Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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T-1982 (cefbuperazone) is a newly developed cephamycin. Clinical studies on this drug were carried out and the results were as follows: Eighteen patients (pneumonia 13, purulent tonsillitis 1, acute bronchitis 1, cellulitis 1, urinary tract infection 2) were treated intravenously with daily 27.4-100.2 mg/kg of T-1982 in 3-4 divided dose for 3-6.7 days. The overall efficacy rate was 94.4%. No adverse reactions were observed. Abnormal laboratory data noted were liver dysfunction in 1 case (4.8%), eosinophilia in 2 cases (9.5%), and anemia in 1 case (4.8%).
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PMID:[Clinical studies of T-1982 (cefbuperazone) in pediatric field]. 687 75

The health profile of two groups of Ethiopian immigrants in Israel was evaluated. Trichophytosis and active trachoma were observed in 5%-8.7% of prepubertal children. Among adults 13% had corneal opacities and 10.4% had cataracts. Goiter, spastic bronchitis, valvular heart disease, leprosy and onchocerciasis were prevalent. Malnutrition was common, with average body weights ranging from 72.4% to 85.2% of normal. Anemia was observed in 6.3% of young children and 70% of all immigrants. Fifty percent of children over 12 years and 98% of adults over 40 years of age had been exposed to hepatitis B virus; 9.8%-11.8% were HBsAg carriers. Tuberculin tests were positive in 9.8%-13%; and intestinal parasites were identified in 86%-98%. Hospitalization was required for 15.7% of immigrants arriving during the period 1978-90, and for 3.7% of those arriving in mid-1991 (Operation Solomon).
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PMID:Health profile of Ethiopian immigrants in Israel: an overview. 834 45

The study involved 112 children with 169 confirmed vesicoureteric reflux grades I, II, III. During anti-bacterial treatment which lasted at last two years, spontaneous regression occurred in 82% of the vesicoureteral reflux. Renal scars were observed in 8% of the cases. Initially urinary tract infection was diagnosed in 84% of the children. This figure was reduced to 8% after anti-bacterial treatment. 54% of the observed children had associated diseases (anaemia, chronic enteropathy, bronchitis and pneumonia). The results confirmed the efficiency of anti-bacterial treatment in children with vesicoureteral reflux grades I, II, III.
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PMID:[Results of conservative treatment for regressive vesicoureteral reflux in childhood]. 865 25

Patterns of health-care utilization and of morbidity were investigated in a demographically defined community: the 1400 inhabitants of a rural village near Lahore, Pakistan. The data collected, by semi-monthly clinic surveys from February 1982 to January 1983, showed that 42% of the study population sought health care during the year-long study period, between one and 10 (mean 2.1) times each. Females attended the clinics twice as often as males. The 1193 person-visits that were recorded at the field clinics yielded a total of 1354 cases of various diseases. The cumulative number of clinic-visits per person fitted a negative binomial distribution, indicating that health problems were concentrated in a small portion of the population. When the patients were classified according to the International Classification of Diseases, the most common disease category was that of the respiratory system (27.6%), followed by infectious and parasitic diseases (18.7%), diseases of the skin (13.7%) and those of the nervous system and sense organs (10.9%). Classification of the cases by single disease condition indicated that diarrhoea, helminthiasis, malaria, anaemia, conjunctivitis, bronchitis, coryza, pharyngitis, tonsillitis, dyspepsia and pyoderma were the most common diseases. In view of the fact that infectious diseases continue to be a major public health problem in rural Pakistan, the need for a sound health policy that is primarily focused on preventive medicine, especially health education, is apparent.
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PMID:Patterns of health-care utilization and morbidity in a rural community near Lahore, Pakistan. 872 31

