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An unusual outbreak of hookworm disease occurred after a game of "kabaddi" (a local game which results in much body contact with the ground) in 27 young males from one village. It was characterized by an immediate incapacitating dermatitis, followed by severe pulmonary symptoms. Progressive weakness, abdominal pain, weight loss and anemia developed within a few months. Ancylostoma duodenale was found in all except four patients who had received antihelminthic treatment. Specific treatment for hookworm resulted in complete clinical recovery. Features of the outbreak were: 1) the hitherto unrecorded mode of infection; 2) severe dermatitis; 3) pulmonary symptoms lasting more than 3 mo; 4) abdominal symptoms suggestive of subacute obstruction starting 4-6 mo after exposure; and 5) severe disability with weight loss for a period of 1 yr until specific treatment was administered.
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PMID:An unusual outbreak of hookworm disease in North India. 62 80

The increase of Cr+6 in well water results from pollution by electroplating waste water. The average content of Cr+6 in water of the wells in the polluted area is as high as 1.68 mumols/L, obviously higher than that in the control area (P less than 0.05). The health condition of inhabitants is poor in the polluted area, with a higher incidence of such symptoms as dizziness, weariness, poor appetite, abdominal pain and dermatitis. The blood pressure of the inhabitants in the polluted area is generally lower than that of those in the control area. The chromium content in the urine of 36 cases in the polluted area is 0.12 mumols/L, which is much higher than that in the control area (P less than 0.05). This investigation indicates that long-term drinking of high-chromium content water is harmful to people's health.
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PMID:[Effects of Cr+6-polluted-well-water on inhabitant's health]. 234 Jul 66

Inpatient and community-based care can be complementary in relation to the management of HIV disease. Medical records from 200 inpatients of Chikankata Hospital near Lusaka, Zambia and 200 home based patients were examined and compared for the common symptoms of presentation of HIV disease, associated opportunistic infections, and treatment protocols. Drug costs of both groups were also compared. The most common respiratory symptoms in the 2 groups are cough, chest pains, weight loss, and hemoptysis. Treatment employed for these symptoms were cortimoxazole, penicillin V, erthromycin, and tetracycline. Acetyl saliclic acid and paracetamol were used for pain relief in both groups. Gastointestinal system symptoms for both groups were diarrhea, weight loss, abdominal pain, and vomiting. Cotrimoxazole and metronidazole were used in treating diarrhea. Additional treatment protocol for the 2 patient samples included oral rehydration therapy for dehydration, antacid or bismuth subsalicylate for diarrhea and enteritis, and mycostatin for oral candidiasis. Central nervous system symptomatology included headache, dementia, neckace, and lethargy. Chloramphenicol was employed in treating bacterial meningitis. Diazepam and chlorpromazine were effective for restless patients. Genito-urinary system symptomatology for the 2 groups included dysuria, genital ulcers, hematuria, viral warts, and buboes. Antibodies were used for sexually transmitted diseases and infections. Skin symptomatology included rash and dermatitis, herpes zoster, abscess, kaposi's sarcoma, ulcers, furunculosis, and discharging anal sinus. In treating these symptoms, hospital based care and home based care were similar. Overall, it was found that hospital treatment protocols were detailed, expensive, and time consuming. Furthermore, hospital treatment for HIV positive patients is more expensive than HIV negative patients; hospital costs for 50 HIV negative patients totaled US$415.94 compared to US$1204.98 HIV positive/PTB negative patients and US$1705.62 for HIV positive/PTB positive patients. Drug cost/patient admission is increased by 469% if HIV positive. (author's modified).
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PMID:Clinical care as part of integrated AIDS management in a Zambian rural community. 248 94

