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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This is an a posteriori analysis of previously published data to assess whether improving vitamin A (VA) status resolves measles-related pneumonia (MP). Nonhospitalized acute measles patients (2 d of rash onset) had their VA status determined based on the molar ratio of retinol-binding protein to transthyretin (RBP/TTR). Using a cutoff value of </=0.36, indicative of marginal VA deficiency, 82 children were diagnosed as marginally VA deficient and 114 were diagnosed as VA sufficient. At baseline, marginally VA-deficient patients had significantly lower serum retinol and higher serum C-reactive protein concentrations than VA-sufficient children. At the 2-wk follow-up visit, serum retinol and the RBP/TTR ratio were significantly greater in marginally VA-deficient measles patients receiving VA supplements than in those receiving placebo; whereas in VA-sufficient measles patients, retinol increased in those receiving VA supplements or placebo. Concomitantly the odds ratio of unresolved pneumonia in marginally VA-deficient measles patients receiving VA supplements compared with those receiving placebo was 0.20 (95% confidence interval, 0.05-0.71). In conclusion, VA supplements during measles infection improved VA status of VA-deficient children and helped resolve MP, demonstrating the importance of determining VA status when assessing the efficacy of VA supplements.
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PMID:Vitamin a supplementation of vitamin a deficient measles patients lowers the risk of measles-related pneumonia in zambian children. 1246 10

The present study was conducted to better understand the immure response to Toxocara canis pneumonia in mice with preweaning nutritional deprivation. Breast-fed Swiss mice, undernourished due to large litter size (up to 15 pups) and paired controls with only 5-8 pups were used. At 21 days old, both groups were infected with T. canis larvae. Liver retinol, retinyl palmitate, and inflammatory infiltrate in lungs were compared in both groups. Significantly lower levels of retinol and retinyl palmitate in liver tissue confirmed the hypovitaminosis A (P < 0.0001 for both comparisons) in the nutritionally deprived animals. Histological analysis showed similar eosinophilic infiltration in both groups at day 3 but was significantly more severe in undernourished mice at day 20 post-infection (P = 0.01). The present findings indicate that preweaning undernourishment is associated with a more severe inflammation in response to T. canis pneumonia. It suggests that vitamin A deficiency that persists after nutritional rehabilitation, may contribute to the severity of T. canis infection. The authors suggest that nutritional status should be carefully investigated in patients with more severe clinical findings.
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PMID:Toxocara canis: impact of preweaning nutritional deprivation on the pathogenesis of pneumonia in the mouse. 1588 87

Community-acquired alveolar pneumonia (CAAP) is typically associated with bacterial infections and is especially prevalent in vulnerable populations worldwide. The authors studied nutritional status and diarrheal history as risk factors for CAAP in Bedouin children <5 years of age living in Israel. In this prospective case-control study (2001-2002), 334 children with radiographically confirmed CAAP were compared with 529 controls without pneumonia with regard to nutritional status and diarrhea history. Controls were frequency matched to cases on age and enrollment month. Logistic regression models were used to evaluate associations of CAAP with nutritional status and recent diarrhea experience. Anemia (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 3.32, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.24, 4.94; p < 0.001), low birth weight (AOR = 2.16, 95% CI: 1.32, 3.54; p = 0.002), stunting (AOR = 2.22, 95% CI: 1.31, 3.78; p = 0.004), serum retinol concentration (AOR = 1.03 per microg/dl, 95% CI: 1.02, 1.05; p < 0.001), and having > or =1 diarrhea episodes within 31 days prior to enrollment (AOR = 2.30, 95% CI: 1.26, 4.19; p = 0.007) were identified as risk factors for CAAP. Results suggest that improving antenatal care and the nutritional status of infants may reduce the risk of CAAP in Bedouin children. Furthermore, they suggest that vaccines developed to prevent diarrhea may also lower the risk of CAAP.
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PMID:Nutritional status and diarrheal illness as independent risk factors for alveolar pneumonia. 1620 7

