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Epidemiologic research has the potential to complement public health technical assistance programs and to provide health planners with information on priority areas for intervention. This potential was documented in Djibouti, where a US naval medical research unit conducted 10 epidemiologic investigations preliminary to the planning of a national acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) control program. Data were collected on human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevalence and incidence in high-risk populations, the comparative performance of HIV screening assays, attitudes and practices relevant to sexually transmitted diseases, viral hepatitis markers, the prevalence of arboviral infections, the nature and drug susceptibility of microbial pathogens associated with infectious diarrhea and Neisseria gonorrhoea, the epidemiology of malaria, and the ecology of sandflies in relation to human leishmaniasis. These findings were utilized in the setting of priorities and the planning of disease control measures. Baseline epidemiologic data are now available, and national research capabilities have been strengthened so that further research on AIDS , malaria, and diseases such as leishmaniasis can be conducted. The success of this experience was in large part due to the cooperation and coordination between the research unit, the Ministry of Health, and a World Health Organization Collaborating Center on AIDS.
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PMID:A partnership in epidemiological research. 185

A double-blind randomized comparative study of the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a single oral dose of 750 mg or 1250 mg of mefloquine was carried out on 20 Thai male patients with acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria. In the 750-mg group, one patient exhibited an RII response, while the others responded to the treatment with a mean fever clearance time of 50.2 +/- 28.2 hours and a mean parasite clearance time of 70.2 +/- 17.3 hours. The main adverse effects were dizziness, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhoea. Electrocardiogram monitoring detected sinus bradycardia in three patients and sinus arrhythmia in three others. In the 1250-mg group, one patient exhibited an RII response, while the others responded to the treatment with a mean fever clearance time of 43.4 +/- 36.6 hours and a mean parasite clearance time of 73.4 +/- 25.2 hours. However, during the follow-up period, two patients recrudesced on day 23 and on day 31 (RI response). Dizziness, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhoea were the major adverse effects, with dizziness being more frequent compared with the 750-mg group. Sinus bradycardia occurred in four patients and sinus arrhythmia in four others. The pharmacokinetics of the two regimens were similar, with the absorption of mefloquine increasing linearly with the dose; however, vomiting within an hour of taking the drug reduced the whole blood mefloquine concentrations. The results do not indicate that there is any advantage in using a single dose of 1250 mg of mefloquine rather than 750 mg.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of mefloquine in Thai patients with acute falciparum malaria. 186 Jan 48

To evaluate the consequences of receiving human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-seropositive blood, 90 HIV-1-seronegative recipients of HIV-1-seropositive blood (case patients) and 90 HIV-1-seronegative recipients of HIV-1-seronegative blood, matched for age, sex, number of transfusions, diagnosis, and severity of illness (controls), were followed for 12 months after transfusion at Mama Yemo Hospital in Kinshasa, Zaire. Of case patients and controls, 72% were children transfused for anemia caused by malaria. Of the 46 case patients case patients alive 6 months after transfusion and for whom HIV-1 serologic results were obtained, 44 (96%) had seroconverted. Significantly more case patients (47%) than controls (16%) died within 1 year after transfusion (P less than .001). In the first 3 months after transfusion, fatigue, diarrhea, fever, cough, pruritus, pallor, oral candidiasis, polyadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and rhinorrhea were observed more often among seroconverters than controls (P less than .04). Six percent of case patients and no controls had developed clinical AIDS after 12 months of follow-up. These findings underscore the urgent need for appropriate HIV screening facilities in transfusion centers worldwide.
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PMID:Seroconversion rate, mortality, and clinical manifestations associated with the receipt of a human immunodeficiency virus-infected blood transfusion in Kinshasa, Zaire. 186 35

