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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (sore throat)
2,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retropharyngeal abscess is a potentially fatal deep neck infection. Classical symptoms include fever, neck swelling, sore throat, dysphagia, and cervical rigidity. Sometimes small children present with nonspecific symptoms. We report a rare case whereby the Ga-67 citrate scan was the first investigation to reveal an inflammatory process in the retropharyngeal or submastoid region of a 3-year-old child with sepsis. This directed the line of investigation to a more precise anatomic imaging modality, CT scanning, to localize the abscess. With prompt administration of intravenous antibiotics, the child recovered quickly and did not require surgery. The Ga-67 scan is thus a useful screening test to detect inflammatory foci because of its high sensitivity. It is also valuable in the follow-up of the patient's response to therapy.
Clin Nucl Med 1999 Dec
PMID:Retropharyngeal abscess on a Ga-67 scan: a case report. 1059 73

A 47-year-old man who smelled of alcohol presented with a three-day history of sore throat. He had not had fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, rhinorrhea, cough, chest pain, or palpitations. On evaluation in the emergency department, he was found to have tachycardia and an irregular pulse.
Hosp Pract (1995) 1999 Dec 15
PMID:An alcoholic man with an abnormal pulse. 1061 94

This work was conducted in order to study how the health of adults is affected by the presence of moisture or mould in the home. A random sample of 310 houses in Finland was studied during the years 1993-1994. The houses were investigated for visual signs of moisture by a surveyor, and observations of mould were reported by the occupants. A moisture problem was observed in 52% and a mould problem in 27% of the houses. Health data was collected by means of a postal questionnaire from 699 adults. Exposure to moisture was significantly associated with sinusitis, acute bronchitis, nocturnal cough, nocturnal dyspnoea and sore throat, and the exposed inhabitants had significantly more episodes of common cold and tonsillitis. Exposure to mould was significantly associated with common cold, cough without phlegm, nocturnal cough, sore throat, rhinitis, fatigue and difficulties in concentration. Building-related moisture or mould increased the risk of upper and lower respiratory infections and symptoms as well as of nonrespiratory symptoms.
Eur Respir J 1999 Dec
PMID:The relationship between moisture or mould observations in houses and the state of health of their occupants. 1062 68

Head and neck cancers are a significant and worsening health problem in the UK. In the absence of screening, minimising diagnostic delay after the onset of symptoms improves prognosis. Delay, from the patient's initial experience of symptoms to the ultimate diagnosis, consists of two elements--the delay prior to presenting to a clinician plus that due to the health professional consulted. This study aimed to establish the period of delay between recognition of the initial tumour symptoms and the formal diagnosis among a sample of patients recently diagnosed with head and neck cancer. Using a semistructured questionnaire, 133 men and 55 women were interviewed by a research nurse, and the results were related to the clinical findings. Tumour size at diagnosis was classified according to T1 (22%), T2 (29%), T3 (27%) and T4 (22%). Of the 186 patients with complete hospital records, 48 (26%) were diagnosed with cancer of the lip and oral cavity (CLOC). From the onset of symptoms to the patients' initial decision to seek professional advice, the median period was 4 weeks among those with CLOC and 3 weeks for those with other head and neck cancers (OHNC). The distribution was highly skewed with delays beyond 6 months occurring among 9% of the OHNC group, compared with 3% of CLOC. From the onset of symptoms to a consultant appointment, the median delay was 8 weeks for OHNC, but 12 weeks for CLOC, with delays beyond 6 months of 13% in each group, respectively. First symptoms included 'change in voice' (26%), 'pain' (27%), 'lump' or 'growth' (12%) as well as dysphagia, 'infection', 'sore throat', 'ulcers' or 'abscess'. No significant association was found between the nature of the first symptoms and the urgency with which patients interpreted their symptoms, nor was this related to diagnostic delay, sex, age or social class. It is concluded that there is substantial variation in time to clinical presentation, particularly for OHNC, although professional delay for the majority of these cases was minimal. For patients with CLOC there was less variation in patient delay, but clinician delay was relatively longer.
Eur J Cancer Care (Engl) 1999 Dec
PMID:Diagnostic delays in head and neck cancers. 1088 16

Higher indoor concentrations of air pollutants due, in part, to lower ventilation rates are a potential cause of sick building syndrome (SBS) symptoms in office workers. The indoor carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration is an approximate surrogate for indoor concentrations of other occupant-generated pollutants and for ventilation rate per occupant. Using multivariate logistic regression (MLR) analyses, we evaluated the relationship between indoor CO2 concentrations and SBS symptoms in occupants from a probability sample of 41 U.S. office buildings. Two CO2 metrics were constructed: average workday indoor minus average outdoor CO2 (dCO2, range 6-418 ppm), and maximum indoor 1-h moving average CO2 minus outdoor CO2 concentrations (dCO2MAX). MLR analyses quantified dCO2/SBS symptom associations, adjusting for personal and environmental factors. A dose-response relationship (p < 0.05) with odds ratios per 100 ppm dCO2 ranging from 1.2 to 1.5 for sore throat, nose/sinus, tight chest, and wheezing was observed. The dCO2MAX/SBS regression results were similar.
Indoor Air 2000 Dec
PMID:Associations between indoor CO2 concentrations and sick building syndrome symptoms in U.S. office buildings: an analysis of the 1994-1996 BASE study data. 1108 29

