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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient developed eosinophilic peripheral pulmonary infiltrates while receiving
malaria
prophylaxis with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (Fansidar). Withdrawal of Fansidar and treatment with corticosteroids led to rapid recovery. No exacerbation occurred after cessation of corticosteroids. Lymphocyte transformation testing gave a positive result in the presence of sulfadoxine but not pyrimethamine. It is concluded that drug hypersensitivity to sulfadoxine was the cause of the eosinophilic
pneumonia
in this patient.
...
PMID:Sulfadoxine specific lymphocyte transformation in a patient with eosinophilic pneumonia induced by sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (Fansidar). 276 33
Mammalian plasma contains a high-affinity actin-binding protein, plasma gelsolin, that severs actin filaments. Destruction of erythrocytes could result in the release of erythrocyte cytoskeletal actin into the plasma where it could bind to gelsolin. If the clearance of actin-gelsolin complexes exceeds its synthesis, lowering of the plasma gelsolin concentration might follow. To test this hypothesis, we measured plasma gelsolin levels in patients with falciparum
malaria
, a disease where at least part of the hemolysis takes place in the intravascular space and that is usually not accompanied by dysfunction of other organs. Two functional gelsolin assays showed that the mean plasma gelsolin concentration of 18 Nigerian children with Plasmodium falciparum malaria was less than 50% (P less than .001) of healthy Nigerian control subjects tested at the same time. Patients with
pneumonia
and febrile seizures also had depressed gelsolin levels, which indicates that factors other than hemolysis can lower gelsolin concentrations. Gelsolin levels were measured in 11 patients from The Gambia with P falciparum
malaria
before and approximately 3 weeks after treatment. In all cases the gelsolin level increased after treatment. To confirm the hypothesis that hemolysis can result in a lowering of plasma gelsolin levels, hemolysis was induced in rabbits, either acutely (by the injection of human serum) or subacutely (by the administration of phenylhydrazine). A fall in plasma gelsolin levels was seen, the rate of fall differing with the extent of hemolysis. Affinity adsorption of plasma from animals undergoing acute hemolysis with Sepharose beads coupled to the actin-binding protein DNase I, followed by immunoblotting of adherent proteins with antiactin antiserum demonstrated the presence of actin in circulating rabbit plasma. These studies suggest that under some conditions components of the red cell cytoskeleton are exposed to plasma proteins and that accelerated clearance of actin-gelsolin complexes may explain in part the depressed plasma gelsolin levels seen in patients with falciparum
malaria
.
...
PMID:Decreased plasma gelsolin levels in patients with Plasmodium falciparum malaria: a consequence of hemolysis? 283 53
Seroprevalence to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was determined among 368 children 2 to 14 years of age who were admitted to the pediatric service at Mama Yemo Hospital in Kinshasa, Zaire. Forty (11%) of these patients and only one (1%) of 92 healthy siblings of these patients were HIV seropositive (chi 2 = 8.68, P less than .01). Seropositivity was associated with previous hospitalization, receipt of a blood transfusion prior to the current hospitalization (odds ratio 3.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.5 to 6.4), receipt of medical injections during the past year, and smaller household size. Clinically, HIV seropositivity was associated with the diagnoses of malnutrition and
pneumonia
. A higher proportion of seropositive children died during the current hospitalization (4/40 v 10/328); when patients with
malaria
were excluded, the in-hospital mortality of seropositive children was more than eight times higher than that of seronegative children (Fisher exact test, P = .006). Clarification of clinical, immunologic, and epidemiologic features of childhood HIV infection is urgently required because HIV appears to account for or complicate a substantial proportion of pediatric hospitalizations in Kinshasa.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus seroprevalence in pediatric patients 2 to 14 years of age at Mama Yemo Hospital, Kinshasa, Zaire. 302 Apr 92
Melioidosis is a long-known disease since 1912, but only quite recently we have obtained the knowledges about its actual clinical and epidemiological features. The disease is so unique in having a wide spectrum of disease course and clinical manifestation. The causative agent, P. pseudomallei, is free-living bacterium in the natural environments (soil and surface water) of tropical and subtropical areas. Just like legionnaires' disease, melioidosis is a good example of infectious disease in which
pneumonia
is produced by inhalation of contaminated soil dusts or water droplets. The infection becomes dormant for years, but with a chance of recrudescence under a variety of insults to the host resistance. The disease, may it be acute or chronic, will be symptomatically confused with
malaria
