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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
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An inquiry with the objective of bringing the study of the hemotherapy situation in the state of S. Paulo, up-to-date was undertaken in 1990 and compared with that carried out in 1988. In 1990 research was undertaken in 62 counties, 48 of which performed blood transfusions through 104 services, with hemocenter participation in 13.5% of these latter. In 1988 the respective figures were 57, 40, 71 and 8.5%. The number of donors and transfusions and prevalence of serological positivity for Chagas' disease were, respectively: 105,170; 79,544 and 1.24%, while in 1988 the corresponding numbers were: 51,614; 49,211 and 1.52%. Evaluating the serological selection it was found that the following percentages of the services performed serological tests: for Chagas' disease (94.2%), syphilis (94.2%), hepatitis (94.2%), HIV (92.3%) and malaria (20.2%) while in 1988 only 69.0%; 70.4%; 67.6%, 63.4% and 16.9%, respectively, of the services utilized these same tests. In respect of the serological trial specific for Chagas' disease the results were: complement fixation-4.9%; latex-4.0%; indirect immunofluoresce-80%; direct hemaglutination-24.0%, indirect hemaglutination-69.0% and ELISA-59.0% of all services. In the preceding inquiry only 14.3% of the services performed the ELISA test, and complement fixation was utilized in 28.6%. The results show that the services are utilizing ever more sensitive techniques in the serological routine. Further it was observed that in 1988, 77.6% of all the services studied used only one technique for the diagnosis of Chagas' disease while in 1990 92.9% utilized two or more different techniques. It is concluded that the quality of the hemotherapy undertaken in the state of S. Paulo has improved significantly.
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PMID:[Control of hemotherapy and transfusional Chagas disease: 1988 and 1990]. 799 13

Concerns are sometimes expressed at the extent to which HIV-1 is prioritized within international and national health budgets and as a research issue, on the grounds that much larger numbers of people in developing countries currently die from other diseases, such as malaria and tuberculosis. We use a previously described mathematical model to explore how the HIV-1 epidemic could develop within a sub-Saharan African context and investigate the trends and patterns of adult mortality which could follow. Two contrasting scenarios are studied, one which turns population growth rates negative and another which does not. In both cases, HIV-1-related disease accounts for over 75% of annual deaths among men and women aged 15-60 years by year 25 of the epidemic. Relatively little change in mortality is seen in the early years of the simulated epidemics. However, by year 15, expectation of life at age 15 has fallen from 50 to below 30 years. The fragmentary evidence now available from empirical studies supports the impression that HIV-1 is rapidly emerging as a leading cause of adult deaths in areas of sub-Saharan Africa. Observed patterns of age-dependent mortality reflect those projected in the model simulations.
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PMID:Is HIV-1 likely to become a leading cause of adult mortality in sub-Saharan Africa? 802 17

This article reports the findings of a study conducted to identify the relationship between HIV infection and cerebral malaria in Burundi. Study subjects were selected from hospital patients diagnosed with cerebral malaria. The Glasgow scale was used for unconscious patients as a measurement for admission into this study. Parasite density was determined with Giemsa-stained thick blood smears. HIV-1 testing was done by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques and positives were confirmed by Western blot. All patients received 10 mg of quinine per kg of body weight as an initial dose by intravenous infusion. This regimen was followed by a daily dose of 25 mg/kg body weight via intravenous infusion. If after 2 days the patient could take treatment orally, it was switched. This treatment regimen lasted 5-7 days total. Statistical analysis was performed using the Mann-Whitney U test, the Fisher exact test, and the Chi-square test. Of the 31 study patients, 22 were male and 9 were female. 7 (22.6%) died within the first 96 hours. The surviving 24 patients had a mean coma recovery time of 33.7 +or- 25.8 hours. No neurological damage was noted. The mean Glasgow score was 8.3 +or- 2.7 for the whole group of 31 patients. The mean malaria parasitemia was 11,920 (95% CI: 643-221,018) parasites/mcl of blood. Plasma levels of creatinine were higher in fatal cases than in patients who survived (307.2 +or- 261.8 mcmol/L vs. 135.1 +or- 55.3 mcmol/L). Of the 31 patients, 12 (38.7%) had antibodies to HIV-1. No relationship between positive HIV-1 and cerebral malaria was found, and no patient showed any clinical symptoms of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
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PMID:Prognostic indicators in adult cerebral malaria: a study in Burundi, an area of high prevalence of HIV infection. 802 53

