Cases reported "Tracheitis"

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1/2. Herpetic tracheobronchitis.

    Nine adult patients from three community teaching hospitals had bronchospasm unresponsive to standard therapy. Bronchoscopic, cytologic, histopathologic, and virologic studies confirmed that necrotizing and exudative tracheobronchitis was due to herpes simplex virus. No patient had a history of previous chronic lung disease; most were not immunocompromised. Three patients never had intubation during hospitalization. All patients were successfully treated with intravenous acyclovir. Herpetic tracheobronchitis may be a commoner clinical syndrome than generally assumed. In an elderly patient with unresolving acute bronchospasm, herpesvirus infection of the lower respiratory tract should be considered in the differential diagnosis. In the immunocompetent host, antiviral therapy can successfully treat herpesvirus respiratory infection, with reversal of clinical, virologic, and pathologic findings. A prompt and accurate diagnosis is crucial.
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ranking = 1
keywords = herpesvirus
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2/2. Cytologic features of nonfatal herpesvirus tracheobronchitis.

    Herpesvirus infections of the lower respiratory tract have most commonly been reported in patients with severe burns, immunosuppression or malignancies. Two patients without any of these underlying conditions developed severe herpetic tracheobronchitis, diagnosed by cytologic examination and confirmed by serologic studies. Serial examination of sputum, bronchial brushings and bronchial washings permitted observation of the evolution and progression of cellular changes found in herpesvirus infection of the lower respiratory tract. both patients recovered without specific antiviral therapy, but both developed superinfection with gram-negative organisms, requiring intensive antibiotic therapy. The distinctive features of herpesvirus infection in the tracheobronchial tree are similar to those recognized elsewhere in the body. Early findings include a variety of nonspecific changes in nuclear chromatin configurations; multinucleated cells may be common but do not often contain the central intranuclear inclusion bodies seen in later stages. These distinctive central intranuclear inclusions disappear in a few days, leaving only reparative changes in the surface epithelium. Herpesviruses are increasingly being reported in the literature as an etiologic agent of acute tracheobronchitis in otherwise healthy individuals.
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ranking = 3
keywords = herpesvirus
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