, typhoid fever, leptospirosis, septicemia caused by other gram-negative bacteria, tuberculosis and mycotic infections. Isolation of the causative agent from clinical specimens is the only reliable method for diagnosis. Because of the increasing clinical awareness and the development of diagnostic methods, the reported cases of melioidosis have numbered almost one thousand in Thailand during the past 20 years. This country has now the most ample clinical experiences on melioidosis. We have reviewed the history of melioidosis research from bacteriological, immunological, clinical and epidemiological viewpoints, especially including the recent reports in Thailand.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas pseudomallei and melioidosis, with special reference to the status in Thailand. 307 4
Within a 2 month period 131 Ethiopian immigrants were admitted for treatment at a general hospital in Jerusalem. There were 52 patients with
malaria
, 13 with typhoid fever, 24 with
pneumonia
, seven with tuberculosis, nine with shigella and 11 with campylobacter. Over three-quarters of these patients were anaemic. In the majority of cases anaemia was normocytic and was most probably secondary to
malaria
and other intercurrent infections. The prevalence of diffuse non-toxic goitre was 7% in children and 19% in adults with a male to female ratio of 4:13. A positive rapid plasma reagin (RPR) test was found in 4% of sera tested and a positive HBsAg in 13%. IgG antibodies to HBc antigen were found in 75% of subjects. All patients with infectious diseases responded to therapy and, despite their poor condition at arrival, there were no fatalities and no late sequelae. The high HBsAg carrier state calls attention to the risk of vertical transmission by infected mothers and underlines the need for active immunization of infants at risk. The high prevalence of untreated tuberculosis and
malaria
poses a potential public health hazard, but with the current systematic screening of this population leading to identification and effective treatment of affected subjects, chances for the practical eradication of
malaria
and tuberculosis are excellent. Finally, the large scale transfer of a population from rural Africa to a modern and largely urban society presents a unique opportunity for a prospective study of the impact of environment on the emergence of diseases which plague modern society such as diabetes, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, hypertension and cancer.
...
PMID:Medical problems in Ethiopian refugees airlifted to Israel: experience in 131 patients admitted to a general hospital. 346 61
A goal of a pilot project in Tanzania's Bagamoyo District was to achieve a 30% reduction in mortality due to acute respiratory infection (ARI) in children under 5 years of age in the 1983-86 period. The project utilized village health workers who were trained to refer seriously ill children to dispensaries and to educate mothers on the early recognition of signs and symptoms of infection. To differentiate the impact of the ARI control program from other effects, the district's villages were randomly divided into intervention and control villages; however, control villages received a deployment of trained village health workers in the 2nd year of the project, thereby changing them into phase II intervention areas. In the 1st year (June 1983-June 1984), there were 260 deaths from ARI among children under 5 years (mortality rate, 32.4/1000) in the intervention area compared with 325 deaths (mortality rate, 40.1/1000) in the control area--a significant difference of 19.2%. In the 2nd year (July 1984-June 1985), there were 266 deaths in the intervention area (29.2/1000) and 347 deaths (35.0/1000) in the control area, for a difference of 9.9%. 51% of the deaths recorded in the 2 years for which data are available involved males; 54% occurred during the 1st year of life. The most significant direct causes of death were
pneumonia
(35%),
malaria
(23%), diarrhea (14%), and malnutrition (9%), while important indirect causes were measles (12%) and convulsions (10%). Only 33% of deaths in the control area compared with 54% in the intervention area were treated with antibiotics. To strengthen the success of the intervention program, control of diarrheal diseases and malnutrition are being added.
...
PMID:Acute respiratory infections in children under five years. Control project in Bagamoyo District, Tanzania. 360 35
We report a subject who had Fansidar prescribed to him for the purpose of
malaria
prophylaxis. This agent is a combination of pyrimethamine and sulphadoxine. He subsequently developed severe hypersensitivity
pneumonia
and required mechanical ventilation. We believe that sulphadoxine was responsible for his illness.
...
PMID:Fansidar hypersensitivity pneumonitis. 365 13
A study of morbidity patterns in a new paediatric hospital in Juba, Sudan, showed
malaria
, gastroenteritis,
pneumonia
, dysentery and infections of the eye, ear, and skin to be the commonest conditions. During the entire period of the study, these conditions constituted more than 90% of the outpatient load. In a group of inpatients interviewed, immunization coverage was 22%, 46% of the mothers had been enrolled in school at some time, and only 17% of the families had a latrine at home. The mean number of living children per family was four and of those not surviving was two. These findings are related to an inadequate environment, lack of public health information, and low socioeconomic status. Immediate and long-term strategies are necessary to provide safe water, adequate latrines, better immunization coverage, income-generating practices, increase in female education, and general health education of females, children and youth.
