Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A biomedical survey was conducted in several areas of Irian Jaya, Indonesia in July 1972 in association with an investigation of reports of a cholera outbreak. Stool specimens, blood smears and sera were collected and examined for evidence of parasitic as well as other infectious diseases. A total of 114 stools were examined and the most commonly found intestinal parasites were Trichuris trichiura (94%), Ascaris lumbricoides (74%), hookworm (58%), Entamoeba coli (15%), Endolimax nana (8%), Entamoeba histolytica (7), Entamoeba hartmanni (4%), Giardia lamblia (3%) and Chilomastix mesnili (3%). A total of 513 blood smears were examined and Wucheria bancrofti microfilariae were detected in 4% and
malaria
in 4% (Plasmodium falciparum 3%, Plasmodium vivax 2%). The
malaria
and filarial positive individuals lived in Beeuw, Waigeo and Arar, Sorong. These parasitic infections were not detected in people from Biak City and Sburia, Biak. Sera were collected from 357 persons and significant antibody titers were found for Entamoeba histolytica (4%) Toxoplasma gondii (7%),
Influenza
A2 Hong Kong 68 (65%),
Influenza
B Taiwan 68 (78%), Japanese encephalitis virus (87%) and Dengue 1 virus (79%).
...
PMID:Biomedical survey in Irian Jaya (West Irian), Indonesia. 20 84
A biomedical survey was carried out in North Samar Province, Philipines to update information on the prevalence of parasitic and other infectious diseases. A total of 1,394 stool specimens, 1,859 blood smears and 1,274 sera were collected from persons living in 8 barrios. Stools were examined for intestinal parasites, bloods smears for
malaria
and filariasis and sera tested for antibodies to Schistosoma japonicum, Entamoeba histolytica, Toxoplasma gondii,
influenza
A and B, and Japanese encephalitis virus. The prevalence rates for intestinal parasites were: Trichuris trichiura 90%, Ascaris lumbricoides 78%, hookworm 65%, Schistosoma japonicum 15%, Strongyloides stercoralis 1%, Entamoeba coli 16%, Endolimax nana 6%, entamoeba histolytica 5%, Giardia lamblia 3%, Entaemoeba hartmanii 1%, Chilomastix mesnili 1%. No
malaria
was found but microfilariae of Wuchereria bancrofti were detected in 4% of the blood smears; the MfD50 was 12.9. The circumoval precipitin test (COPT) was used to detect antibodies to Schistosoma japonicum and 65% of 994 sera was considered positive. The indirect hemagglutination test (IHA) was used for detecting antibodies to Entamoeba histolytica and Toxoplasma gondii and 5% and 3% of 1,274 sera tested were positive at titers equal to or greater than 1:128 and 1:256, respectively. Hemagglutination inhibition tests (HI) were used to detect antibodies to
Influenza
A2HK68,
Influenza
A2HK68,
Influenza
B2T62 and Japanese encephalitis virus and 72%, 12% and 78%, respectively, of 1201 sera were considered positive at titers equal to or greater than 1:20.
...
PMID:Biomedical survey in North Samar Province, Philippine Islands. 61 7
Various workers, including T. D. Stewart, claim that the aboriginal Americas were relatively disease-free because of the bering Strait cold-screen, eliminating many pathogens, and the paucity of zoonotic infections because of few domestic animals. Evidence of varying validity suggests that precontact Americns had their own strains of treponemic infections, bacillary and amoebic dysenteries,
influenza
and viral penumonia and other respiratory diseases, salmonellosis and perhaps other food poisoning, various arthritides, some endoparasites such as the ascarids, and several geographically circumscribed diseases such as the rickettsial verruca (Carrion's disease) and New World leishmaniasis and trypanosomiasis. Questionably aboriginal are tuberculosis and typhus. Accordingly, virtually all the "crowd-type" ecopathogenic diseases such as smallpox, yellow fever, typhoid,
malaria
, measles, pertussis, polio, etc., appear to have been absent from the New World, and were only brought in by White conquerors and their Black slaves. My hypothesis is that native American medical care systems--especially in the more culturally advanced areas--were sufficiently sophisticated to deal with native disease entities with reasonable competence. But native medical systems could not cope with the "crowd-type" disease imports that struck Indian and Eskimos as "virgin-field" populations. Reanalysis of native population losses through a genocidal combination of diease, war, slavery and attendant cultural disruption by Dobyns, Cook and others strongly suggest that traditiona estimates underplayed the death toll by a factor of the general order of ten. This would make for an immediately pre-contact Indian population of some 90-111 million instead of the tradition 8-11 million. Evidence is growing that Indians may have been no more susceptible to new pathogens that are other "virgin soil" populations, and thus their immune systems need not be considered less effective than those in other people. Present-day high mortality rates in Indians of both continents from infectious disease imports may be more socioeconomic than anything else.
