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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prolyl oligopeptidase (EC 3.4.21.26) activity was measured in human tissue homogenates and body fluids. The enzyme was ubiquitously present, revealing high activity in renal cortex, epithelial cells, fibroblasts, testis, lymphocytes and thrombocytes. The activity in the body fluids was low. Prolyl oligopeptidase activity was significant higher in tumours of prostate, lung and sigmoid, than in the healthy tissues. Sera of individuals suffering from HIV infection,
malaria
, prostate cancer or benign prostate hypertrophy contained lowered activity. Interestingly, the low serum activity during prostate carcinoma increased upon medical treatment with anti-androgens. This suggests hormonal control of the gene transcript. A positive correlation with angiotensin converting enzyme activity in hypertensive patients was demonstrated and this further supports the possible involvement of prolyl oligopeptidase in the renin-angiotensin system and in the pathogenesis of
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Distribution of prolyl oligopeptidase in human peripheral tissues and body fluids. 870 29
The mechanisms of death and neurologic sequelae in African children with cerebral
malaria
are undetermined. Because pathologic features are confined to the cerebral vasculature, perturbations in cerebral hemodynamics may be responsible. We compared the transcranial Doppler findings in 50 children with cerebral
malaria
with those of 115 conscious Kenyan children. In addition, 10 children with cerebral
malaria
were studied during intracranial pressure monitoring and nine children were studied during the agonal stages. In the children with cerebral
malaria
, cerebral blood flow velocity was increased in 30%, usually associated with seizures. Of the 11 children who developed neurologic sequelae, six had sonographic abnormalities associated with lateralizing deficits, including four children with hemiparesis (in two children the contralateral middle cerebral artery could not be insonated and two had transient increases in blood flow velocity associated with seizures). In the children with severe intracranial
hypertension
, there was a significant linear relationship between the cerebral perfusion pressure and blood flow velocity, suggesting that autoregulation was impaired. Sonographic features of progressive intracranial
hypertension
, were observed in three children with cerebral
malaria
who died. Perturbations of cerebral hemodynamics are associated with a poor outcome in Kenyan children with cerebral
malaria
.
...
PMID:Perturbations of cerebral hemodynamics in Kenyans with cerebral malaria. 885
We assessed the clinical characteristics of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients presenting to the Mulago Hospital Diabetic Clinic for the first time between 1 January 1993 and 10 August 1994. There were 252 patients: 117 men and 135 women. Mean age at onset of diabetes was 45 years (range 2-87 years) and peak incidence was at 40-49 years. Body mass index (BMI) was available in only 71 patients, of whom 53.5% (33.8% female, 19.7% male) were overweight (BMI > 25 in women, in > 27 men) and 11.3% (8.5% men, 2.8% women) were underweight (BMI < 20). Obesity was more marked in young women. Almost all patients presented with the classical symptoms of diabetes, and the majority were severely hyperglycaemic. A family history of diabetes was identified in 16%. Concurrent illnesses at diagnosis of diabetes were unusual. Sepsis was commonest (11.9%), followed by
malaria
(7.8%), tuberculosis (1.2%), AIDS (1.2%) and pancreatitis (0.8%). Peripheral neuropathy was present in 46.4% of patients,
hypertension
(BP > 150/100) in 27.3%, impotence in 22.2% of the men, proteinuria in 17.1%, ischaemic heart disease in 4.8%, foot ulcers in 4.0% and cataracts in 3.2%. Insulin was the most commonly prescribed treatment (52.8%); 31% of patients received oral hypoglycaemic agents, only 15.1% were managed on diet only, and 1.2% opted for herbal medicine.
...
PMID:The presentation of newly-diagnosed diabetic patients in Uganda. 891 47
Autoimmune disease is generally rare in tropical rural populations. Plasma concentrations of nitrite plus nitrate (reactive nitrogen intermediates), reflecting high nitric-oxide production somewhere in the body, can be high in patients who have cerebral
malaria
, but even higher in symptom-free parasitised individuals, who are termed
malaria
-tolerant. We propose that the nitric oxide causing high serum levels of reactive nitrogen intermediates in
malaria
-tolerant individuals is generated in macrophages during the establishment and maintenance of malarial tolerance, and makes autoimmune disease rare in many tropical rural populations by minimising proliferation of autoreactive T cells. Conversely, innately low levels of nitric-oxide generation in these populations, selected by malarial disease in tropical areas, could rationalise their high frequency of autoimmune disease and
hypertension
when living in western societies.
...
PMID:Does malarial tolerance, through nitric oxide, explain the low incidence of autoimmune disease in tropical Africa? 902 7
The causes of death and neurological sequelae in African children with cerebral
malaria
are obscure. Intracranial pressure (ICP) was monitored and cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) calculated in 23 Kenyan children with cerebral
malaria
. Four children had severe intracranial
hypertension
(ICP > 40 mm Hg, CPP < 40 mm Hg): two died, one with an ICP of 158 mm Hg and signs of transtentorial herniation, the other one with an ICP of 42 mm Hg and cardiorespiratory arrest. The other two survived with severe neurological sequelae. Nine had intermediate intracranial
hypertension
(ICP > 20 mm Hg, CPP < 50 mm Hg) and 10 had mild intracranial
hypertension
(maximum ICP 10-20 mm Hg); all survived without severe sequelae. Mannitol controlled the ICP in children with intermediate intracranial
hypertension
, but it did not prevent the development of intractable intracranial
hypertension
in children with severe intracranial
hypertension
. Intracranial hypertension is a feature of Kenyan children with cerebral
malaria
and severe intracranial
hypertension
is associated with a poor outcome.
