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Query: UMLS:C0729233 (
Thoracic
)
6,478
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thoracic
nontuberculous or atypical mycobacterial infections typically occur in patients who have underlying
lung disease
or an immunologic abnormality. These infections are usually indolent and the diagnosis is often difficult to establish and, even if confirmed, is of questionable clinical significance. The most common radiologic pattern is fibronodular opacities in the upper lobes similar to those seen with tuberculosis. Less commonly, patients may have scattered nodularity associated with bronchiectasis. If suspected by radiologic and clinical findings, culture should be obtained for diagnosis. This review focuses on nontuberculous mycobacterial disease in the thorax of the immunocompetent host.
...
PMID:Pulmonary manifestations of nontuberculous Mycobacterium. 761 Feb 41
Correctly performed antituberculous chemotherapy, together with the early diagnostics of tuberculosis, significantly lowered the need for surgery. Surgery is limited to patients with poor or no response to chemotherapy. In the period between 1983-1992 212 tuberculous patients were operated in the Clinic for
Thoracic
surgery, the Institute for the
Pulmonary Disease
the operated patients had the following form of the disease: primary tuberculosis in 4 patients (1.87%), 104 patients (49.06%) had the postprimary form of the disease, 67 patients (31.60%) had tuberculoma (causative lesion) cavernous tuberculosis existed in 33 patients (15.57%), while only 4 patients (1.87%) had diffuse pulmonary lesion. Diagnosis of post-tuberculous syndrome was made in 68 patients (32.08%). Secondary aspergylloma existed in 36 patients while the frequency of bronchial stenosis and bronchiectasis was the same -m 31 patients (16.98% and 14.63% respectively). One patient had broncho-oesophageal fistula. Tuberculous empiema, complicating the disease, existed in 36 patients (16.98%). Comparing the two 5-years periods, (1983-87 and 1988 to 1992) the authors conclude that the number of operations for tuberculosis is decreasing. Treatment was successful in all patients except in a patient with a broncho-esophageal fistula, who died postoperatively slow lung reexpansion existed in 5 patients, and in two cases partial upper thoracoplasty had to be done in order to solve the complication of the initial treatment. In all cases postoperative antituberculous chemotherapy was performed taking in consideration the problem of possible drug-resistance. There were no recurrences.
...
PMID:[Modern surgical treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis]. 778 90
The first widely used questionnaire in respiratory epidemiology was the questionnaire from the Medical Research Council (MRC) of Great Britain. In the first version, from 1960, there were only a few questions about wheezing, but in later editions, more questions about asthma and asthma-like symptoms were added. The MRC questionnaire initiated the development of other questionnaires such as the European Community for Coal and Steel (ECSC) questionnaire of respiratory symptoms and the questionnaire from the American
Thoracic
Society and the Division of
Lung Diseases
(ATS-DLD-78). In Tucson, Ariz, a questionnaire was developed in the 1970s that was focused on the subject's own report of asthma. In Great Britain, a questionnaire was developed in the 1980s with the intention of finding the most valid symptom-based items for identifying asthma, "the IUATLD (1984) questionnaire." When judging the validity of a questionnaire, it is essential to understand sensitivity and specificity. Sensitivity is the fraction of the truly diseased subjects found to be diseased using the questionnaire. Specificity is the fraction of the truly healthy subjects found to be healthy using the questionnaire. Regarding questionnaires dealing with asthma, the situation is confusing because of the absence of any gold standard for asthma. The most usual mode of validation has been to test the questionnaire against the results of a clinical physiologic investigation, often a nonspecific bronchial challenge test. Another approach has been to compare the answers from the questionnaire with the clinical diagnoses of asthma. When validated in relation to bronchial challenge tests, the questions about self-reported asthma have a mean sensitivity of 36 percent (range, 7 to 80 percent) and a mean specificity of 94 percent (range, 74 to 100 percent). The questions about "physician-diagnosed asthma" have even higher specificity, 99 percent. When validated in relation to a clinical diagnosis of asthma, the mean sensitivity for the question about self-reported asthma was 68 percent in the reviewed studies (range, 48 to 100 percent). The specificity was 94 percent (range, 78 to 100 percent). One problem in using the presence of bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR) as a gold standard for asthma is that many people with BHR report no respiratory complaints. In other words, the presence of BHR is a measure with high sensitivity but low specificity for asthma. The effect of using a methacholine challenge test as a standard for the disease will thus be an underestimation of the sensitivity of the questionnaire.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Asthma and asthma-like symptoms in adults assessed by questionnaires. A literature review. 792 33
Thoracic
surgeons have often been embarrassed by the discrepancy between an improvement in symptoms and the unchanged or even worse results of spirometry in postoperative patients with either bullae or inflammatory
