Cases reported "Pneumonia"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/8. High fever. Experience in private practice.

    Experience with confirmed high fever, 40 C (104 F) or more, in a private practice during 14 years is presented. The records of 1,500 patients covering 8,000 patient years disclosed only 108 confirmed episodes of high fever. Eleven diagnostic categories included 149 diagnoses. Fourteen of 43 roentgenographic examinations yielded positive findings, including two cases of pneumonia not detected on physical examination. Two of six stool cultures yielded specific enteric pathogens. Convulsions occurred in 12 of the 108 episodes of high fever, and recurred only once in one child. There were no deaths in this series of children with high fevers. Only one diagnosis, pneumonia, was significantly more frequent in confirmed high fever than in unconfirmed high fever. Lastly, the ability of a group of mothers to read thermometers set at three different temperatures proved to be surprisingly good.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = physical examination, physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/8. 3: Community-acquired pneumonia.

    Community-acquired pneumonia is caused by a range of organisms, most commonly streptococcus pneumoniae, mycoplasma pneumoniae, chlamydia pneumoniae and respiratory viruses. Chest x-ray is required for diagnosis. A risk score based on patient age, coexisting illness, physical signs and results of investigations can aid management decisions. patients at low risk can usually be managed with oral antibiotics at home, while those at higher risk should be further assessed, and may need admission to hospital and intravenous therapy. For S. pneumoniae infection, amoxycillin is the recommended oral drug, while benzylpenicillin is recommended for intravenous use; all patients should also receive a tetracycline (eg, doxycycline) or macrolide (eg, roxithromycin) as part of initial therapy. Flucloxacillin or dicloxacillin should be added if staphylococcal pneumonia is suspected, and gentamicin or other specific therapy if gram-negative pneumonia is suspected; a third-generation cephalosporin plus intravenous erythromycin is recommended as initial therapy for severe cases. Infections that require special therapy should be considered (eg, tuberculosis, melioidosis, legionella, acinetobacter baumanii and pneumocystis carinii infection).
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.10424210034809
keywords = physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/8. autopsy case of Dubin-Johnson syndrome with pneumonia and abetalipoproteinemia-like lipid profile.

    We report the autopsy of a 79-year-old Japanese woman with Dubin-Johnson syndrome accompanied by pneumonia, an abetalipoproteinemia-like lipid profile and acanthocytosis. On admission, physical examination of the patient revealed malnutrition. Blood tests revealed marked inflammatory changes and mild liver dysfunction. Chest X-ray indicated bilateral pneumonia. Total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and triglyceride levels were 89 mg/dL, 5 mg/dL and 6 mg/dL, respectively. Peripheral blood smears revealed numerous acanthocytes. Despite the administration of antibiotics and nutritional support, the patient died. autopsy revealed a black liver, atrophy of fat tissue on the mesentery, and pneumonia with bilateral pleural effusion. We believe that the abetalipoproteinemia-like lipid profiles in this case were caused by malnutrition and the inflammatory changes rather than the direct effects of Dubin-Johnson syndrome. We base this conclusion on the following three findings: 1) the patient's lipid profile before hospitalization was in the normal range, 2) her serum LDL cholesterol and triglyceride levels gradually increased after nutritional support began, and 3) blood tests revealed marked inflammatory changes (c-reactive protein 9.0 mg/dL; interleukin-6 16.4 pg/mL). This case provides important information that enhances our understanding of lipid metabolism under conditions of malnutrition and inflammation.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = physical examination, physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/8. Diagnostic value of lung uptake of indium-111 oxine-labeled white blood cells.