...
PMID:Intracranial hypertension in Africans with cerebral malaria. 913 62
Chloroquine, an agent used in treatment and prophylaxis of
malaria
, and also known for its antiinflammatory effects in dermatological, rheumatological, and connective tissue disorders, has been reported to cause toxicity, most commonly in the retina and the cardiovascular system. We describe a 60-year-old woman with longstanding rheumatoid arthritis receiving multidrug treatment, including prolonged administration of chloroquine. She developed complete heart block requiring a permanent pacemaker, congestive heart failure, and progressive myopathy. During hospital investigations for her myopathy, she died of acute pulmonary thromboembolism. Although
hypertension
and possibly amyloidosis were thought to be the cause of her cardiac disease, cardiac and skeletal muscle changes characteristic of chloroquine toxicity were observed. Chloroquine may be an important unsuspected contributing cause of cardiac dysfunction in patients with rheumatological disease. Endomyocardial biopsy should be considered early in the course of diagnosis and management.
...
PMID:Chloroquine related cardiac toxicity. 963 91
Of 295 children with cerebral
malaria
, 117 (40%) had an abnormal respiratory pattern; 15 children exhibited more than one pattern during their clinical course. Four distinct patterns were seen. (i) Deep breathing (80 children); this was associated with severe metabolic acidosis, and resolved following treatment with intravenous fluids and/or blood. (ii) Hypoventilation with nystagmus and salivation (18 children); simultaneous electroencephalographic recording revealed continuous electrical seizure activity, demonstrating that these children were in subtle status epilepticus; anticonvulsant treatment resulted in return to normal of blood gases and recovery of consciousness. (iii) Hyperventilation with extensor posturing (20 children), which was associated with varying degrees of intracranial
hypertension
. (iv) Periodic respiration (14 children); all had clinical features suggestive of transtentorial herniation, and died following a respiratory arrest. Abnormal respiratory patterns can alert the clinician to complications of cerebral
malaria
that require treatment. Recognition of these patterns and rapid initiation of appropriate supportive therapy may help to reduce the high mortality rate of this disease.
...
PMID:Abnormal respiratory patterns in childhood cerebral malaria. 986 4
According to the World Health Organization, 585,000 women die each year from a pregnancy-related cause, 99% of whom are from developing countries. The first International Conference on Safe Motherhood in 1987 sensitized the world community to this drama. Ever since, maternal mortality and its medical causes are better known. The maternal mortality ratio is highest in West Africa (1,020 maternal deaths per 100,000 live borns) when it is 27/100,000 in industrialized countries. Direct obstetric causes account for 80% of the deaths: hemorrhage, infection, dystocia,
hypertension
and abortion. Indirect causes are essentially anemia,
malaria
, hepatitis C and AIDS. Severe maternal morbidity is 6 to 10 times more frequent than maternal mortality but it also leads to handicaps which end up often in women's social rejection. However, WHO estimates that 95% of these deaths and handicaps are avoidable, and at a low cost.
...
PMID:[Pregnancy and delivery in western Africa. High risk motherhood]. 1050 33
In this study, a questionnaire was used to study the individual behavior of a sample of fifty health workers, doctors and nurses from Tamatave (Madagascar) with respect to a number of current health issues. We used the results to assess the impact and efficacy of previous training and to obtain information about the extent to which health staff actually follow the recommendations and standards that they are given and expected to teach, as far as their own health is concerned. It was clear that the standard management procedures and instructions concerning basic health-preserving behavior were far from being universally accepted and followed by health workers themselves. This was the case even for common diseases and health issues for which specific training had been given, such as
malaria
, diarrhea, AIDS and STDs, tobacco use,
HBP
management and the use of antibiotics. More attention should be paid to involving health workers in their training programs so that they are really convinced by the recommendations given. So long as most health workers are not themselves committed to the recommendations and have inadequate behavior regarding their own health, they are unlikely to be effective at promoting good health practice.
...
PMID:[Do health workers practice what they preach? A study of knowledge, opinions and practices of health care professionals, with respect to their own health, in Madagascar]. 1082 56
From September 1995 to May 1997, 315 consecutive stillbirths and 315 randomly selected controls were studied at the Port Moresby General Hospital to determine the causes of the deaths, to describe the sociodemographic and reproductive characteristics of the mothers, and to see if there were any avoidable factors in the stillbirths and where the responsibility for them lay. 249 (79%) of the stillbirths were antepartum and 14% were intrapartum; the timing of death could not be determined in the remaining 21 (7%). 36% of the stillbirths were unexplained. The common identified causes were: syphilis (VDRL and TPHA positive) 10%, intrauterine growth restriction/placental insufficiency 9%, antepartum haemorrhage 9%,
malaria
6%, major congenital abnormalities 6%, cord accidents 6%, pregnancy-induced
hypertension
5% and acute intrapartum asphyxia 4%. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed a significant association between stillbirth and the following variables: husband's occupation unskilled, age over 35 years, poor antenatal attendance, a past history of stillbirth, syphilis and
malaria
. An avoidable factor was established in 41% of the cases; in 60% the responsibility for the avoidable factor lay with the patient and her relatives.
...
PMID:A case-control study of stillbirths at the Port Moresby General Hospital. 1093 55
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