lung disease
. Forty-four patients with lung diseases, who underwent a total of 47 operations, were categorized as follows: 12 cases of empyema, 16 cases of giant bulla (undergoing surgery a total of 19 times), 4 cases of bronchiectasis, and 12 cases of other miscellaneous diseases. All patients were tested preoperatively and again 4-6 months after surgery on both the spirometer and treadmill exercise tests. The forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume (FEV1.0) results were as follows: the empyema group 1.82 +/- 0.52 liters preoperatively to 1.93 +/- 0.69 liters postoperatively and 1.47 +/- 0.44 liters to 1.56 +/- 0.53 liters, respectively; and the giant bulla group, 3.49 +/- 0.96 liters to 3.35 +/- 0.77 liters and 2.35 +/- 0.96 liters to 2.48 +/- 0.69 liters, respectively. However, the exercise time was prolonged in the empyema group from 6.00 +/- 3.77 min to 8.33 +/- 3.80 min (P < 0.01) and in the giant bulla group from 11.83 +/- 3.71 min to 12.92 +/- 2.84 min (P < 0.05). It was thus concluded that exercise testing should be chosen for the postoperative evaluation of patients with inflammatory pulmonary disease and giant bullae, especially if any discrepancies are seen between spirometry and performance status, because on the basis of our results, it appears that the benefits obtained by surgery are best measured by the dynamic values of exercise testing and not by the static values of spirometry at rest.
...
PMID:The superiority of exercise testing over spirometry in the evaluation of postoperative lung function for patients with pulmonary disease. 805 86
The inspiratory flow-volume (FV) curve can be used to identify patients with upper airway obstruction, air trapping, and restriction. Current computed pulmonary function testing equipment often mandates a forced expiratory maneuver (FEM) immediately prior to the forced inspiratory maneuver (standard method). We evaluated the inspiratory FV curve with and without an antecedent FEM in 119 subjects referred for pulmonary function testing. The subjects were divided into four groups by grading the degree of airway obstruction using confidence intervals of the FEV1/FVC percent predicted minus the actual FEV1/FVC percent measured from the best FEM according to Intermountain
Thoracic
Society recommendations. The forced inspiratory vital capacity (FIVC), forced inspiratory flow 50 (FIF50), and peak inspiratory flow (PIF) from the inspiratory FV curve with an antecedent FEM was compared with the FIVC, FIF50, and PIF without an antecedent FEM in each category of obstructive
lung disease
. The FIVC without the antecedent FEM was significantly larger than that with an antecedent FEM by 170 ml (p < 0.002) in subjects with severe airway obstruction, but was not significantly different in the other groups. The FIF50 was not significantly different in any group, but approached significance in both normal subjects and subjects with severe obstruction. The PIF was not significantly different in any group, but approached significance in the normal subjects, order for patients with severe obstructive airway disease to generate a valid forced inspiratory FV curve, it should be obtained without an antecedent FEM. When a plateau of the inspiratory FV curve is encountered, we suggest that is useful to generate the inspiratory FV curve prior to the FEM and to analyze its flow and volume characteristics independent of the FEM. The "best" inspiratory FV curve should then be displayed with the "best" FEM for proper evaluation of the FV loop.
...
PMID:Analysis of the inspiratory flow-volume curve. Should it always precede the forced expiratory maneuver? 808 64
A 64-year-old white male with cavitary
lung disease
is presented. Mycobacterium avium was isolated from sputa and gastric lavage and the American
Thoracic
Society criteria for nontuberculous mycobacterial disease were met. Seven years follow-up and treatment regimens are discussed. This case illustrates that medical treatment of M. avium pulmonary disease can be disappointing and requires regular clinical, radiological, microbiological and haematological reassessment to evaluate efficacy and toxicity of therapy. Despite in vitro resistance to the standard antimycobacterial agents, prolonged treatment regimens can be successful and are the therapy of choice. Another drug combination, based on in vitro susceptibility patterns, has to be started for patients who fail to respond or who relapse. Lifelong treatment may be necessary to keep the patient stable and to prevent further destruction of lung parenchyma.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of pulmonary disease caused by Mycobacterium avium in a previously healthy patient. 839 2
Pulmonary function was assessed by spirometry in 5,201 ambulatory elderly participants of the Cardiovascular Health Study, sampled from four communities. A stringent quality assurance program exceeded American
Thoracic
Society (ATS) recommendations for spirometry. Less than 6% of the participants were unable to perform three acceptable spirometry maneuvers. A "healthy" subgroup of 777 women and men 65 to 85 yr of age was identified by excluding smokers and those with
lung disease
and other factors determined to independently, significantly, and negatively influence the FEV1. Results from black participants were examined separately. Reference equations and normal ranges for FEV1, FVC, and the FEV1/FVC ratio were determined from the healthy group. The results demonstrate differences in predicted values as great as 20% (0.5 to 1 L) for elderly patients when compared with the spirometry reference equations that are most commonly used in the United States.