...
PMID:Aboriginal new world epidemiolgy and medical care, and the impact of Old World disease imports. 79 20
This manuscript describes the design of new vaccines based on synthetic peptides. To this end, we first analyze the structural basis of antigenic reactivity and specificity and the various types of epitopes that form the mosaics of macromolecular antigens, as well as the regulatory mechanisms involved in immune recognition. A distinction is made between sequential or continuous epitopes, and discontinuous or conformational ones, which are the majority of epitopes in globular proteins. In this context it is of particular interest to identify epitopes reacting with B cells and T cells, respectively, or with cytotoxic T cells, in association with the major histocompatibility cell-surface antigens, and the role of these interactions in protective immunity. Identification of such epitopes in proteins of viral, bacterial, or parasitic organisms led to the synthesis of peptides, which when used in conjunction with appropriate carriers and/or adjuvants induced neutralizing antibodies. Particular examples are described, including: bacterial epitopes and mainly those of toxins of diphtheria, cholera, and shigella, leading not only to neutralizing antibodies but also to protective immunity against the deleterious effects of the respective toxins; parasite epitopes, such as those leading to anti-
malaria
vaccine, based on either the sporozoite or the merozoite stage antigens; viral epitopes leading to protective immunity, with special emphasis on
influenza
virus where induction of CTL is crucial; and finally, synthetic peptide vaccines against HIV, which should lead to broad specificity protective immunity while avoiding the risks of a vaccine based on the infectious agent. The rapid recent progress in this field, as described in this review, increases the prospect of constructing successful synthetic peptide vaccines in the not too distant future.
...
PMID:Structural basis of antigenic specificity and design of new vaccines. 138 42
In tropical countries, concomitant infections are a continuous problem. In the Rufiji Delta, an area of Tanzania that is holoendemic for
malaria
, there were outbreaks of
influenza
A, measles, and pertussis in 1986 and 1987. Significantly lower parasitic prevalences and mean densities of
malaria
parasites were found in children up to nine years of age who had measles or
influenza
than in asymptomatic control children. In contrast, children with pertussis had a higher prevalence and mean density than controls. The clinical courses of measles,
influenza
, or pertussis infections did not appear to be significantly affected by concomitant
malaria
infections. The reasons for the suppression of Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia during these viral infections are unclear. This effect could not be explained by the presence of fever.
...
PMID:Suppression of Plasmodium falciparum infections during concomitant measles or influenza but not during pertussis. 144 8
The American population developed, during thousands of years, free of epidemics that had been attacking Europe, Asia and Africa. The European and African migrations, after Columbus's first trip, produced an epidemic invasion of
influenza
, smallpox, measles, yellow fever,
malaria
, diphtheria, typhus, and other diseases that attacked the immunologically virgin populations and produced a very high mortality, with a diminution of the indigenous population of more than 90% in many places. According to historical evidence, the first epidemic was
influenza
, produced by swine strain of virus, immediately followed by smallpox. The Spaniards mated freely with the Indians producing a mixed race called the Mestizo, who were immunologically more capable of defending themselves against various viruses, bacteria, and parasites brought over from the Old World. Marriage between the races also was sanctioned by Queen Isabella (1503) and Fernando I (1515). With these new genetic immunologic defenses against infections, the Mestizo eventually made up the majority of the population of Indians in the New World.
...
