Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A febrile convulsion is a generalized seizure occurring during a febrile illness whose cause is extracranial. Most scholars agree that strong evidence exists of familial predisposition to febrile seizures. The events are more common among men, with the pattern of such convulsions in Europe and North America apparently different from that in Africa. The authors report their findings from an examination of the pattern of febrile seizures at the Children's Emergency Room of the University of Benin Teaching Hospital in Benin City, Nigeria. 1046 children were admitted over the course of the study conducted January-September, 1988. Seven of the 202 patients with febrile convulsions died, five from aspiration pneumonia and two from tetanus following traditional treatment. 5% of patients with febrile convulsions were younger than 5 months or older than 5 years. The male:female ratio was 1.3:1. 140 children had a family history of febrile convulsion; in 55% the relative was a close family member. The authors point out that the number of families with a positive history of febrile convulsions may have been underreported because the average Nigerian family is loathe to admit that any member suffers from a socially stigmatized illness. These findings confirm the view that a strong familial predisposition exists for febrile seizures. Major causes of the rise in temperature in those studied included malaria, which accounted for 32.7%, followed by bronchopneumonia among 16.8%, measles at 15.4%, otitis media at 13.4%, and tonsillitis at 10.5%. Observed morbidity and mortality could be attributed to the sociocultural background of this community which practices modes of therapy which are often detrimental to patient health.
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PMID:Childhood febrile seizures (Benin City experience). 782 94

The purpose of this prospective study conducted from March to December 2000 in the Internal Medicine Department of the Sanou Souro University Hospital in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso was to evaluate the epidemiological, clinical, biological and prognostic features of severe malaria in adult patients according to their HIV status. During the study period HIV testing was performed in 37 of the 72 adults with confirmed severe malaria. Findings were positive in 12 cases and negative in 25. The mean age of the 12 seropositive patients with severe malaria was 32.4 +/- 2.8 years and most (50%) had used self-prescribed antimalarial treatment. The most common reasons for seeking medical care were fever, headache and deterioration of general health. The main manifestations of severe malaria were coma (n=4), generalized seizure (n=4) and circulatory collapse (n=4). Six patients (50%) presented two severe manifestations. Mean parasitemia at the time of admission was 4066 parasites/microl for seropositive subjects versus 8563 parasites/microl for seronegative subjects. Outcome of malaria included 4 deaths and 8 recoveries in the seropositive group versus 2 deaths and 23 recoveries in the seronegative group. Comparison with the group of 25 seronegative patients presenting severe malaria demonstrated no significant difference in mean age (p=0.96), self-prescribed antimalarial treatment (p=0.50), parasitemia upon admission (p=0.28), or mortality (p=0.07). However co-infected patients were found to have a higher incidence of anemia (P=0.01) and never presented certain manifestations of severe malaria. Further studies of co-infection by HIV infection and malaria (especially severe malaria) is needed given the high human and economic impact of these two diseases in sub-Saharan Africa.
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PMID:[Severe malaria and HIV in adult patients in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso]. 1561 84