This study was conducted in Mexico among residents of an area near a recycling plant for zinc and other metallic dusts to find out if these substances produce various adverse health effects in the population that may come in contact with them. The plant is in a municipality close to Monterrey, which is Mexico's third most populous and second most industrialized city. A cross-sectional comparative design was used for the research, which took place from September to November 1994. By means of quota sampling, houses were selected in two areas--one exposed, by virtue of its proximity to the plant, and the other unexposed, which served as a control--until the desired sample size was reached (621 individuals, an average of five per household). In each dwelling, a trained psychology student administered a questionnaire to one of the older family members to gather data on the presence of acute and chronic illnesses, problems during pregnancy, and congenital illnesses among the household members. In the exposed population, 127 questionnaires were completed, providing information on 596 persons; in the unexposed population, data on 743 persons were gathered via 147 questionnaires. The sex and age distributions were similar in the two populations, and the length of residence in their respective area was slightly longer among unexposed individuals. The most frequently reported health problems in the exposed population were irritation of the eyes and upper respiratory tract, allergies, sleep disturbances, bronchitis, fatigue, skin problems, ear infections, and anemia. The prevalence ratios for the exposed versus unexposed populations were significant with regard to skin eruptions and other skin diseases, fatigue, sleep disturbances, upper respiratory infections, ear infections, bronchitis, and allergies. Women from the two groups did not show significant differences in the prevalence of obstetric problems, miscarriages, or children born with congenital deformities or low birthweight. The sensitivity of the questionnaire used to detect health problems was poor, which could have resulted in an underestimation of some disorders. Nevertheless, various types of information bias were controlled, permitting the conclusion that the exposed population had a greater risk of suffering certain diseases and disorders than the unexposed population.
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PMID:[Health status of the population in the vicinity of a waste recycling plant in Mexico]. 950 58

Cefozopran (CZOP) was used as an initial antibacterial therapy for infections in patients with hematological malignancies. CZOP was given at a daily dose of 4 g by drip intravenously to patients who were febrile over 38 degrees C and were suspected as having bacterial infections. As underlying diseases, 8 patients had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), 9 acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML), 2 aplastic anemia (AA), 2 adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL), 28 non Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), and 2 multiple myeloma (MM). Bacterial infections diagnosed were sepsis in 7 patients, suspected sepsis in 32, bronchitis in 6, pneumonia in 5 and acute peritonitis in 1. Clinical responses among 51 evaluable cases were excellent in 14, good in 15, fair in 3, poor in 19 and the overall response rate was 57%. The overall response rates for AML, ALL, AA, ATLL, NHL and MM were 56%, 63%, 100%, 50%, 50%, and 100%, respectively. Those for sepsis, suspected sepsis, bronchitis, pneumonia and acute peritonitis were 14%, 63%, 100%, 40%, and 0%, respectively. This therapy was effective in 53% (9/17) of patients whose granulocyte count remained below 500/microliter throughout the course of CZOP therapy. Six bacterial and one fungal strains were isolated from blood and sputum of six patients including five sepsis cases; two bacteria were eradicated and bacterial change was observed in one case. As side adverse effects, 10 patients had liver dysfunction, 1 anemia, 2 proteinemia, 1 indirect bilirubinemia, 2 thrombocytopenia, and 1 eosinophilia. We tried to establish a scoring system for the severities of patients with their infections, underlying diseases, treatments for the underlying disease, and granulocyte counts in order to evaluate the efficacy of CZOP more precisely. This scoring system was consisted of three grades; severe, moderate, and mild. CZOP was effective on mild and moderate grades. These results indicate that the initial antibacterial therapy by CZOP is useful for the treatment of mild and moderate grade infections complicated with hematological malignancies.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of cefozopran for infections associated with hematological malignancies]. 983 22

Pneumococcal diseases are a major public health problem all over the world. The etiological agent, Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) is surrounded by a polysaccharide capsule. Differences in the composition of this capsule permit the serological differentiation between about 90 capsular types, some of which are frequently associated with pneumococcal disease, others rarely. Invasive pneumococcal infections include pneumonia, meningitis and febrile bacteremia; among the common noninvasive manifestations are otitis media, sinusitis and bronchitis. At least 1 million children die of pneumococcal disease every year, most of these being young children in developing countries. In the developed world, elderly persons carry the major disease burden. Conditions associated with increased risk of serious pneumococcal disease include HIV infection, sickle-cell anaemia and a variety of chronic organ failures. Vaccination is the only available tool to prevent pneumococcal disease. The recent development of widespread microbial resistance to essential antibiotics underlines the urgent need for more efficient pneumococcal vaccines. Immunity following pneumococcal disease is directed primarily against the capsular serotype involved. The currently licensed pneumococcal vaccine is based on the 23 most common serotypes, against which the vaccine has an overall protective efficacy of about 60%-70%. Children aged < 2 years, and persons suffering from various states of immunodeficiency, for example HIV infection, do not consistently develop immunity following vaccination, thus reducing the protective value of the vaccine in some major target groups for pneumococcal disease. However, in the healthy elderly population the polysaccharide vaccine provides relatively efficient protection against invasive pneumococcal disease. Extensive clinical trials are now under way with a new generation of pneumococcal vaccines. These protein-polysaccharide combinations, known as conjugate vaccines, contain 7-11 selected polysaccharides bound to a protein carrier, and induce a T-cell dependent immune response. These vaccines are likely to be protective even in children aged < 2 years, and may reduce pneumococcal transmission through a herd effect.
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PMID:Pneumococcal vaccines. WHO position paper. 1043 29