Malaria and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection are major health problems in many areas in Sub-Saharan Africa. An interaction between malaria and HIV infection has been postulated, since both produce similar cellular immune responses, with a lowering of the CD4/CD8 lymphocyte ratio. The frequency of malaria parasitemia was examined in children born to HIV-seropositive and seronegative mothers attending regular postnatal visits. A prospective study on mother-to-infant transmission of HIV had been underway since 1989 in Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, a major hospital in urban Malawi. Standard HIV serology was performed on pregnant women, after obtaining consent. To reduce the effect of selection bias and seasonality, HIV seropositive (case) and seronegative (control) mothers and their infants were enrolled at delivery. Children included in the study were 503 born to 494 HIV-seropositive mothers and 540 born to 536 HIV-seronegative mothers. At each 3-monthly postpartum visit a Giemsa-stained thick blood film from the child was examined for malaria parasites. Children born to HIV-seropositive mothers were tested for HIV antibodies at 12 and 18 months of age. Of the 353 children born to HIV-seropositive mothers, 82 children (23.2%) were found to be HIV seropositive by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blotting at 12 and 18 months. No statistically significant difference was found in frequency of malaria parasitemia by maternal or infant HIV serostatus after controlling for child's age. There was, however, a significant trend of increase in high parasitemia with age, irrespective of the HIV serostatus of the mother or the child. The frequency of parasitemia was higher in the wet season than in the dry season. This study suggests that maternal or infant HIV infection does not alter susceptibility to, or the clinical course of, malaria in infants.
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PMID:Childhood malaria parasitaemia and human immunodeficiency virus infection in Malawi. 803 59

This paper reports the findings of an evaluation of Western Kenyan blood transfusion practices used with a cohort of severely anemic women of child-bearing age. The potential of receiving HIV-infected blood puts these women at a definite health risk. Characteristics of severely anemic women included being older (P = 0.03, Wilcoxon rank sum test), lower likelihood of being pregnant when admitted to hospital (odds ratio [OR] = 0.53; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.35-0.81), and greater likelihood of being HIV seropositive (OR = 2.92; 95% CI, 1.52-5.60) when compared to non-anemic women. Severely anemic women were also less likely to have malaria (OR = 0.58; 95% CI, 0.35-0.96). Women who had a transfusion ordered had a higher mortality rate than women who did not (25/240, 10.4% vs. 18/933, 1.9%)(OR = 5.91; 95% CI, 3.04-11.53). In this study, positive benefits were restricted to women who had a transfusion only for them. These were the severely anemic women. The attributed mortality caused by HIV infection and severe anemia was 75% and 31%, respectively. Detection of HIV infected blood is very critical. Prevention of anemia is considered more important than transfusing concerns. Preventing the need for transfusions would reduce the HIV transmission risk from potentially infectious blood during transfusion.
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PMID:Anaemia, blood transfusion practices, HIV and mortality among women of reproductive age in western Kenya. 803 63

Serum samples from 51 patients with malaria, 35 patients with hepatitis B virus infection, 111 patients with tuberculosis, and 166 healthy controls were studied to determine any associations between tuberculosis, malaria, hepatitis B, and AIDS in Nigeria, West Africa. All serum samples were examined for the presence of HIV-1/HIV-2, hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg), and malaria antibodies. Only one patient was HIV-1 antibody-positive and none HIV-2 antibody-positive. Statistical associations were found between the presence of malaria antibody titres on the one hand and a diagnosis of hepatitis B virus infection (P < 0.05) or tuberculosis (P < 0.05). A stronger association (P < 0.001) was found between the presence of HBsAg and tuberculosis suggesting that HBsAg carriers are at higher risk of contracting tuberculosis.
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PMID:Seroepidemiological associations between tuberculosis, malaria, hepatitis B, and AIDS in West Africa. 804 26

In Kenya, health professionals compared prospective data on 193 suspected malaria patients at the Eldoret District Hospital during February-March, 1992, with retrospective data on 120 suspected malaria cases at the same hospital during November-December, 1991, to examine the protocol on the management of suspected malaria cases. Between these 2 periods, physicians introduced a simple algorithm to follow in suspected malaria cases. The use of quinine as the 1st choice drug fell considerably between the 2 periods (54.2-19%). There was an increase in the use of chloroquine as the 1st choice drug for uncomplicated malaria (38.4-63.9%). The proportion of blood smear positive patients increased (27.5-51.3%), probably because the department technician was more careful conducting repeat blood smears than were technicians at the busy hospital laboratory. Blood smear negative patients were less likely to automatically receive any antimalarial treatment or quinine in 1992 than in 1991 (14.6% vs. 47.5% and 4.1% vs. 30.9%, respectively). The proportion of patients whose final diagnosis was an illness other than malaria was higher in 1992 than in 1991 (19.7% vs. 15.8%). No clear diagnosis other than flu-like illness was the case for 28 (14.5%) of the prospective patients. The tendency for clinicians to accept a diagnosis of malaria without enough evidence to confirm it can have the damaging effect of masking other serious diagnoses (e.g., dysentery [8 cases], meningitis [6 cases], and HIV infection [2 case]). These findings show that hospital physicians should develop simple protocols for inpatient management of suspected malaria cases, a properly quantified blood smear should be done of all suspected malaria cases to confirm or refute the diagnosis, and chloroquine should be the 1st line of treatment in the Kenyan highlands, until considerable parasite resistance is confirmed.
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PMID:Management of malaria before and after introduction of a treatment protocol at the Eldoret District Hospital. 805 55

