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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malaria
may present with Multi System Organ Failure (MSOF) or Single System Organ Failure (SSOF). Thirteen cases of
malaria
are presented for their protean manifestations. Five patients presented for chronic urticaria with or without polyarticular arthritis, another mimicking acute rheumatic arthritis. A case of reactivation of
pulmonary tuberculosis
and the other to with apparent chloroquin resistant
malaria
who responded to combination of verapamil and chloroquin. A case developing Guillain Barre syndrome and another complicating into dilated cardiomyopathy are the rarities. All the cases are described and the pathogenesis is discussed in detail.
...
PMID:Protean manifestations of malaria--(multi organ dysfunction syndrome). 900 75
Malaria
, a major killer of mankind, apart from classical ague presentation, may present with respiratory manifestations. This may be misdiagnosed and important time may be lost in instituting antimalarials leading to higher morbidity and mortality. Present work was undertaken to study the clinical presentations of
malaria
with special reference to respiratory system and to evaluate the effect of antimalarials to such atypical presentation. One hundred slide positive cases of
malaria
were taken and detailed for respiratory involvement. Response to antimalarials was seen in these cases and associated complications (if any) were looked for. Mean age of the cases was 29.3 years with a male predominance. Positivity of peripheral smear read as: P vivax(53%), P falciparum (36%) and mixed infection (11%). Twenty-six patients had presented with respiratory manifestations-bronchitis (15), pneumonia (4), asthmatic bronchitis (1), adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (4) and
pulmonary tuberculosis
(2). Of these 26 cases, presenting symptoms noticed were cough (77%), dyspnoea (32%), expectoration (29%) and chest pain (15%). Twenty-five (96%) of these 26 patients were positive for P falciparum. Response to antimalarials was not significantly different in these 26 patients as compared to the rest (74 cases). All patients developing ARDS expired. The present study concludes that malarial atypical respiratory presentations are far higher in incidence than reported in literature. Peripheral smear examination in all patients of high grade fever with chills and rigors and having respiratory manifestations may unmask malarial infection and warrant early antimalarial treatment resulting in decreased morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Pulmonary manifestations in malaria. 1125 88
To evaluate the impact of infectious diseases on hospital services in Northern Uganda, a retrospective analysis of discharge records concerning 70,304 inpatients admitted to the Lacor Hospital (Gulu, Uganda) during the period 1992-1997 was performed. Children less than five years old represented 46.5% of the admissions, and the burden of infectious diseases on pediatric admissions increased over time, especially due to
malaria
and measles. Infectious diseases accounted for 7 of the 10 leading causes of admission. The most frequent cause was
malaria
(21.8% of total). The second leading infectious disease resulting in admission was
respiratory tuberculosis
(6.2%); given the long hospital stay, this is the most important disease in terms of hospital bed days (24.6%). Infectious diseases have represented a progressively heavy burden on hospital services, mostly due to pediatric admissions.
Respiratory tuberculosis
and
malaria
represent nearly one-third of the overall burden in terms of hospital bed days.
...
PMID:The increasing burden of infectious diseases on hospital services at St Mary's Hospital Lacor, Gulu, Uganda. 1144 10
Taiwan's population has undergone rapid growth. From 3000000 in 1906. It had grown to 6000000 by 1941. By the end of 1996 the total population has reached 21500000. This large population is served by over 120000 health professionals. For every 10000 people there are 12.91 doctors (including 11.52 Western medical doctors and 1.39 Chinese medical doctors), 3.37 dentists and 9.36 pharmacists. There has been a huge change in causes of mortality. Under the Japanese occupation, the main causes of death were
malaria
, pneumonia, dysentery, enteritis, and
pulmonary tuberculosis
. After the return to Chinese control, the main causes were acute contagious diseases and digestive tract disease. At present, malignant tumors, cerebrovascular accident, heart disease, and diabetes are the main causes of death. With the development of the health-care system, infectious diseases have been controlled or eliminated.
Malaria
was eradicated from the island in 1956.
...
PMID:Modern medicine in Taiwan (II). 1162 Apr 86
The 19th century was a period of comprehensive, "big" histories of diseases. German historiographers of diseases were especially prominent. World-famous is August Hirsch's Handbuch der historisch-geographischen Pathologie (the second edition appeared in three volumes in 1881-1886). The first volume of the Finn Immanuel Ilmoni's (1797-1856) Bidrag till Nordens sjukdoms-historia (A History of Diseases in the Nordic Countries) was published in 1846, the second volume in 1849 and the third in 1853. In this book Ilmoni treated the history of disease up to the year 1800. He planned a fourth volume, dealing with the 19th century, but this book was never published. Ilmoni was strongly influenced by the ideas of Thomas Sydenham and the German exponents of Naturphilosophie. Ilmoni's "ontological" concept of disease was rejected by Erik Alexander Ingman, a contemporary Finnish representative of "modern" medical ideas. After Ilmoni, nobody has attempted to write a comprehensive history of diseases in Finland, but histories of cholera (Carl Qvist, 1872) lepra (Lars Fagerlund, 1886),
malaria
(Richard Sievers, 1891) and
pulmonary tuberculosis
(Woldemar Backman and Severi Savonen, 1934) have been published. Diseases in Finland received very little attention in the "world histories" of diseases. After Hirsch only one comprehensive "world history" of diseases has been published (1993).