Pneumococcal diseases are a major public-health problem all over the world. The etiological agent, Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) in surrounded by a polysaccharide capsule. Differences in the composition of this capsule permit the serological differentiation between about 90 capsular types, some of which are frequently associated with pneumococcal disease, others rarely. Invasive pneumococcal infections include pneumonia, meningitis, and febrile bacteremia; among the common non-invasive manifestations are otitis media, sinusitis, and bronchitis. At least one million children die of pneumococcal disease every year, most of these being young children in developing countries. In the developed world, elderly persons carry the major disease burden. Conditions associated with increased risk of serious pneumococcal disease include HIV infection, sickle-cell anaemia, and a variety of chronic organ failures. Vaccination is the only available tool to prevent pneumococcal disease. The recent development of widespread microbial resistance to essential antibiotics underlines the urgent need for more efficient pneumococcal vaccines. Immunity following pneumococcal disease is directed primarily against the capsular serotype involved. The currently licensed pneumococcal vaccine is based on the 23 most common serotypes, against which the vaccine has an overall protective efficacy of about 60% to 70%. Children aged < 2 years, and persons suffering from various states of immunodeficiency, for example HIV infection, do not consistently develop immunity following vaccination, thus reducing the protective value of the vaccine in some major target groups for pneumococcal disease. However, in the healthy elderly population, the polysaccharide vaccine provides relatively efficient protection against invasive pneumococcal disease. Extensive clinical trials are now under way with a new generation of pneumococcal vaccines. These protein-polysaccharide combinations, known as conjugate vaccines, contain 7-11 selected polysaccharides bound to a protein carrier, and induce a T-cell dependent immune response. These vaccines are likely to be protective even in children < 2 years of age, and may reduce pneumococcal transmission through a herd effect.
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PMID:Pneumococcal vaccines: World Health Organization position paper. 1051 18

At present Denmark has the status of a 'non-vaccinating' country for Newcastle disease and its poultry population should therefore be free of antibodies to avian paramyxovirus 1 (APMV-1). Three live avian vaccines against infectious bronchitis, avian encephalomyelitis, and chick anaemia which had been found to be contaminated with APMV-1 viruses of low virulence for chickens were examined. The vaccines were produced by the same company and the affected batches had been used in Denmark in 1996/97. Furthermore, APMV-1 isolates of low virulence were obtained from three commercial broiler breeder flocks, one of which had been vaccinated with two of the contaminated vaccines. The flocks belonged to the same hatchery organisation. A comparison of viral F0 gene sequences and typing of virus isolates with a panel of monoclonal antibodies showed that the vaccine and field isolates were identical.
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PMID:Similarity of avian paramyxovirus serotype 1 isolates of low virulence for chickens obtained from contaminated poultry vaccines and from poultry flocks. 1088 55

Certain socioeconomic factors weakened families and socioeconomic development in the Philippines. 34% of pregnant mothers in 1982 had anemia and by 1987 it increased to 45%. 70.4% of children 6-12 months old and 38.7% of those 12 months were also deficient in iron. Moreover, 12.4% of pregnant women in 1987 had a goiter for a total of 223,200 pregnancies of which likely resulted in spontaneous abortions, fetal death, or cretinism. 20% of newborns weighed 2.5 kg in 1990 so 324,000 newborns began their lives malnourished. Breast feeding fell from 87% in 1983 to 80% in 1984. 17.7% of children 6 years old were malnourished and 67% of them had stunted growth. 23% of elementary school students also were malnourished. Family daily energy intake decreased from the already inadequate level of 1808 calories in 1982 to 1753 in 1987. Similar falls in dietary intakes included protein, carbohydrates, calcium, ascorbic acid, and riboflavin. In 1989, 50% of families were poor thereby limiting their access to health, education, and food. Even though fertility fell from 6.3 in 1970 to 4.5 in 1984, it still was too high. Infant mortality in 1990 stood at 652 which meant that 250 babies died each day. In addition, 70 1-4 year old children died each day. Yet most of these deaths could have been prevented. Pneumonia was responsible for 40% of these child deaths. Other leading causes of death included diarrhea, measles, nutritional deficiencies, and bronchitis. The government has chosen primary health care (PHC) as the means to better the health status of the population, but is had no official policy and PHC committees largely are inactive. The government must seriously implement PHC throughout the Philippines and place health at the top of its list. Cooperation and coordination among all levels of government and nongovernmental organizations must begin.
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PMID:Health and nutrition and the role of the family. 1234 61


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