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) is currently operating three major medical cooperation projects in sub-Saharan Africa, the Noguchi Memorial Institute project in Ghana and infectious diseases projects in Zambia and Kenya. The department of Pediatrics of the Mie University School of Medicine is presently participating in the projects in Ghana and Zambia with activities already carried out on priority infectious diseases. The department has ten years of experience in international medical cooperation with African countries. Technical assistance by JICA includes the dispatch of Japanese experts, counterpart training in Japan, and the donation of medical equipment. Projects are commanded to improve priority health problems in each country such as diarrheal diseases and HIV infection. Details of the two projects are presented. The major infectious diseases in Africa are malaria, diarrheal diseases, acute respiratory infections, and some specific parasitic diseases. HIV infection has also become a threat to the health and survival of children in Africa. It is argued that primary health care activities may be an effective and economical way to reduce related morbidity and mortality. In closing, since Japan is expected to make further technological and economic contributions to the control of infectious diseases in developing countries, Japanese pediatricians really should be aware of the condition of child health in those countries and consider what can be done to help.
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PMID:Infectious diseases in African children. 810 40

According to the World Health Organization, between 1980 and 1985 the total fertility rate was 2.0 in the wealthy countries and 4.1 in the less developed countries. The highest rate was found in Kenya with 8.1. The risk of maternal mortality in connection with pregnancy and childbirth was 1/10,000 in Northern Europe, but 1/21 in Africa. Every year about 500,000 women die because of complications before, during, or after delivery. The maternal mortality rate (30/100,000 live births in Europe) is still 500-800/100,000 in the developing countries, although Tanzania has succeeded in cutting its rate from 450/100,000 to 170/100,000. The main causes of maternal mortality are: 1) unrecognized obstructed labor, 2) postpartum bleeding that could be managed by massaging the uterus, administration of oxytocin or by the manual removal of the placenta, 3) postpartum infections that could be treated by timely administration of antibiotics, 4) preeclampsia that could be detected and treated, and 5) abortion complications requiring effective treatment. Among indirect causes of death is anemia: 66% of pregnant women in developing countries are anemic, compared to 14% in industrialized countries. So far the cause of the reduction of partial immunity against malaria parasites in primiparas has not been explained. A significant percentage of deaths (11-47%) can be traced to unqualified and negligent personnel, especially in the slums and rural areas. Only 52% of deliveries are attended by well-trained health personnel, although in 10% of pregnancies complications arise. Young age is another factor: in 1989 in Tanzania the first pregnancy occurred on the average at age 17.6 years compared to 27 years in England. In the beginning of the 1990s there were an estimated 3 million HIV-infected women, therefore maternal mortality as a consequence of AIDS is going to increase. In high prevalence areas the population growth rate will decline from 3% to 2.4%. Traditional birth attendants could be trained and used effectively to reduce maternal mortality by 3-11% as part of a functioning referral system.
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PMID:[Obstetrics in the Third World]. 811 19

A sample of 300 sexually-active adults was selected at random from patients, from the rural area of Malenga Makali, Tanzania, who were attending a dispensary because they had diarrhoea of at least 2 weeks' duration. The potential associations between the patient's health (in terms of the World Health Organization's clinical definition of AIDS), HIV-1 seroprevalence and malaria and other parasitic infections were then investigated. Although, HIV-1 seroprevalence was 20.6% overall, the level of seroprevalence was directly correlated with the distance between the patients' home villages and the nearest main road. Strict application of the clinical definition of AIDS gave 98.7% specificity, 46% sensitivity and a predictive value of 90.6% when validated by HIV-1 seropositivity. Although malaria infection was more common in HIV-1 seropositives than in the seronegatives, the intensity of the Plasmodium falciparum infections, intestinal amoebiasis and giardiasis did not appear to be correlated with HIV-1 infection. In contrast, intestinal infections with Cryptosporidium parvum and Isospora belli were virtually restricted to HIV-1 seropositive individuals who had had diarrhoea for a relatively long time.
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PMID:HIV-1 and parasitic infections in rural Tanzania. 812 20


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