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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-46189

ABSTRACT

Though the history of in-country training of doctors in Nepal is not long, Nepal had started training doctors in abroad long ago. This is probably the first paper of its kind to correlate the developmental and ecological region to the country of training of Nepali doctors. This retrospective analysis reveals that nearly 38% doctors are trained in India, 22% each from former USSR and Nepal, 10% from Bangladesh, and 2.5% from Pakistan. Other countries contribute very few in the list. Nearly 2/3rd of the doctors represent the central developmental region and most of them are from Kathmandu valley. Ecologically mountain and hills are in great minority compared to Kathmandu valley and Terai. Interestingly training in former USSR shows a bit wider base regarding the origin in terms of developmental region. And Nepal has a clear broad base both in terms of developmental and ecological regions. As most of the doctors among Nepal trained ones are from IOM, the role of IOM way of selecting medical students need a deeper look into it.


Subject(s)
Foreign Medical Graduates/statistics & numerical data , India/ethnology , Nepal , Physicians/supply & distribution , Retrospective Studies
2.
Bangladesh Med Res Counc Bull ; 2003 Apr; 29(1): 23-8
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-240

ABSTRACT

The study was designed as retro-prospective and the study period was 3.5 years. A total of 66 (42 prospective and 24 retrospective) consecutive patients were included in the study. The commonest tumor in CPA is the Schwannoma (76%) followed by Meningioma (13.3%) and Epidermoid (4.44%). Unusual forms are Ependymoma and Hemangiopericytoma. Amongst the troublesome clinical features headache, hearing loss, vertigo and imbalance, vomiting and tinnitus were more important besides visual failure and features of lower cranial nerve involvement. The objective of the study is to "Review the Large Cerebello Pontile Angle tumors clinically". In this study 66 large CPA tumors were included and analyzed. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was implied for the test of significance. On the whole, n=66 Schwannoma represents 76.70% and Meningioma 15.38%. Of these there are 45 cases with histological verification. The most common presenting (average duration is 1.3 years) symptoms were Headache (94.54%) and Hearing loss of varying grade (85.45%). Vertigo or imbalance was present in 67.27% cases. Vomiting was found in 54.54% of the times and difficulties in deglutition or voice change were complained of in 29.09% cases. Tinnitus was found only in 27.27% cases and it was the complaint mostly in lower diameter tumors. By maximum diameter, there were 24 cases measuring 3-4 cm, 15 more than 4 cm and only one case <3 cm sized tumors. Volume-wise tumors with volume <10 cc were 5 cases, 10-20 cc were 10, 20-30 cc were 13, 30-40 cc were 6 and >40 cc were 6. Similarly tumor volume and posterior fossa volume ratio was as follows: <10% were 6 cases, 10-20% were 15 cases, 20-30% were 7 cases and >30% were 6 cases. Amongst the schwannomas, the consistency of the tumor has been shown to be important factor for LCN involvement. The softer variety involved LCN more often than the harder (p<0.05). The involvement of the different groups of lower cranial nerve ranged from 7% to 92%.


Subject(s)
Adult , Analysis of Variance , Bangladesh/epidemiology , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Cerebellar Neoplasms/diagnosis , Cerebellopontine Angle , Comorbidity , Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Hypertension/epidemiology , Male , Meningioma/pathology , Middle Aged , Neurilemmoma/epidemiology , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies
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