In this article, oxidative stress and enzymic-non-enzymic antioxidants status were investigated in children with acute pneumonia. Our study included 28 children with acute pneumonia and 29 control subjects. The age ranged from 2 to 11 years (4.57+/-2.13 years) and 2 to 12 years (4.89+/-2.22 years) in the study and control groups, respectively. Whole blood malondialdehyde (MDA) and reduced glutathione (GSH), serum beta-carotene, retinol, vitamin C, vitamin E, catalase (CAT), ceruloplasmin (CLP), total bilirubin, erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) levels were studied in all subjects. There was a statistically significant difference between the groups for all parameters except for serum CAT. Whole blood MDA, serum CLP and total bilirubin levels were higher in the study group than those of the control group. However, SOD, GPx, beta-carotene, retinol, vitamin C, vitamin E and GSH levels were lower in the study group compared with the control group. All antioxidant vitamin activities were decreased in children with acute pneumonia. Our study demonstrated that oxidative stress was increased whereas enzymic and non-enzymic antioxidant activities were significantly decreased in children with acute pneumonia.
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PMID:Oxidative stress and enzymic-non-enzymic antioxidant responses in children with acute pneumonia. 1663 91

Children in less developed countries die from relatively small number of infectious disease, some of which epidemiologically overlap. Using self-reported illness data from the 2000 Malawi Demographic and Health Survey, we applied a random effects multinomial model to assess risk factors of childhood co-morbidity of fever, diarrhoea and pneumonia, and quantify area-specific spatial effects. The spatial structure was modelled using the conditional autoregressive prior. Various models were fitted and compared using deviance information criterion. Inference was Bayesian and was based on Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulation techniques. We found spatial variation in childhood co-morbidity and determinants of each outcome category differed. Specifically, risk factors associated with child co-morbidity included age of the child, place of residence, undernutrition, bednet use and Vitamin A. Higher residual risk levels were identified in the central and southern-eastern regions, particularly for fever, diarrhoea and pneumonia; fever and pneumonia; and fever and diarrhoea combinations. This linkage between childhood health and geographical location warrants further research to assess local causes of these clusters. More generally, although each disease has its own mechanism, overlapping risk factors suggest that integrated disease control approach may be cost-effective and should be employed.
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PMID:A Bayesian multinomial model to analyse spatial patterns of childhood co-morbidity in Malawi. 1756 46

In a community-based double-blind randomized trial in children aged 6-35 months, both intervention and control groups received a multi-vitamin syrup containing vitamin A, while the intervention group had zinc gluconate (equivalent to 10 mg of elemental zinc) additional in the syrup. There was a significant decrease in diarrhoea and pneumonia in the intervention group. This study was undertaken to investigate if addition of zinc to vitamin A had improved plasma retinol levels, which, in turn, was responsible for the effects observed in the intervention group. In a randomly-selected subsample of 200 children--100 each from the intervention and the control group, plasma retinol levels after 120 days of supplementation were measured. There was no difference in the mean plasma retinol levels [the difference in the mean 0.46 microg/dL (95% confidence interval -1.42-2.36)] between the two groups following supplementation. No difference in plasma retinol levels was observed in the subgroups based on base-line nutritional status and plasma zinc levels. Addition of zinc to low-dose vitamin A in this study did not improve the vitamin A status of children and cannot explain morbidity effects of the intervention.
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PMID:Effect of zinc added to multi-vitamin supplementation containing low-dose vitamin A on plasma retinol level in children--a double-blind randomized, controlled trial. 1761 4

The aim of this article was to collect the results of systematic reviews and meta-analyses that evaluated the effect of vitamin A supplementation on child growth and maternal, fetal, and child morbidity and mortality. A detailed search was performed in PubMed, Cochrane Library, LILACS, PAHO, CAPES, USP Digital Thesis Library, and UNIFESP Collection Database. A total of 14 studies published from 1993 to 2006 were included in the review. There is evidence that vitamin A supplementation in children is associated with a reduction of 23% to 30% in mortality risk and attenuation in the severity of measles and diarrhea. There is no evidence of the intervention's impact on pneumonia incidence or mortality in children without measles. Vitamin A also appears to be protective in children and pregnant women with HIV/AIDS, with a positive effect on child morbidity and mortality and birth weight. There is no evidence that supplementation in pregnant and lactating women reduces infant morbidity and mortality, but there is an indication that vitamin A protects against maternal morbidity.
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PMID:[Evidence of the impact of vitamin A supplementation on maternal and child health]. 1795 49