...
PMID:Morbidity patterns in a new paediatric hospital in Juba, Sudan. 373 97
An analysis is presented of data on all 30 129 inpatient admissions to a mission hospital in the West Nile District of Uganda in the 27 year period from July 1951 to August 1978. For most of this period the hospital was staffed by the same two doctors. For each patient admitted, a record was made of their age (adult or child), sex, place of residence, duration of stay in hospital, diagnosis and vital status at discharge. The annual number of admissions increased steadily from around 300 in 1952 to over 1600 in 1966 and subsequently declined to about 900 in 1977. Sixty-five per cent of admissions were medical, 12% surgical, 11% obstetric and 9% gynaecological. Thirty per cent of admissions were children (aged 0-9 years). Forty-five per cent of admissions were from those resident in the same county as the hospital and another 20% were from an immediately adjacent county. Infective and parasitic conditions (including respiratory diseases) accounted for over 60% of admissions among children and over 38% of admissions among adults (excluding obstetric patients). The six most common causes of admission were: uncomplicated delivery (2308 admissions),
pneumonia
(2020), hookworm (1999),
malaria
(1806), schistosomiasis (1742) and diarrhoea (1041). In total 1960 deaths were recorded (6.5% of all admissions). High case fatality rates were observed for tetanus (61%), immaturity (54%), meningitis (38%), kwashiorkor (21%), other malnutrition (19%) and anaemia (19%). A striking increase in the number of admissions for measles was observed in the period 1976 to 1978. Admission rates for schistosomiasis (S. mansoni) appeared to be highest from counties adjacent to the Nile and 104 deaths were recorded among the 1742 patients with this as the primary diagnosis. Admissions for diabetes, as a percentage of all admissions increased from 0.2% in 1951-54 to 1.5% at the end of the study period. Marked seasonal variations in admission patterns were found for diarrhoea, measles, meningitis and respiratory infections, the last two, but not diarrhoea, being most common in the wettest months. Admissions for
malaria
showed no strong seasonal associations. Despite the limitations of hospital-based data, it is argued that the data analysed provide a reasonable indication of the important causes of severe morbidity and mortality in the district. Furthermore, some of the changes in admission patterns over time are likely to represent true changes in disease rates rather than artefacts of diagnosis or referral. The analyses presented indicate the value of simple record systems, carefully maintained.
...
PMID:Admissions to a rural hospital in the West Nile District of Uganda over a 27 year period. 378 13
The characteristics of AIDS in Africa differ sharply from those in North America with respect to diagnosis and epidemiology, and in a clinical sense. The study of 78 patients treated in Kinshasa, Zaire during the period of October 1983-July 1984 yielded the following results: 159 out of a total of 1051 hospitalized patients were suspected of having AIDS, and there were 78 proven cases (54 of them died). The average age of 40 women and 38 men was 27 and 31 years, respectively, and the ratio of married people was 35% and 74%, respectively, with a lot of men living in polygamous relationships. In the first stage of the disease weight loss appeared in 100%, recurrent diarrhea in 83.3%, significant loss of strength in 75.6%, febrile conditions in 68.3%, and skin lesions in 58.9%. The ratio of men to women was 5:5, since heterosexuality and polygamy prevailed. Cigarette smoking was the main addition, thus drug addition per se did not appear as a risk factor. Blood transfusions occurred frequently (for instance, in
malaria
), but hemophilic patients receiving lyophilized preparations were rare. Haitians visited in fairly large numbers after the 1960's propagating the risk of AIDS. Black Africans accounted for 100% of cases. The number of concomitant, opportunistic diseases in AIDS patients in Zaire were: 34 cases of tuberculosis, 32 cases of candidiasis, 30 fungal infections, 21 Herpes labialis and/or genitalis, 19 cases of dermal and cerebral cryptococcosis, 12 cases of cryptosporidiosis, 9 cases of Kaposi's sarcoma, 5 cases of Herpes zoster, 3 cases of aseptic cerebral infections, 3 cases of coccidiosis, 2 cases of toxoplasmosis, and 1 case of
pneumonia
(Pneumocystis). Tuberculosis, cryptococcosis, cryptosporidiosis, and toxicosis were more frequent opportunistic diseases in Zaire than in the U.S.A., while
pneumonia
caused by Pneumocystis and Kaposi's sarcoma were relatively rare.
...
PMID:[Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the African environment]. 382 54
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