    One hundred sixty-two white-blood-cell scans were retrospectively reviewed to determine the sensitivity and specificity of the test for pulmonary and pleural infection. All scans were performed 18-24 hr after injection of indium-111 oxine-labeled autologous or donor cells. Pulmonary activity was graded on a scale of 0-4: 0 = equal to soft tissue; 1 = greater than soft tissue but less than rib; 2 = equal or greater than rib but less than liver; 3 = equal or greater than liver but less than spleen; 4 = equal to spleen. Activity was also characterized as being focal or diffuse. The white-blood-cell scan findings were correlated with the clinical diagnosis on the basis of physical examination, laboratory results, chest radiographs, clinical course, and pathologic studies when available. As pulmonary activity increased from grade 1 to 4, sensitivity declined from 93% to 14% and specificity increased from 64% to 100%. The sensitivity and specificity of focal uptake were 31% and 89% vs 62% and 74% for diffuse pulmonary activity. Making a distinction between focal and diffuse activity did not improve the specificity of low grades of pulmonary activity. The white-blood-cell scan can be very sensitive or very specific for pulmonary or pleural infection, depending on the criteria selected for a positive scan.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = physical examination, physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/8. Cryptococcal pneumonia in a patient with sickle cell disease.

    We present the findings in a patient having sickle cell disease who developed multilobar pneumonia. Cultures of bronchial aspirates and histologic specimens grew cryptococcus neoformans. There was neither spontaneous clearing of the infection nor a response to bactericidal antibiotics. The patient had no underlying malignant neoplasm or immunodeficiency as indicated by history, physical examination, and specialized tests of humoral and cell-mediated immunity.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = physical examination, physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/8. Nocardial infection in a renal transplant recipient--a case report.

    Report is given about a 50 year old renal transplant recipient who developed signs of a severe pneumonia 37 days post transplantation. The diagnosis following chest X-ray and physical examination was multifocal nodular pneumonia of unknown origin in an immunosuppressed patient. Although a varying antibiotic chemotherapy was administered at high doses he died 4 weeks later without identification of the infective agent. Post-mortem and microbiological examinations revealed a systemic suppurative infection caused by nocardia asteroides. Percutaneous or open lung biopsy within the first 10 days after onset of clinical symptoms has to be recommended to secure the diagnosis and treatment with sulphonamides.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = physical examination, physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/8. Cyclic hematopoiesis: human cyclic neutropenia.

    Human cyclic neutropenia is a relatively rare disorder of unknown etiology. Study of patients and animals with the disorder has led to important information regarding the differentiation of blood cells and control mechanisms of hematopoietic regulation. It has a world-wide distribution, occurs in both sexes, and, in about one-fourth of the patients, a family history has been obtained. While usually benign, deaths from overwhelming infections occur. In addition to cycling of neutrophils, in the majority of cases the monocytes cycle and in about one-fifth of the cases eosinophils are elevated. In a small number of patients, cycling of platelets and reticulocytes occurs. Cycles of colony stimulating factor are present. Cycles of bone marrow cells are easily demonstrable. The recent transfer of human cyclic neutropenia following allogenic bone marrow grafting confirms the hypothesis that the disorder is of bone marrow origin. The following subjects are covered in this review article: A. Definition, history, and incidence; B. Etiology, geographic distribution, mode of transmission; C. Symptoms, physical signs, diagnosis, clinical course; D. Clinical laboratory studies; E. Experimental studies; F. prognosis; G. Treatment. It is felt that human cyclic neutropenia represents a heterogeneous group of disorders and that much remains to be learned about its cause(s).
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.10424210034809
keywords = physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/8. hallucinations after a therapeutic dose of benzodiazepine hypnotics with co-administration of erythromycin.

    A case of repetitive hallucinations during treatment with a therapeutic dosage of triazolam (0.25 mg/day) and nitrazepam (5 mg/day) is presented. The patient suffered from acute pneumonia and chronic renal failure. Such non-psychotic symptoms as anxiety, tremor and depressed feeling were observed initially. However, after co-administration of erythromycin (600 mg/day), visual hallucinations and abnormal bodily sensations developed repeatedly after each administration of triazolam or nitrazepam. This report suggests that benzodiazepine hypnotics even at a therapeutic dosage with co-administration of erythromycin causes serious psychotic symptoms in vulnerable patients with physical complications.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.10424210034809
keywords = physical
(Clic here for more details about this article)


Leave a message about 'Pneumonia'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.