Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026916 (MAC)
5,226 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Considering that the current legal regulations on jobs prohibited to women lack consistency, especially in relation to the criteria for including specific jobs into the prohibited category, and because the regulations fail to protect women satisfactorily from the harmful effects of occupational and environmental loads and exposures, preparation of new legal regulations on those matters has been attempted. Special stress has been put on specifying parameters which, when measured and compared with the suggested allowable values, should provide a basis for deciding whether a woman can be employed at a specified post. Separate criteria have been specified to determine jobs prohibited to women: a) irrespective of age, b) at reproductive age, c) during pregnancy and lactation. The irrespective-of-age restrictions result from lower average physical efficiency of women in relation to men, lower muscular strength and different psychical or biological characteristics. Lower allowable physical loads and lower maximum allowable weights of objects to be carried or moved by women have been specified. In specifying the restrictions for women at the reproductive age it has been assumed that, when determining the maximum allowable concentrations of chemicals at workplaces, effects of those chemicals on the reproducibility and health state of the off spring were taken into consideration. However, for chemicals which, according to the present knowledge, show genotoxic, teratogenic, or reproduction-disturbing effects, employers will be obliged to inform the reproductive-age female employees about the risk involved, as well as to take steps to reduce, as far as possible, below MAC the concentrations of those chemicals in the ambient air at workplaces. The restrictions in the employment of the pregnant and lactating women are intended to ensure conditions enabling correct development of pregnancy and safe growth of the fetus and, subsequently, of the neonate. The restrictions relate to: physical effort--as this has been proved to affect the course and the outcome of pregnancy (increased abortion risk, reduced duration of pregnancy, reduced neonate weight); exposure to carcinogens--as there is evidence that carcinogens display genotoxic properties and are capable of permeating the placenta: exposure to agents which can disturb the course of pregnancy and damage the fetus or unfavourably affect health condition of the offspring even if the MAC and MAI values are not exceeded; exposure to biologic agents, evidently harmful to the fetus and to the condition of health of the progeny.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Project for amending regulations regarding jobs prohibited to women]. 129 5

Cytomegalovirus encephalitis (CMVE) is frequently diagnosed only at postmortem because its specific clinical features have not been fully identified. We have described the clinical, radiologic, and laboratory features of CMVE in a retrospective review of 14 autopsy-confirmed cases of CMVE and compared them with a control group of demented acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients without CMVE. CMVE was more common among homosexual men, and a subacute onset was more typical (mean duration of presenting symptoms was 3.5 weeks versus 18 weeks in demented controls). Median survival times were 4.6 weeks for CMVE and 28 weeks for controls. CMVE was accompanied by prominent systemic CMV infection at autopsy, including CMV adrenalitis (92%), CMV pneumonitis (42%), systemic Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (MAI; 58%), and CMV retinitis (58%). Hyponatremia and MAI bacteremia were found in 58% of CMVE cases. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of CSF samples identified CMV genome in 33% of CMVE cases. CMVE was associated with periventricular enhancement on CTs and periventricular lesions with meningeal enhancement on MRI scans. CMVE should be particularly suspected in homosexual men presenting with subacute encephalopathy who have had AIDS for more than 1 year and have a history of systemic CMV infection. Other features supporting the diagnosis of CMVE include periventricular lesions, hyponatremia, and identification of CMV genome in CSF by PCR.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus encephalitis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). 814 23

The risk of neoplastic disease, primarily lung cancer, induced by occupational, inhalation exposure to nonorganic arsenic was assessed. In order to identify individual risk in the linear dose-response relationship which would serve as a basis for the risk assessment among persons exposed occupationally, the author also analysed the latest epidemiological studies performed in Sweden, as well as repeated analyses of American studies. This allowed to diminish individual risk by several times. It is thought that a diminished value of individual risk is, in the light of the most up-to-date epidemiological studies, closer to the reality than the value proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Having the value of individual risk related to occupational exposure, equal 1.79 x 10(-4), lung cancer risk after forty years of employment under the exposure level within the range of currently binding MAC values for arsenic (0.05 mg/m3) accounts for 8.95 x 10(-3), thus slightly exceeding the adopted value of 1 x 10(3). Whereas a new value, proposed by the Expert Group for Chemical Factors of the International Commission for Updating the list of MAC and MAI values in 1996, equals 0.01, so the risk for a forty-year employment accounts for 1.79 x 10(-3), in fact the value corresponding to that already approved. In addition, the assessment indicated that smoking increases by 4-6 times the risk of lung cancer induced by exposure to arsenic.
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PMID:[A quantitative assessment of health risk induced by occupational exposure to inorganic arsenic]. 955 33

Many people are exposed to opportunistic infections which can only be controlled by a healthy immune system. The HIV virus limits the development of the immune system. The prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of many opportunistic infections are described. Pneumocystis carinii, Mycobacterium avium complex infections (MAI or MAC), toxoplasmosis, cryptococcal meningitis, cytomeglovirus infections (CMV), tuberculosis, Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), crytosporidiosis, AIDS Dementia Complex, and progressive multifocal encephalopathy are outlined.
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PMID:[Opportunistic infections--prevention and treatment]. 1136 39

Our objective was to characterise the CT features of the various species of non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) and to identify differences, if any, between Mycobacterium avium intracellulare( MAI) and other species. Fifty-five patients, who were culture positive on at least two occasions for a single NTM species, were evaluated. All patients had CT scans performed within 6 months of NTM identification. The CT scans were assessed for the presence and severity of bronchiectasis, nodules, cavities, tree-in-bud pattern, consolidation and for evidence of pre-existing lung disease. Bronchiectasis was identified in most patients (52 of 55, 95%) and nodules were present in approximately half (29 of 55, 53%). Patients with MAI ( n=16) were found to have significantly higher bronchiectasis scores and higher prevalence of nodules than the other species (both p<0.01). Patients with M.kansasii ( n=9) and M.xenopi ( n=9) had cavities, tree-in-bud pattern, and pre-existing emphysema as the dominant CT features. Patients with M.chelonae and M.fortuitum were younger than the other groups and also had a high incidence of pre-existing lung disease. Patients with MAI infection have more severe bronchiectasis and more nodules on CT than the other NTM species. Morphological differences between the other species were identified but were less distinct.
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PMID:Comparative appearances of non-tuberculous mycobacteria species: a CT study. 1219 72

The presented data concern occupational exposure understood as work performed in working conditions with exceeded values of maximum allowable concentrations/intensities (MAC/MAI) of hazardous/noxious agents. In Poland, the State Sanitary Inspection (PIS) is responsible for the occupational hygiene surveillance in the work environment. Information on occupational exposure to various hazardous agents (chemical and physical, as well as industrial dust, lighting or microclimate) is collected by the Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine every three years on the basis of routine statistics of sanitary inspectorates. Information on occupational exposure apply exclusively to workers employed in PIS-supervised enterprises. In 2000, the Polish enterprises, registered and supervised by PIS, employed 4 321 312 workers, including 505 638 (11.7%) workers employed in working conditions with exceeded MAC/MAI values. In 2000, both the proportion of workposts with exceeded MAC/MAI values and the proportion of workers employed in exposure decreased. The data show a general improvement in working conditions in Poland.
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PMID:[Occupational exposure to hazardous agents in enterprises supervised by the State Sanitary Inspection]. 1466 73