In no patient did the oxygen saturation decrease to below 95% or the CO2 tension exceed 5.8 kPa.
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PMID:Cardiovascular effects of fibreoptic oral intubation. A comparison of a total intravenous and a balanced volatile technique. 148 24

Forty patients aged 2 to 5 years who were admitted for paediatric operations were randomly assigned to have either spinal or general anaesthesia. Spinal anaesthesia was achieved with isobaric bupivacaine 0.5% at a dose of 0.5 mg/kg. General anaesthesia was induced with thiopentone 2-5 mg/kg and continued with low-dose fentanyl (1-2 micrograms/kg, oxygen/nitrous oxide/isoflurane (30/70/0.1-0.5%), vecuronium normoventilating the patients. The time spent in the operation room was shorter in the spinal anaesthesia group because the children were awake and could immediately be transferred. The haemodynamic pattern and respiratory function were stable during spinal anaesthesia. After general anaesthesia, respiratory function deteriorated as indicated by arterial desaturation (< 90%), which was detected in 11 of the 20 patients after general anaesthesia. Vomiting (2), sore throat (4) and micturition difficulties (2) were the adverse events associated with general anaesthesia. Three patients were restless after spinal anaesthesia. It can be concluded that spinal anaesthesia is a suitable anaesthetic technique for paediatric surgery.
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PMID:[Pediatric surgery. A comparison of spinal anesthesia and general anesthesia]. 148 75


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