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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (malaria)
44,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The incidence of clinical pulmonary manifestations during clinically mild Plasmodium falciparum malaria was studied in 50 patients. In nine patients (18%), respiratory symptoms developed and consisted of cough either productive (in 5) or dry and pleuritic (in 3), wheezing and dyspnea (in 2). Physical examination of these patients disclosed minimal decrease of breath sounds with diffuse moist rales over both lung bases. Chest X-rays showed small infiltrates and increased vascular markenings in most. Peak expiratory flow rates were measured in 38 of these patients and showed a mean decrease of 16.9% which reached its nadir on the third to fourth day of disease with return to normal values within 7.7 days. In patients with pulmonary symptoms a marked decrease in PEFR was observed (28.9%) and return to normal values was also longer (9.6 days). We conclude that mild, easily detectable and asymptomatic alterations of pulmonary function are observed in most patients with P. falciparum malaria and the incidence of respiratory manifestations in the uncomplicated forms of the disease is relatively high.
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PMID:The incidence of pulmonary manifestations during Plasmodium falciparum malaria in non immune subjects. 159 11

Major causes of anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa are malaria, iron deficiency, folate deficiency and haemoglobinopathies: now there is added also the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Anaemia is often multifactorial, with the different causes interacting in a vicious cycle of depressed immunity, infection and malnutrition. Anaemia progresses through 3 stages: compensation, with breathlessness on exertion only; decompensation, with breathlessness at rest and haemoglobin (Hb) below about 70 g/litre; cardiac failure, with Hb below about 40 g/litre. Without treatment, over half of the women with haematocrit less than 0.13 and heart failure die. Maternal anaemia, malaria and deficiencies of iron and folate cause intrauterine growth retardation, premature delivery and, when severe, perinatal mortality. Surviving infants have low birthweights, immune deficiency and poor reserves of iron and folate. They have entered already the vicious cycle of infection, malnutrition and impaired immunity. Treatment with blood transfusions is even more hazardous since the advent of AIDS, and should be limited to saving the life of the mother. Treatment of malaria is complex as chloroquine-resistant strains are now common. Prevention remains relatively easy with proguanil and supplements of iron and folic acid and is highly cost-effective in the improvement of maternal and infant health; it is more important than ever as it avoids the unnecessary exposure of women and infants to HIV transmitted through blood transfusion.
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PMID:Tropical obstetrics and gynaecology. 1. Anaemia in pregnancy in tropical Africa. 269 76

The case is reported of a 40-year-old woman who developed an eosinophilic lung infiltration during malaria prophylaxis with pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine (Fansidar). The patient had a severe condition with cough, fever, chills, dyspnea, weight loss and an unusual but characteristic radiologic picture. Corticosteroid medication was followed by a dramatic improvement in symptoms and complete resolution of the radiographic opacities within a few days. There was no recurrence after cessation of steroids. The authors believe that the cause of this lung disease was an allergic reaction to pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine (Fansidar). Some aspects of drug-induced eosinophilic pulmonary infiltrations are discussed.
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PMID:[Eosinophilic lung infiltration during malaria prophylaxis with pyrimethamine-sulfadoxine (Fansidar)]. 404 13

Despite the frequent association of respiratory symptoms and signs with malarial morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa, the value of individual symptoms and signs has rarely been assessed. We have prospectively examined the association of individual clinical findings with the summary diagnosis of respiratory distress, outcome, and the presence of metabolic acidosis in children admitted with severe malaria to a Kenyan district hospital. Respiratory distress was present in 119 of the 350 children included in the study and in 23 of the 30 deaths (relative risk = 6.5, 95% confidence interval = 2.8-14.4). The features of a history of dyspnea, nasal flaring, and indrawing or deep breathing (Kussmaul's respiration) were individually most closely associated with the summary diagnosis of respiratory distress. Of these, deep breathing, which was sensitive (91%) and specific (83%) for the presence of severe metabolic acidosis (base excess < or = -12), is the best candidate sign to represent the prognostically important syndrome of malarial respiratory distress. Therefore, it warrants further prospective evaluation in different clinical settings and areas of different malaria endemicity.
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PMID:Deep breathing in children with severe malaria: indicator of metabolic acidosis and poor outcome. 894 Sep 84

Verbal autopsy uses a caretaker interview to determine the cause of death. We conducted a study of the major causes of child death in Namibia to determine the validity of this method. A questionnaire, including signs and symptoms of the diagnoses of interest was administered to the caretaker in 135 deaths of children < 5 years old who were identified from hospital records. The 243 diagnoses included malnutrition (77), diarrhoea (73), pneumonia (36), malaria (33), and measles (24). Sensitivity and specificity of various algorithms of reported signs and symptoms were compared to the medical diagnoses. An algorithm for malnutrition (very thin or swelling) had 73 per cent sensitivity and 76 per cent specificity. An algorithm for cerebral malaria (fever, loss of consciousness or convulsion) had 72 per cent sensitivity and 85 per cent specificity, while for all malaria deaths the same algorithm had low sensitivity (45 per cent) and high specificity (87 per cent). For diarrhoea, loose or liquid stools had high sensitivity (89 per cent), but low specificity (61 per cent). Cough with dyspnoea or tachypnoea had 72 per cent sensitivity and 64 per cent specificity. An algorithm for measles (age > or = 120 days, rash) had 71 per cent sensitivity and 85 per cent specificity. The study results suggest verbal autopsy data can be useful to ascertain the leading causes of death in childhood, but may have limitations for health impact evaluation.
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PMID:Validation study of a verbal autopsy method for causes of childhood mortality in Namibia. 900 66