The prevalence of malnutrition in Cambodia is among the highest in Southeast Asia, and diarrhea and pneumonia are the leading causes of death among children. Whether these adverse health outcomes are associated with co-existing micronutrient deficiencies is uncertain. We have determined the prevalence of anaemia, as well as iron, zinc, and vitamin A deficiency and their co-existence among stunted children (77 females; 110 males) aged 6-36 mos. Non-fasting morning venipuncture blood samples were taken and analyzed for haemoglobin (Hb), serum ferritin (via IMx system), retinol (via HPLC), and Zn (via AAS), C-reactive protein (CRP) (via turbidimetry) and Hb type (AA, AE, or EE) (via Hb gel electrophoresis). Children with CRP>or=5.0 mg/L (n=34) were excluded. Zinc deficiency defined as serum Zn<9.9 micromol/L had the highest prevalence (73.2%), followed by anaemia (71%) (Hb<110 g/L), and then vitamin A deficiency (28.4%) (serum retinol<0.70 micromol/L). Of the anaemic children, only 21% had iron deficiency anaemia, and 6% had depleted iron stores. Age, log serum ferritin, and Hb type were significant predictors of Hb in the AA and AE children. Serum retinol was unrelated to haemoglobin or serum zinc. The prevalence of two or more micronutrient deficiencies (low Hb, serum retinol, and/or serum zinc) was 44%. Nearly 10% had low values for all three indices, and 18% had just one low value. In conclusion, anaemia, and deficiencies of iron, zinc, and vitamin A are severe public health problems among these stunted Cambodian children. Intervention strategies addressing multiple micronutrient deficiencies are needed.
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PMID:Co-existing micronutrient deficiencies among stunted Cambodian infants and toddlers. 1836 30

The present study was carried out to find out the incidence of measles in under five children and its complications in four selected urban slums of inter-state border districts of West Bengal. 20 cluster sampling technique was followed and in each cluster 250 under five children were covered. Paramedical workers found out the children of the target age group who had the history of measles in past one year and Medical Officer confirmed the case following standard case definition. Incidence of measles was round to be 3.3% in Purulia, 5.5% in Bankura. 4.6% in Midnapur, 5.7% in Haldia-Tamluk and with an overall rate of 4.8%. Incidence was higher in 0-11 and 12-23 months age group and decreased with increasing age, but no sex difference in incidence of Measles was observed. Only 20% of cases were vaccinated with measles vaccine and 26% received Vitamin A in oil. Diarrhoea was the commonest complications followed by cough and cold, pneumonia and weight loss. The study highlighted the necessity of timely measles vaccine coverage, additional dose at a higher age and Vitamin A oil supplementation through IEC activities.
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PMID:An epidemiological study on incidence, symptoms and complications of measles in bordering districts of West Bengal. 1912 71

Cancer patients often have subclinical vitamin A deficiencies and low vitamin A lung levels. Previous studies showed that subclinical vitamin A deficiency increased the severity of pneumonitis induced by whole-lung irradiation in rats. Many studies have shown that lung irradiation increases the number of lung tumors developing from intravenously injected tumor cells in mice. We examined the impact of vitamin A deficiency on the development of lung metastases from a highly metastatic syngeneic rat rhabdomyosarcoma in normal rats and rats receiving prior lung irradiation. Weanling female WAGrijY rats were randomized to receive either a diet lacking both vitamin A and beta-carotene or a control diet. After five weeks, the deficient diet significantly decreased levels of retinol in the lung and liver but not in the serum, modeling the tissue and blood levels seen in prior studies of patients with subclinical vitamin A inadequacy. The vitamin A-deficient diet did not alter the number of lung tumors developing from intravenously injected tumor cells in unirradiated rats. Whole-lung irradiation produced dose-dependent increases in the number of lung tumors developing from tumor cells injected intravenously one or 29 d after irradiation. Vitamin A deficiency did not alter these dose-response curves, indicating that the more intense radiation-induced pneumonitis seen previously in vitamin A-deficient rats did not alter the enhancement of metastases produced by whole-lung irradiation. Moreover, inadequate vitamin A intake did not influence the growth of tumors implanted subcutaneously or increase the number or size of the spontaneous lung metastases developing from these subcutaneous tumors. Thus, although low vitamin A status influences the development of lung injury and is considered a possible modifiable risk factor increasing risk of primary cancer, it did not affect the growth of subcutaneous tumors or increase the development of artificial or spontaneous lung metastases in this rat model.
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PMID:Subclinical vitamin A deficiency does not increase development of tumors in irradiated or unirradiated lungs. 2184 22


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