...
PMID:Spirometry reference values for women and men 65 to 85 years of age. Cardiovascular health study. 842 Apr 5
A nested case-control study was undertaken to assess the role of antibody (Ab) to a panel of antigens associated with hypersensitivity pneumonitis in the development of
lung disease
among Wisconsin dairy farmers. Immunologic reactivity to a panel of inhaled allergens was assessed in the Ab+ cases and compared to the Ab+ control, Ab- control, and Ab- blue-collar control subjects by skin tests, RAST assays, and a modified American
Thoracic
Society questionnaire. The most prevalent allergens among the cases as determined by either skin test or RAST assays were the house dust mites (HDM) (21.6%), storage mites (11.2%), grain smuts (11.2%), Cladosporium (7.5%), Aspergillus (6.0%), and cattle (5.2%). No other allergens appeared to be different from in nonfarming populations. Of the storage mite reactors, IgE to Lepidoglyphus destructor (7 of 8) was the most frequently found, followed by Tyrophagus putrescentiae (6 of 8), Glycyphagus domesticus (5 of 8), Chortoglyphus arcuatus (5 of 8), and Acarus siro (2 of 8). L. destructor was also isolated from the farm of one of the cases. There was no difference in the total IgE levels among the groups. Reactions to HDM, storage mites, and grain smuts were significantly more frequent among the cases (p < 0.05). We conclude from this study that there is a significant increase in reactivity to certain inhaled allergens among those dairy farmers reporting barn-associated respiratory symptoms that is unrelated to past exposure to the causative agents of farmer's lung disease.
...
PMID:Inhaled aeroallergen and storage mite reactivity in a Wisconsin farmer nested case-control study. 843 Sep 58
The role of rapidly growing mycobacteria (RGM) as pulmonary pathogens has been unclear. We identified 154 cases of
lung disease
caused by RGM using the microbiologic and radiographic criteria of the American
Thoracic
Society (ATS) and availability of the causative organism for study. More than one third of patients had positive lung biopsy cultures. Patients were predominantly white (83%), female (65%) nonsmokers (66%), and they had prolonged periods from onset of symptoms to diagnosis of their disease. Cough was an almost universal presenting symptom, whereas constitutional symptoms became more important with progression of disease. Upper lobe infiltrates were most common (88%), with 77% of patients developing bilateral disease. Cavitation was present in only 16% of the patients. Specific underlying diseases were infrequent, but they included previously treated mycobacterial disease (18%), coexistent Mycobacterium avium complex (8%), cystic fibrosis (6%), and gastroesophageal disorders with chronic vomiting (6%). The majority of isolates (82%) were M. abscessus (formerly M. chelonae subsp. abscessus). Effective treatment for M. fortuitum long disease was accomplished with drug therapy, whereas surgical resection of localized disease was the only effective long-term therapy for M. abscessus. Although the disease was generally slowly progressive, 21 of 154 (14%) patients died as a consequence of progressive RGM
lung disease
and respiratory failure. RGM should be recognized as a cause of chronic mycobacterial
lung disease
, and respiratory isolates should be assessed carefully.
...
PMID:Clinical features of pulmonary disease caused by rapidly growing mycobacteria. An analysis of 154 patients. 848 42
Pulmonary function was assessed by spirometry in 3,076 elderly Japanese-American men of the Honolulu Heart Program (HHP) cohort. The assessment was done with a stringent quality assurance program that adhered to American
Thoracic
Society (ATS) recommendations for spirometry. Less than 6% of the participants were unable to perform three acceptable spirometry maneuvers. A "healthy" subgroup of 528 men between the ages of 71 and 90 yr was identified by excluding almost all smokers and subjects with
lung disease
and other factors negatively influencing FEV1. Reference equations and normal ranges for FEV1, FVC, and the FEV1/FVC ratio were derived from the healthy group. Use of prediction equations from the Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) of elderly European-American men consistently overpredicted FVC by 0.3 to 0.4 L and FEV1 by 0.15 L. Men in the HHP were on average 11 cm shorter than those in the CHS. Use of a prediction equation derived from the HHP cohort when the men in the cohort were on average 22.6 yr younger consistently overpredicted FEV1 by 0.2 to 0.3 L. These results underscore the importance of using prediction equations appropriate to the ethnicity, age, and height characteristics of the subjects being studied.
...
PMID:Reference values for pulmonary function tests of Japanese-American men aged 71 to 90 years. 856 36
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