A researcher reviewed village health worker (VHW) utilization in a primary health care (PHC) program in villages around Farafenni in North Bank division of The Gambia. 47 children 7 years old died between April 1986-March 1987. WHWs could have treated the illnesses (malaria, diarrhea, and acute respiratory infection) that killed 23 (49%) of these children. Yet they treated only 6 of the 23 while other health workers in the region treated 14 children. 3 children received no treatment. Further a traditional healer later treated 3 of those seen by a VHW before death. Parents of a fatally ill child with diarrhea were a bit more likely to take the child to a traditionally healer than a VHW. None of the VHWs referred any of the fatally ill children to the next PHC level. Chronic diarrhea/malnutrition, chronic cough, meningitis, measles, and septicemia caused the death of 20 of the 24 remaining children. A VHW treated only 1 of the 24 remaining children before death. Moreover a VHW saw only 48% of the living children who had experienced illness during the study period. The remaining children went to other health providers. 26% of mothers claimed they had forgotten that VHWs could treat illnesses. In fact, 75% of those who had forgotten did not clearly understand the role of the VHW. They tended to think that the VHW provided only prevention information. 20% could not afford a VHW, yet they paid much more for other health workers. Another 26% said that the VHW was not available at the time. 5% reported the VHW to be unsupportive. The remaining 21% did not know why they did not take their child to a VHW. When the researcher pushed these mothers, 61% gave personal animosity as a reason and 39% did not want to talk about it. In conclusion, the VHWs did not receive adequate training, had limited range of drugs, were poorly supervised, and often not available.
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PMID:Utilization of village health workers within a primary health care programme in The Gambia. 188 Aug 30

Preparing adult travelers for journeys abroad can be challenging and rewarding. Prevention is the cornerstone of a safe, enjoyable trip. Patient education and commonsense precautions may well prevent infection or disease. Prophylaxis for diarrhea and malaria could save one day of illness or inconvenience on an expensive trip or may save a traveler's life. And the Loa loa worm? The nurse fortunately waited until it crawled from under her cornea. Then it was gently teased from under the bulbar conjunctiva.
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PMID:Health risks of foreign travel. Preparing adults for jaunts abroad. 190 86

This paper examines the relationship between clinical manifestations and parasitaemia in relation to malaria endemicity. Discriminant analysis, showed that fever alone can detect 74.4% of the parasite positive cases and the inclusion of other symptoms like headache, vomiting, nausea, bodyache and diarrhoea marginally increases the efficiency of discrimination (i.e., from 74.4% to 74.7%). It was observed that the association of symptoms with parasitaemia varies with the degree of malaria endemicity. The percentage of correct classification of parasite carriers varied from 45.7% in the immune population to 80.6% in the non-immune population. A significant difference was observed in the density grades between symptom positive and symptom negative cases. Slide examination in hyperendemic area does not give any advantage over the clinical examination and the data obtained from the slides collected during fever surveys tend to overestimate the malaria incidence in hyperendemic area.
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PMID:Symptomatic diagnosis of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in field conditions. 191 84

Mortality of infants aged 0-30 months was studied in a subdistrict of the eastern Ivory Coast with a population of 240,000 inhabitants. A cluster sample of the type recommended by the World Health Organization for evaluating progress of the expanded program of immunizations consisted of 2 samples with 30 clusters of 70 children each, 1 taken in urban Abengourou and the other in rural cantons of the subprefecture of Abengourou. A standardized questionnaire was administered to all the mothers about their births within the last 3 years. Supplementary questionnaires concerning all deaths of children of the sample mothers were interpreted by 3 physicians who agreed on a probably diagnosis in each case. The survey covered 2375 infants under 1 year and 1825 aged 12-30 months. The total mortality was 103 deaths in the total sample and 70 for infants aged 0-11 months, for a rate of 29.4%. The difference between the urban rate (31.7%) and the rural rate (26.8%) was not significant. The rate varied significantly by sex for deaths due to malnutrition (11 boys, 1 girl), and pneumopathies (6 girls, 1 boy). Mortality varied significantly according to treatment received and place of death. 55% received traditional treatment and 45% modern treatment. 53% died at home, 36% at a health center, and 9% at the home of a healer. Among infants aged 0-27 days, the cause of death was tetanus for 8, prematurity for 12, neonatal distress for 5, neonatal jaundice for 5, and infection for 2. Among infants aged 1-11 months the cause of death was malaria for 10, meningitis for 7, tetanus for 2, diarrhea for 9, pneumopathy for 3, measles for 4, whooping cough for 2, and unknown for 1. Among infants aged 12-30 months the cause of death was malaria for 11, malnutrition for 12, meningitis for 3, pneumopathy for 4, measles for 1, and sickle cell anemia for 2. Malaria was the single most important cause of death followed by malnutrition for the overall sample. In urban and rural areas respectively, the proportions of infants correctly vaccinated for their age groups were 78.1% and 76.0% for those under 11 months; 92.3% and 80.6% for those 12-17 months; 78.3% and 76.6% for those 18-23 months; and 66.5% and 71.4% for those 24 months and over. Mortality rates varied very significantly by vaccination status. 70 of the children dying had not been vaccinated. Their mortality rate was 19.6%, compared to .5% for children in process of vaccination, 1.1% for children incompletely vaccinated, and .9% for children correctly vaccinated.
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PMID:[Infant mortality and its causes in a sub-district of the Ivory Coast]. 196 15