Bernardo O'Higgins was a very apprehensive individual regarding his health and ailments. This fact is clearly reflected in his letters, that provide valuable anamnestic data. During his youth, while living is Spain, he suffered of yellow fever and later in Chile, he probably had an acute phase of a rheumatic fever. Since his adolescence, he was affected by a chronic hlepharo-conjunctivitis. During the Chilean independence revolution, he suffered several battle wounds. The most severe was a shot that affected both his right arm and elbow (1818). While living in Peru (1823-1842) he suffered of dysentery and malaria. The latter was an endemic disease in the valleys of Peru. Being previously asymptomatic, he started experiencing extensional dyspnea, angor pectoris and syncopal episodes in 1840. At that time, physicians diagnosed a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Analyzing his symptoms and taking into account their short term evolution, the author concludes that they were a consequence of either an aortic stenosis or coronary insufficiency. These led him to a heart failure that was his immediate cause of death in 1842.
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PMID:[A medical history of Bernardo O'Higgins (1778-1842)]. 1066 97

The clinical characteristics of falciparum malaria were studied among 61 children, aged 0 to 14 treated at a reference center in Manaus, from October to December 1997. The symptoms observed were fever (98.4%), headache (80.3%), chills (68.9%), perspiration (65. 6%), myalgia (59.0%), nausea (54.1%), lumbar pain (49.2%), vomiting (49.2%), cough (45.9%), arthralgia (31.1%), diarrhea (34.4%), dyspnea (8.2%), convulsions (8.2%) and dizziness (4.9%). Pallor and anaemia were found more frequently in children under five years old. Anaemia was associated with high levels of parasitaemia. Fifty-eight (91.5%) patients had uncomplicated malaria, 3 (4.9%) had severe malaria and the lethality was 1.6%.
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PMID:[Clinical study of falciparum malaria in children in Manaus, AM, Brazil]. 1088 Nov 32

In people who do not have clinical immunity to malaria, infection with the malaria parasite could lead to severe complications. We describe a patient who had acute and severe lung injury from malaria. A 37-year-old woman had a 24-hour history of generalized weakness and chills 2 days after returning from Nigeria. She had received mefloquine as prophylaxis, but the patient did not take the medication. On admission, a thick blood smear revealed severe Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia. She was given doxycycline and quinine, but as her parasitemia resolved, dyspnea and hypoxemia developed and she consequently required placement of an endotracheal tube. Chest radiography results showed bilateral and diffuse infiltrate. This report shows that patients with P falciparum malaria should be monitored closely and transferred to an intensive care unit for additional management if respiratory distress develops. Physicians caring for patients who have recently traveled to malaria-endemic areas need to anticipate the possible development of malaria with all of its complications, including acute lung injury.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome complicating Plasmodium falciparum malaria. 1090 67

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.
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PMID:Pulmonary manifestations in malaria. 1125 88

Each year, at least 4 million African children die before they reach their fifth birthday, and 70% of the deaths are caused by pneumonia, diarrhea, malaria, measles, malnutrition, or, more commonly, a combination of these. Despite the fact that sick children often have more than one condition, busy clinics tend to treat only the one that is most obvious. With much of the effort of the past two decades directed to diarrhea, health workers have been taught their clinical skills in a piecemeal, rather than an integrated, fashion. In response to this problem, the World Health Organization and the UN Children's Fund developed a training course for the integrated management of childhood illnesses (IMCI) in 1993. IMCI is now being used in Uganda, Tanzania, and Zambia, and other African countries are preparing to institute it. IMCI relies on a straightforward clinical assessment and classification of illness that does not require the use of a laboratory. IMCI identifies general danger signs that may call for hospitalization of the child and then bases its assessment on the presence of 1) cough and difficulty breathing, 2) diarrhea, 3) fever, 4) measles, 5) ear infection, and 6) malnutrition. All sick children are screened for all of these conditions because IMCI capitalizes on the presence of the child in the clinic (vaccinations are also given if necessary). Training for IMCI involves 11 days, half of which are spent in clinical practice and demonstration and half in the classroom. Each country must adapt the IMCI guidelines and training course to meet its specific needs. Such adaptation provides an opportunity for collaboration among disease-specific programs; it stimulates a review of technical and clinical guidelines; and it provides an opportunity for the health system to focus on its essential drug needs, referral care, and supervisory system.
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PMID:The integrated management of childhood illness. 1229 34


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