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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
More than 340 parasitic species infect more than 3 billion people worldwide with varying morbidity and mortality. The Tropics constitute the main reservoir of infection with the highest clinical impact, owing to favorable ecological factors. Acquisition of infection, clinical severity, and outcome of a parasitic disease depend on innate and acquired host immunity as well as the parasite's own immune response against the host when infection is established. Organ transplant recipients may acquire significant parasitic disease in 3 ways: transmission with the graft, de novo infection, or activation of dormant infection as a consequence of immunosuppression.
Malaria
, Trypanosoma, Toxoplasma, and Leishmania are the principal parasites that may be transmitted with bone marrow, kidney, or liver homografts, and microsporidia with xenotransplants. De novo infection with
malaria
and kala-azar may occur in immunocompromised travelers visiting in endemic areas, while immunocompromised natives are subject to superinfection with different strains of endemic parasites, reinfection with schistosomiasis, or rarely, with primary infections such as acanthamoeba. The list of parasites that may be reactivated in the immunocompromised host includes giardiasis, balantidiasis, strongyloidiasis, capillariasis,
malaria
, Chagas' disease, and kalaazar. The broad clinical syndromes of parasitic infection in transplant recipients include prolonged pyrexia, lower gastrointestinal symptoms,
bronchopneumonia
, and meningoencephalitis. Specific syndromes include the hematologic manifestations of
malaria
, myocarditis in Chagas' disease, acute renal failure in
malaria
and leishmaniasis, and the typical skin lesions of Chagas' and cutaneous leishmaniasis. Many antiparasitic drugs have the potential for gastrointestinal, hepatic, renal, and hematologic toxicity, and may interact with the metabolism of immunosuppressive agents. It is recommended that transplant clinicians have a high index of suspicion of parasitic infections as an important transmission threat, as well as a potential cause of significant posttransplant morbidity.
...
PMID:Parasitic infections in organ transplantation. 1585 39
This was a retrospective study to ascertain the prevalence and clinical features of
malaria
in infants in Enugu between January 1998 and January 2000. Case notes of two thousand children were reviewed, one hundred and fifty-five (7.75%) had a diagnosis of
malaria
, with a male/female ratio of 1.2:1. The age range was two days to twelve months with a mean of 5.06 +/- 3.24 months. Nine infants (5.8 %) were less than seven days old. Ninety-nine of the patients (63.9%) had temperature > or = 37.5 degrees C. Diarrhea was a symptom in 52 (33.5%) patients, while vomiting alone or in combination with diarrhea was a presenting feature in 37 (23.87%) of the children. Twenty-eight children (18.1%) had respiratory symptoms of which, two had
bronchopneumonia
. Other associated illnesses included. septicaemia: 6(3.8%). infective diarrhea; 5(3.2%), and urinary tract infection; 4 (2.6%).
Malaria
is common in infants less than 6 months of age and associated with symptoms common with other childhood illnesses.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of malaria in infancy at Enugu, Nigeria. 1698 83
Congestive cardiac failure (CCF) is a common paediatric emergency with diverse aetiologies. The objective of this study is to define the current prevalence rate and common causes of CCF among children hospitalized in a Nigerian Tertiary Hospital. The study was prospectively done over a 1-year period in the Paediatric Wards of the hospital. Consecutive children aged 0-14 years, who fulfilled the standard diagnostic criteria for CCF were recruited. Data obtained from them included the age, sex, duration of illness and the socioeconomic status of the parents. Each subject was given a specific diagnosis based on the clinical, laboratory and radiological features. Out of a total of 1552 admissions, 109 had CCF giving the prevalence of 7.02%. The mean age of children with CCF was mean of 2 +/- 3.1 years (range: 1 day to 14 years). Ninety-five (91%) of them were concentrated in the lower socioeconomic classes III-V. The aetiologies of CCF identified in this study were as follows: severe anaemia occurring alone (48; 46%), lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) (30; 29%), anaemia with LRTI (12; 11.5%), congenital heart diseases (CHD) (11; 10.5%), rheumatic heart disease (1; 1%), myocarditis (1; 1%) and chronic renal disease (1; 1%).