PMID:Epidemic hecatomb in the New World. 148 72
Sialic acid on human erythrocytes is involved in invasion by the human
malaria
parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. Mouse erythrocytes were used as a reagent to explore the question of whether erythrocyte sialic acid functions as a nonspecific negative charge or whether the sialic acid is a necessary structural part of the receptor for merozoites. Human erythrocytes contain N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac), whereas mouse erythrocytes, which are also invaded by P. falciparum merozoites, contain 9-O-acetyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5,9Ac2) and N-glycoloylneuraminic acid (Neu5Gc), in addition to Neu5Ac. We compared the effects of sialidase and
influenza
C virus esterase treatments of mouse erythrocytes on invasion and the binding of a 175-kDa P. falciparum protein (EBA-175), a sialic acid-dependent
malaria
ligand implicated in the invasion process. Sialidase-treated mouse erythrocytes were refractory to invasion by P. falciparum merozoites and failed to bind EBA-175.
Influenza
C virus esterase, which converts Neu5,9Ac2 to Neu5Ac, increased both invasion efficiency and EBA-175 binding to mouse erythrocytes. Thus, the parasite and EBA-175 discriminate between Neu5Ac and Neu5,9Ac2, that is, the C-9 acetyl group interferes with EBA-175 binding and invasion by P. falciparum merozoites. This indicates that sialic acid is part of a receptor for invasion.
...
PMID:Binding of Plasmodium falciparum 175-kilodalton erythrocyte binding antigen and invasion of murine erythrocytes requires N-acetylneuraminic acid but not its O-acetylated form. 156 37
New vaccine developments will reflect achievements of the World Health Organization's (WHO) Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI), as well as resistance from the public toward increasing numbers of vaccines. WHO's EPI program has concentrated on tuberculosis, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio, and measles. 35 countries are attempting to control hepatitis B with universal vaccination. Now some countries are also recommending vaccination against Haemophilus
influenza
, mumps, and rubella. The complexity of multiple injections has prompted new research on acellular vaccines for pertussis, hepatitis A and B, varicella, and
malaria
. Combined vaccines and new adjuvants are also targets of intense research. Vaccines are a priority, because they are among the most cost-effective of medical interventions.
...
PMID:New developments in vaccinology. 163 65
Imported
malaria
cases reported to the
Malaria
Reference Laboratory as occurring in the United Kingdom have remained at around 2,000 cases annually for the past seven years. However, there has been a steady increase in falciparum
malaria
which now accounts for 52% of the cases, with mixed infections that include P. falciparum providing another 2% of the 4083 cases reported in the two years 1989-90. Compared with 1986, there has been a substantial increase in P. falciparum of African origin and a fall in Asian P. vivax. Eight people died. Except for one case who had had a previous splenectomy, either the fatal cases had taken no prophylaxis or diagnosis was very late, usually on a mistaken assumption that the patient had
influenza
. The future is likely to see continuing preponderance of P. falciparum infections, with an increasing problem of multiple drug resistance.
...
PMID:Malaria imported into the United Kingdom 1989 and 1990. 166 72
The failure of up to half of all patients in developing countries to adhere to recommended drug regimens may reflect inadequate physician- provider communication rather than resistance to treatment. There is substantial evidence that patients are more likely to conform to treatment regimens when they are fully informed about their medical condition and the medication prescribed. To investigate the extent to which patients in Zimbabwe received this type of information, household heads in 910 households in the Mashonaland West Province were interviewed. The sample included equal numbers of respondents from urban, rural, and commercial farming areas. Diseases most commonly reported by rural residents and farmers were diarrhea,
influenza
, cough, hypertension, and
malaria
. Most of the illnesses were attributed to natural or supernatural causes, and 80% of respondents in these subsamples claimed to distrust their health care provider and never asked questions about medications prescribed. The rural residents perceived health care personnel as too busy to answer questions and did not believe they would understand any information offered. On the other hand, these respondents indicated they would like to have information on the cause of their illness, its duration and treatment, the best way to take prescribed drugs, actions to take when drugs produce side effects, and storage of medication. Physicians who treat semi-literate rural residents with indigenous health beliefs are urged to provide information about medication tailored to match the individual perceptions and needs of the patient. This need is less urgent in urban areas, where 60% of respondents had general knowledge about the action of various medicines and were able to obtain information from pharmacists.
...
PMID:Drug information for patients in the community. 185 94
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