ABSTRACT
The incidence of nasopharyngeal carcinoma [NPC] is relatively high in Maghreb countries. This cancer is a model of multifactorial oncogenesis, but the role of food as risk factor in ethiopathogenesis of this tumor is not negligible. To identify the association between risk of NPC and some dietary factors in Morocco. It is a case-control study including all new cases of NPC in our department between December 2009 and May 2010. Frequency consummation of foods was compared between cases and controls matched for age, sex and socio economic level. A high frequency consummation of a food was defined as consumption once or more by a week. Some traditional foods in Moroccan cooking like Harissa [hot red pepper], Qadid [mutton dried and salted], Khlii [dried meat, salted, spiced cooked and preserved in a mixture of oil and rendered beef fat] and Smen [rancid butter] were analyzed in this study. A conditional logistic regression was used to identify the association between dietary factors and the risk of NPC. Cases were more likely to have high frequency consumption of Harissa, Smen and Black Pepper, and less frequency consumption of fruits and vegetables. There was significant association between the risk of NPC and the frequency consumption of Qadid, khlii and cooking with olive oil. Some of these risk factors [Harissa, Black pepper] were found in 3 North African studies. This study indicates the involvement of dietary factors, and thus the lifestyle in the development of NPC and the need of biochemical analysis of food specimens to search for the carcinogenic agents
ABSTRACT
The Authors have done an epidemiologic study of the head lice [pediculosis] il the Rabat Children Hospital. The Results of the sampling showed high rate of infestation with the head lice, approximately 34.1%. However some factors related to the socio economic status of the individuals seem to have a non negligible influence on the parasitose within the children patients. Finally this study emphasizes the High infestation risk of intra-Hospital infestation