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)

As part of a population-based malaria surveillance program in late 1990, surveillance agents took blood samples from 979 people who had had a fever within the last 2 weeks and from 4044 healthy people during regular house-to-house visits in rural northern Natal/KwaZulu, South Africa, to determine HIV seroprevalence and risk factors of HIV infection. 60 (1.2%) people were HIV-1 seropositive. No one had HIV-2 infection. Febrile people had a 30% higher sex-adjusted relative risk (RR) of HIV-1 infection than healthy individuals, but this increase was insignificant. Women were at greater risk of HIV-1 infection than men (1.6% vs. 0.4%; age-adjusted RR = 3.8). In fact, this risk still existed when the researchers controlled for fever (RR = 3.75) and migrancy (RR = 3.2). The fall in the RR for women from 3.8 to 3.2 when controlled for migrancy suggested an underrepresentation of migrant male workers in the study sample. 2.3% of the women in their childbearing years (15-44) were HIV-1 seropositive, indicating an increased likelihood of transmission of HIV-1 to newborns. The youngest person afflicted with HIV-1 was a 12-year-old female and the oldest was a 66-year-old woman. No 10-to-19-year-old males tested HIV-1 positive, while 1.7% of the 10-to-19-year-old females did, suggesting that the young females had sex with older men. This may have indicated teenage prostitution and sexual abuse. 2.9% of the people who changed their place of residence within the last year (migrancy) had HIV-1 infection. For women it was linked to a 2.4 times higher RR (age-adjusted) of HIV-1 infection. For men, the age-adjusted RR was even greater (7.3). Even though HIV-1 seroprevalence was about 45% greater in areas crossed by the main national road than it was in other areas (1.3% vs. 0.9%), the difference was not significant. Since migrants were a key source of HIV-1 infection, improvement in social conditions, allowing families to live together and to settle in their communities, may reduce HIV-1 transmission.
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PMID:Seroprevalence of HIV infection in rural South Africa. 149 37

Researchers prospectively studied 264 children aged less than 5 years with diarrhea who were admitted to the Bouake Regional Hospital Center in the Ivory Coast between June 10 and August 11, 1991, to identify clinical disorders associated with severe diarrhea. They compared data on the 196 children with non-severe diarrhea with data on 68 children with severe diarrhea. All but three of the children were breast fed. The severely ill children were more likely than the non-severely ill children to have dehydration (45% vs. 11%; p 0.01), severe wasting (22% vs. 7%; p 0.01), anemia (29% vs. 13%; p = 0.01), bacteremia (26% vs. 9%; p 0.01), and malarial parasitemia (27% vs. 14%; p = 0.02). 68% of the blood isolates had nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. 6% of children had HIV-1 or HIV-2 infection. The most common pathogens in the stool specimens were rotavirus (41 cases), Campylobacter jejuni (22), Shigella spp. (21), and Salmonella spp (10). These findings indicate a need for a more comprehensive approach to assessment and management of children with diarrhea that secures immediate recognition of bacteremia, anemia, wasting, malaria, and dehydration.
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PMID:Severe illness in African children with diarrhoea: implications for case management strategies. 890 71

Co-infections such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) and Pneumocystis pneumonia may affect the progress of HIV infection and speed the onset of death. As malaria and syphilis are both endemic in West Africa we examined their effects on HIV-2 infection, for these may also accelerate the progress of disease. A community-based case-control study was undertaken in a rural village in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa. One hundred and fifty asymptomatic subjects seropositive for HIV-2 and 154 age- and sex-matched controls were enrolled. Venous blood samples taken into EDTA were stained within six hours of collection with CD4 and CD8 monoclonal antibodies and processed by Q-Prep machine in the field. The stained cells were then transported on ice by road and analysed by FACS-can at the base laboratory in The Gambia within a week. The mean CD4% was significantly lower and geometric mean neopterin and beta 2-microglobulin levels were significantly higher in the HIV-2-infected subjects than in the controls (P < 0.01 for all cases versus all controls). The mean CD4% was lower and beta 2-microglobulin level was higher in both HIV-2 and control subjects with active or past syphilis when compared with subjects with no syphilis; however, syphilis did not have a marked effect on plasma neopterin level. Malaria infection raised neopterin levels, but had little effect on CD4%. Overall multiple regression analysis allowing for HIV-2 infection and other variables showed that syphilis lowered CD4% (P = 0.01) and raised beta 2-microglobulin levels (P = 0.05) and malaria raised neopterin levels (P = 0.05). The conclusions are that HIV-2 infection is associated with lower CD4% and higher neopterin and beta 2-microglobulin levels than controls, and co-infection with syphilis is associated with a further lowering of CD4%, suggesting a worse suppression of the immune system. Co-infection with malaria is associated with a modest immune disturbance.
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PMID:Immune stimulation by syphilis and malaria in HIV-2-infected and uninfected villagers in West Africa. 962 34