...
PMID:[Historiography of diseases in Finland]. 1162 20
The in vitro and in vivo activity of phenothiazines against antibiotic susceptible and antibiotic resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis and
malaria
-causing Plasmodia is reviewed. Given the facts that
pulmonary tuberculosis
and
malaria
are the major causes of death in developing countries, that both of these infections continue to escalate in their resistance to antibiotics, that the cost for the management of these infections is beyond that afforded by most developing nations, and lastly, that new and effective agents are not forthcoming from the pharmaceutical industry, the scientific rationale for the potential use of select phenothiazines for the management of these infections is presented.
...
PMID:Phenothiazines: potential alternatives for the management of antibiotic resistant infections of tuberculosis and malaria in developing countries. 1173 39
"This paper examines the adult-mortality transition in Costa Rica and its determinants. The risk of dying declined by 80% for young adults and by 40% for old adults from 1920 to 1990. The fastest decline took place in the 1950s for young-adult ages and in the late 1980s for old-adult ages.... By 1990, about 40% of Costa Rican deaths are caused by accidents and violence at young-adult ages and by cardiovascular diseases at old ages. Infectious and nutritional-related conditions (especially
respiratory tuberculosis
and
malaria
) account for three-fourths of the adult-mortality decline between 1951 and 1971, but only for 30% since that year on." (SUMMARY IN ENG)
...
PMID:[Adult mortality decline in Costa Rica]. 1229 Feb 24
This paper explores the measurement of hospital costs and efficiency in a context where data is scarce, incomplete or of poor quality. It argues that there is scope for using tracers to examine and compare hospital cost structures and relative efficiency in such contexts. Two high-burden diseases,
malaria
and
pulmonary tuberculosis
, are used as tracers to calculate the average costs of inpatient care at selected tertiary hospitals. This study shows that it is feasible to prospectively collect cost data for specific diseases and explore in detail both patient cost distribution and susceptible areas for efficiency improvement. The present study found that the critical source of efficiency variation in public hospitals in Zimbabwe lies in the way hospital beds are used.
...
PMID:Hospital costs of high-burden diseases: malaria and pulmonary tuberculosis in a high HIV prevalence context in Zimbabwe. 1263 15
A total of eighty-one consecutive cases of Kala-azar admitted in all four medicine units of Mymensingh Medical College Hospital during the period from January 2002 to mid August 2002 were included in this study. The number of the patients clearly indicates that the burden of Kala-azar in this region is significant and expanding, which constituted 1.90% of total admission in all 4 medicine units during this period. Majority of the patients were of 20-29 years of age. Male to female ratio was 1.38:1. Maximum number of the patients were of poor socio-economic group with history of housing made up of mud and having close proximity with cattle house. Fever and splenomegaly (100%) were the predominant features. Hepatomegaly was found in 91.36% of the cases. Other clinical manifestations were weight loss (79.01%), normal or increased appetite (65.43%), generalized weakness (72.84%), pallor (69.13%), cough (25.92%), jaundice (17.28%), abdominal Pain (12.34%), hyperpigmentation (9.88%), ascites (4.94%) and bleeding manifestations (4.94%). Notable concomitant illnesses were urinary tract infection (7.40%),
pulmonary tuberculosis
(3.70%),
malaria
(1.23%), scabies (4.94%), heart failure (3.70%) and chronic liver disease (2.47%). Due to wide diversity of clinical presentations, clinical features of kala-azar should be evaluated in details which will pave the hidden cases into light.
...
PMID:Clinical profile of Kala-azar in adults: as seen in Mymensingh Medical College Hospital, Mymensingh, Bangladesh. 1271 42
Health problems of gold miners who worked underground include decreased life expectancy; increased frequency of cancer of the trachea, bronchus, lung, stomach, and liver; increased frequency of
pulmonary tuberculosis
(
PTB
), silicosis, and pleural diseases; increased frequency of insect-borne diseases, such as
malaria
and dengue fever; noise-induced hearing loss; increased prevalence of certain bacterial and viral diseases; and diseases of the blood, skin, and musculoskeletal system. These problems are briefly documented in gold miners from Australia, North America, South America, and Africa. In general, HIV infection or excessive alcohol and tobacco consumption tended to exacerbate existing health problems. Miners who used elemental mercury to amalgamate and extract gold were heavily contaminated with mercury. Among individuals exposed occupationally, concentrations of mercury in their air, fish diet, hair, urine, blood, and other tissues significantly exceeded all criteria proposed by various national and international regulatory agencies for protection of human health. However, large-scale epidemiological evidence of severe mercury-associated health problems in this cohort was not demonstrable.
...
PMID:Health risks of gold miners: a synoptic review. 1297 Dec 53
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