Gastroesophageal reflux disease can result in such supraesophageal complications as hoarseness, sore throat, cough, bronchitis, asthma, recurrent pneumonia, intermittent choking, chest pain, and ear pain. Appropriate patient care involves careful evaluation to decide on medical or surgical therapy. Preoperative testing must include endoscopy, 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring, and esophageal manometry. Additional evaluations, such as barium swallow, chest x-ray, bronchoscopy, and sinus radiographs, may be required. Medical treatment improves gastroesophageal reflux and supraesophageal symptoms. However, surgical therapy seems to provide better long-term results. A profile that predicts the best response to medical therapy has not been identified, although the best results with surgery are achieved in patients with nocturnal asthma, onset of reflux before pulmonary symptoms, laryngeal inflammation, and a good response to medical treatment.
Am J Med 2001 Dec 03
PMID:Laparoscopic antireflux surgery for supraesophageal complications of gastroesophageal reflux disease. 1174 51

This study was undertaken to compare laryngoscopic-guided LMA insertion with a standard insertion technique. A total of 149 patients undergoing elective general surgical and orthopaedic procedures were randomly divided into two groups. Study endpoints included ease of insertion, haemodynamic changes, local trauma bleeding, and postoperative sore throat. There were no statistically significant differences found. The laryngoscope may aid laryngeal mask airway insertion in some circumstances.
Anaesth Intensive Care 2001 Dec
PMID:A randomized trial comparing two laryngeal mask airway insertion techniques. 1177 5

Several epidemiological studies have described an association between adverse health effects and exposure to mould and microbes present in the indoor air of moisture-damaged buildings. However, the biochemical linkage between microbial exposure and the large variety of reported respiratory symptoms is poorly understood. In the present study, the authors compared the respiratory symptoms, the production of inflammatory mediators interleukin (IL)-1, IL-4, IL-6, tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and cell count in nasal lavage fluid and induced sputum samples of subjects working in moisture-damaged and control school buildings. The sampling was performed and the questionnaires were completed at the end of the spring term, at the end of the summer vacation (2.5 months), during the winter term and after a 1-week winter holiday. The authors found a significant elevation of IL-1, TNF-alpha and IL-6 in nasal lavage fluid and IL-6 in induced sputum during the spring term in the subjects from the moisture-damaged school building compared to the subjects from the control building. The exposed workers reported sore throat, phlegm, eye irritation, rhinitis, nasal obstruction and cough in parallel with these findings. The present data suggests an association between microbial exposure, and symptoms as well as changes in pro-inflammatory mediators detected from both the upper and lower airways.
Eur Respir J 2001 Dec
PMID:Changes in pro-inflammatory cytokines in association with exposure to moisture-damaged building microbes. 1182 1

Little evidence exists from randomized controlled trials to support the role of tonsillectomy in children with recurrent tonsillitis. Despite this, parents report a great change for the better in their children following the operation. Previous trials vary in their inclusion criteria, both in terms of the definition of tonsillitis and in the frequency of sore throats required before entry into the study is permitted. The aims of this study are to define tonsillitis from the perspective of parents whose children are awaiting tonsillectomy for recurrent sore throats, and to determine whether such parents have a better understanding of the difference between tonsillitis and other sore throats than parents of children from a normal population control group. These aims demonstrate whether parents who request tonsillectomy for their children do so on the basis of a recognized clinical problem. We report that parents can clearly identify a sore throat illness that they call tonsillitis and which is differentiated from other sore throats by different symptom complexes. The parental history is important in the assessment of a child prior to tonsillectomy. The views of parents whose children have recurrent tonsillitis must be further investigated if the difference between randomised controlled trial results and parents' opinions regarding the benefit of tonsillectomy is to be understood.
Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci 2001 Dec
PMID:How well do parents recognize the difference between tonsillitis and other sore throats? 1184 23

Previous reports have suggested that the incidence of tonsillectomy, and/or tonsillitis in children, is influenced by factors such as parental smoking, maternal health and previous parental tonsillectomy. The reports have considered single factors and have not considered the possible confounding effect of the factors upon one another. Previous studies have not investigated the influence of social class. This paper uses the background of a large case-control trial of children awaiting tonsillectomy for recurrent tonsillitis, and a normal control group to study the influence of parental smoking, parental surgical history, parental tonsillectomy, family atopy and social class upon the reported incidence of sore throats and tonsillitis. A multivariate analysis is used. The paper shows that parental smoking, previous parental surgery and social class have no effect upon the number of sore throat episodes. A history of parental tonsillectomy and a family history of atopy are both significant predictive factors for the number of reported sore throats and episodes of tonsillitis in children.
Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci 2001 Dec
PMID:Is the incidence of tonsillectomy influenced by the family medical or social history? 1184 28


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