Malaria
was the commonest cause of anaemia while
bronchopneumonia
was the commonest form of LRTI in the subjects. Measles infection was associated with LRTI in 10 (23.8%) children. Three children had HIV-related anaemia. Infants formed the bulk of the subjects with CCF due to anaemia, LRTI and CHD. Ventricular septal defect was the commonest CHD identified. The prevalence obtained from this study was higher than rates obtained from some previous studies in the country. Severe anaemia is the commonest cause of CCF probably from the effects of severe
malaria
and increasing poverty. Stringent attention to poverty alleviation and
malaria
control may reduce the burden of CCF among Nigerian children.
...
PMID:Current trends in the prevalence and aetiology of childhood congestive cardiac failure in Sagamu. 1716 31
Plasmodium falciparum malaria is an endemic disease especially in tropical areas with heavy rainfall that spread round the year. We therefore sought to investigate the prevalence pattern and clinical presentation of falciparum
malaria
in Oso degrees c were assessed and screened for plasmodium falciparum infection by clinical assessment and microscopy using both thick and thin blood smears over a period of 12 months- August 2004 and July 2005. The prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum infection was found to be 52.8% with 341/646 of the patients been positive for Plasmodium falciparum parasite based on microscopy. Three hundred and five (47.2%) were aparasitaemic of which 162 (25.1%) had
bronchopneumonia
, 99 (15.3%) had upper respiratory tract infection, 32 (5.0%) had gastroenteritis and 12 (1.9%) had Otitis media. Between August and November 2004, 250 patients were screened and 160 (57.6%) of these patients were positive, while 180 patients were screened between December 2004 and March 2005 and 51 (28.3%) were positive. Between April 2005 and July 2005, 216 patients were screened and 130 (60.2%) of the patients were positive. When compared, the differences in the percentage of patients with positive microscopy in December to March with April to July and August to November were found to be significant (P < 0.0001), whereas the percentage difference in patients with positive microscopy in August to November and April to July was not significant (P = 0.442). The result of this study clearly shows that there are two distinct peaks of
malaria
transmission pattern in consonance with the rainfall pattern in the area.
...
PMID:Prevalence and transmission pattern of Plasmodium falciparum infection in Osogbo metropolis, southwest, Nigeria. 1856 45
Children's bodies are in dynamic stages of development that make them more susceptible to harm from exposure to environmental agents. Children's physical, physiological and behavioral traits can lead to increased exposure to toxic chemicals or pathogens. In addition, the social determinants of health interact with this exposure and create an increasing risk for further disparities among children. In Indonesia, the fourth most populated country in the world, children are under threat of exposure to contaminated water, air, food and soil, which can cause gastrointestinal and respiratory diseases, birth defects and neurodevelopmental disorders. A safe and balanced nutrition is still an unmet need for too many children. At the same time, the prevalence of obesity and the risk of later development of metabolic diseases, including diabetes and cardiovascular diseases, are increasing as a consequence of both unhealthy diets and inadequate physical activity. The risks of potential long-term toxicity, including carcinogenic, neurotoxic, immunotoxic, genotoxic, endocrine-disrupting and allergenic effects of many chemicals, are also close to their lives. This paper provides an overview of common disease risks in Indonesian children, including: acute hepatitis A, diarrheal diseases, dengue and
malaria
due to lack of water supply and sanitation, vectors, and parasites; asthma,
bronchopneumonia
, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and acute respiratory infections (ARIs) due to air pollution and climate change; some chronic diseases caused by toxic and hazardous waste; and direct or indirect consequences due to the occurrence of disasters and health emergencies.
...
PMID:Indonesia: country report on children's environmental health. 3213 38
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