In a health and morbidity screening among 500 carpet weaving children and 450 children attending school selected at random in a rural field practice area the age group studied was from 6 to 16. Each child was thoroughly interviewed and examined for any deviation from health. The height and weight were taken by standard procedures and clinical assessment of morbidity and nutritional status was also observed. The results showed that the heights and weights of schoolchildren were greater than those of the carpet weaving children in both boys and girls. Clinically, 56% of the schoolchildren as against 41.6% of carpet weaving children had no nutritional defects. The main complaints in the carpet weaving children were in order of descent, headache, blurring of vision, backache, abdominal pain, limb pains, and respiratory tract infection. Both groups of children were later followed up for six months from September 1981 to March 1982. The incidence of subjective and objective deviations from health were higher in the carpet weaving than in the schoolchildren and the first ten major complaints in the carpet weaving children were respiratory tract infection, headache, backache, pain in the abdomen, injuries (major and minor), joint pains, diarrhoea and dysentery, fever of unknown origin, dermatitis, and chilblains.
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PMID:Health status of school age children employed in carpet weaving in Ganderbal Block. 349 Aug 78

Fifty-seven children under 1 year of age, 43 children aged 12 to 35 months, and 42 children aged 3 to 15 years with atopic dermatitis were skin tested with foods suspected to have caused their dermatitis and other possible allergic symptoms. At least one positive skin test reaction was seen in 66% of the youngest children, in 21% in the second group, and in 50% of the oldest children. At least 24 out of 37 skin test-positive cases in the youngest group had allergic symptoms after ingested foods. The corresponding number among 1 to 3-year-old children was seven out of nine skin test-positive cases, and 14 out of 21 cases in the last group. Hen egg was the most common food allergen in children under 1 year of age. After that age, apple, carrot, pea, and soybean elicited positive reactions as often as egg. Among skin test-negative children there were five cases reacting with abdominal and skin symptoms to milk and one child who had abdominal pain and diarrhea after cereals. In conclusion, skin tests are often of great value in the diagnosis of dermatologic food allergy. Allergen avoidance diets and peroral challenge tests are needed for judging the clinical relevance of the skin test result and also for detecting untoward reactions to foods caused by other mechanisms than IgE-mediated atopic allergy.
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PMID:Diagnosis of dermatologic food allergy. 368 68

A brief report on the clinical studies of schistosomiasis japonica at Langko village in the Lindu lake area was given. The studies consisted of stool surveys, COPT, evaluation of the signs and symptoms of schistosomiasis, determination of the liver and spleen enlargement as well as the disease index and the clinical gradient. It seemed that the stool examinations as well as the COPT were considered sufficient, accurate and practical for mass surveys. The result of evaluation of the signs and symptoms of schistosomiasis at Lindu lake area showed that dermatitis, dysentry, abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, loss of appetite, weakness, shortness of breath, distension of the abdomen, melena, icterus, and hepatomegaly were found to be significantly different between the schistosomiasis group and the control group. This finding was almost similar to the findings reported by Billings et al. (1946) and Pesigan et al. (1958), only the frequencies of occurrence were different. The clinical gradient of schistosomiasis at Lindu lake area was mostly of the mild type of the disease.
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PMID:Clinical study of Indonesian schistosomiasis at Lindu lake area, Central Sulawesi. 653 66

In the process of chronic intestinal inflammatory diseases the involvement of other organs and apparatuses is frequent. The respiratory apparatus, however, is not so frequently concerned as other organs, especially with regard to the paediatric age. The rarity of clinical evidences concerning the respiratory apparatus contrasts with the anomalies of the lung functionality tests described in literature. A fifteen year old boy is taken into consideration. He was first examined at the age of nine, when his symptomatology (slight fever and abdominal pain) was regarded as a chronic intestine inflammatory disease and it was treated with salazopyrina and cortisone. Compilations supervened later on, such as ilium arthritis, psoriasis-like dermatitis, perineal abscess. Five years after the beginning of the intestine disease the lungs were also involved and there was evidence of dyspnoea, especially when the patient was under stress. The clinical picture was confirmed by the reduction of the parameters of the respiratory functionality in the sense of an insufficiency of obstructive and restrictive kind. The pulmonary compilation was treated with disodium cromoglycate; such treatment was stopped, after the appearance of headache. After more than a year since the supervening of the lung complication the patient is being kept under periodic control to evaluate his pulmonary functionality. The indexes are constantly altered in the sense of a reduction of FEV 1, of FVC, of FEF 25-75 and of PEF, while the ventilatory and perfusional pulmonary scintigraphy has not shown relevant anomalies.
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PMID:[Respiratory function involvement in intestinal chronic inflammatory disease: description of a case]. 848 34

