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Pulmonary Eosinophilia [PDF]

open access: possibleClinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology, 2008
Eosinophils may infiltrate the lung tissue, thus impairing gas exchange and causing several symptoms as dyspnea, fever, and cough. This process may be secondary to several factors, including drugs or parasite migration, or primary (idiopathic). Acute eosinophilic pneumonia is life-threatening and presents frequently in young smokers as an acute ...
Uriel Katz, Yehuda Shoenfeld
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Eosinophilia in Coccidioidomycosis [PDF]

open access: possibleArchives of Internal Medicine, 1988
Eosinophilia as a manifestation of coccidioidomycosis may be found in blood or cerebrospinal fluid. We report on a case of coccidioidomycosis with pleurisy, skin lesions, and meningitis with concomitant striking eosinophilia in both blood and cerebrospinal fluid that resolved promptly after amphotericin B therapy was started.
Daniel R. Hinthorn, Martin J. Schermoly
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Eosinophilia

Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1984
Eosinophilia (eosinophil count >0.45 × 109/litre) is associated with some infections, some allergic diseases, and a variety of other conditions, often neoplastic. Parasitic diseases—eosinophilia is a characteristic feature of infection by multicellular helminth parasites, e.g.
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Eosinophilia and Rash

The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2013
*Division of Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, †Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, and ‡Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts Reprint Address:David F.M.
William Binder   +4 more
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Control of Eosinophilia

International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1991
Experiments in vitro have suggested that IL5 is a late-acting factor in eosionophil production, and that other factors such as IL3, G-CSF and GM-CSF are required for the production of committed eosinophil progenitors. Furthermore, work in vitro indicates that in addition to IL5, both IL3 and GM-CSF are capable of stimulating eosinophil differentiation.
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Eosinophilia and Agammaglobulinemia

Pediatrics, 1965
While studying a group of children with the visceral larva migrans syndrome we encountered in the patient group a child with agammaglobulinemia. This child, in spite of an almost complete absence of immune globulins, exhibited the massive eosinophilia characteristic of the tissue phase of helminth infections. Case Report L.
Carolyn C. Huntley, Margarita C. Costas
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Eosinophilia in Uremia

Nephron, 1981
Peripheral and bone marrow eosinophils were determined in a group of patients on chronic hemodialysis and in predialysis uremics. Healthy subjects were taken as controls. Increased number of eosinophils in bone marrow were found in the predialysis uremic group and this finding was even more accentuated in the dialyzed patients.
Daniela Gabizon   +4 more
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Cough and Eosinophilia

The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, 2019
Eosinophilic airway inflammation is observed in 30% to 50% of chronic cough sufferers. It is a common feature of asthma and upper airway cough syndrome, and it is required in the diagnosis of nonasthmatic eosinophilic bronchitis. Our understanding of the mechanisms underlying allergic and nonallergic eosinophilic inflammation have evolved tremendously ...
Sarah Diver   +2 more
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Workup for eosinophilia

Allergy and Asthma Proceedings, 2019
With automated differentials being a common part of routine blood counts, the finding of eosinophilia is a relatively frequent occurrence. The first step in elucidating the cause is to determine the absolute eosinophil count (AEC), which is calculated from multiplying the percentage of eosinophils by the total white blood cell count.
Canting Guo, Bruce S. Bochner
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Cancer and Eosinophilia

New England Journal of Medicine, 1983
The investigations by Slungaard and colleagues, described in this issue,1 deal with the mechanism of a spectacular elevation of blood eosinophils in a patient with lung cancer and provide us with a...
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