Eight cases of mother-to-child transmission of HIV-2 were documented by ELISA and Western blot in Gambia between January 1988-September 1989 from a hospital-based screening of 205 malnourished children, 864 subjects in a malaria study, 34 patients with probable immunodeficiency and 24 children of 17 HIV-2 seropositive mothers. AIDS was diagnosed by WHO clinical definition. Diagnosis of HIV-2 was made if sera were positive by ELISA and Western blot (LAV Blot2, Diagnostics Pasteur, Marnes-La-Coquette, France) and negative by Wellcozyme I competitive ELISA to HIV-a (Wellcome Diagnostics, Dartford, UK). The children ranged in age from 17 months-5 years, and in ponderal index from 50-90%. 6 had CD4 percentages or counts below the normal range. 7 of the 8 could only have been infected pre- or perinatally, while 1 had been transfused from her mother. The clinical features included 5 with diarrhea 1 month; 3 with Cryptosporidium, 3 with Candida, a pneumonia, an interstitial pneumonia by x-ray, a streptococcus abscess, a staphylococcus abscess, 1 infant with failure to thrive and 1 4-year old who was asymptomatic. This group of patients was more severely affected than a series reported from Guinea Bissau: their mothers also had advanced AIDS in comparison to asymptomatic mothers in the other series. While mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1 occurs in approximately 33% of children of HIV-1 seropositive mothers, these data cannot estimate the actual rate of transmission of HIV-2.
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PMID:AIDS following mother-to-child transmission of HIV-2. 197 26

We examined the malaria situation among 489 children under 5 years of age in the rural villages of Aboh Mbaise, Nigeria, using a combination of a standard questionnaire technique and laboratory diagnosis to confirm clinical observations. The results show a high prevalence rate of 52.8% for Plasmodium falciparum in this area. The geometric mean parasite density (GMPD) was 19,361.4/mm3. The proportion of children with fever and/or parasitaemia was not related to age, although the numbers in the febrile group appeared to increase with age. Using 37.5 degrees C as the threshold for fever, 48.7% of the heavily infected group (more than 1000/mm3) were afebrile while 51.3% were febrile. High grade temperatures above 38 degrees C were associated with high parasitaemia above 10,000 parasites/mm3. Of the 911 children who died in the area within the last five years, 22.4% died of fever of unknown origin, 39.7% from malaria, 22.5% from convulsion, 10.5% from diarrhoea and 4.6% from cough. Chloroquine is the drug of choice for the treatment of malaria and there were many cases of drug abuse, and use of sub-curative doses prescribed by non-medically qualified staff.
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PMID:Malaria and its treatment in rural villages of Aboh Mbaise, Imo State, Nigeria. 198 Aug

Patients who travel to developing nations are those most likely to encounter parasitic diseases. Using a risk assessment approach and the resources introduced in this article, the primary care physician can prepare them for travel and continue their care on return. Immunizations and patient education are the major modes of prevention, coupled with chemoprophylaxis for malaria and traveler's diarrhea. Traveling pregnant women and young children need special precautions. A large body of preventive and therapeutic knowledge, including parasitology, is at the core of emporiatrics, the science of travel medicine.
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PMID:Parasitic diseases. International travel. Preparing your patient. 201 39


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