Although allergic reactions to copper are rare, skin disorders may appear or worsen during the perimenstrual period. This paper presents the case of a 41-year-old user of a copper-containing IUD who presented with a history of recurrent, self-healing skin eruption associated with abdominal pain. The eruption followed a cyclical pattern, appearing 3-7 days before menses and improving spontaneously with the onset of bleeding. Patch testing revealed a positive reaction to copper sulfate and nickel sulfate. After the IUD was removed, abdominal symptoms subsided at the next cycle and progressive resolution of the dermatitis was observed.
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PMID:Perimenstrual dermatitis secondary to a copper-containing intrauterine contraceptive device. 966 54

Acute graft-versus-host disease denotes a distinctive syndrome characterized by a triad of dermatitis (rash), hepatitis (jaundice), and gastroenteritis (abdominal pain, diarrhea) developing in the first 100 days after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Chronic graft-versus-host disease designates a more diverse syndrome, usually presenting with multiorgan involvement and commonly developing 100 days after hematopoietic cell transplantation. This article discusses the pathophysiology, incidence and predictive factors, clinical manifestations, diagnosis and grading, prevention, and treatment for both types of the disease.
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PMID:Pathophysiology and treatment of graft-versus-host disease. 1055 63

Atopic dermatitis is a typical chronic inflammatory skin disease that usually occurs in individuals with a personal or family history of atopy. Children with atopic dermatitis frequently present IgE-mediated food sensitization, the most commonly involved foods being egg and cow's milk. However, controversy currently surrounds whether food allergy is an etiological factor in atopic dermatitis or whether it is simply an associated factor, accompanying this disease as one more expression of the patient's atopic predisposition. Approximately 40 % of neonates and small children with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis present food allergy confirmed by double-blind provocation tests but this allergy does not seem to be the cause of dermatitis since in many cases onset occurs before the food responsible for allergic sensitization is introduced into the newborn's diet.Studies of double-blind provocation tests with food in patients with atopic dermatitis demonstrate mainly immediate reactions compatible with an IgE-mediated allergy. These reactions occur between 5 minutes and 2 hours and present mainly cutaneous symptoms (pruritus, erythema, morbilliform exanthema, wheals) and to a lesser extent, digestive manifestations (nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea), as well as respiratory symptoms (wheezing, nasal congestion, sneezing, coughing). However, these reactions do not indicate the development of dermatitis.Some authors believe that responses to the food in provocation tests may also be delayed, appearing mainly in the following 48 hours, and clinically manifested as exacerbation of dermatitis. However, delayed symptoms are difficult to diagnose and attributing these symptoms to a particular foodstuff may not be possible.Delayed reactions have been attributed to a non-IgE-mediated immunological mechanism and patch tests with food have been proposed for their diagnosis. In our experience and in that of other authors, the results of patch tests with cow's milk do not seem very specific and could be due, at least in part, to the irritant effect of these patches on the reactive skin of children with atopic dermatitis.The involvement of foods in atopic dermatitis will always be difficult to demonstrate given that an exclusion diet is not usually required for its resolution. Food is just one among several possible exacerbating factors and consequently identification of its precise role in the course of the disease is difficult. Further double-blind prospective studies are required to demonstrate the effectiveness of exclusion diets in the treatment of atopic dermatitis.Apart from the controversy surrounding the etiological role of foods, the most important point in atopic dermatitis is to understand that the child is atopic, that is, predisposed to developing sensitivity to environmental allergens; in the first few years of life to foods and subsequently to aeroallergens. Consequently, possible allergic sensitization to foods should be evaluated in children with atopic dermatitis to avoid allergic reactions and to prevent the possible development of allergic respiratory disease later in life.
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PMID:[Etiologic implication of foods in atopic dermatitis: evidence against]. 1198 42


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