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1.
JPMA-Journal of Pakistan Medical Association. 2010; 60 (12): 1045-1058
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-117790

ABSTRACT

A review of published literature on viral hepatitis infections in Pakistan is presented. A total of 220 abstracts available in the Pakmedinet and Medline have been searched. All relevant articles were reviewed to determine the prevalence of hepatitis viral infections in Pakistan. Two hundred and three [203] relevant articles/abstracts including twenty nine supporting references are included in this review. Of the articles on prevalence of hepatitis infection, seven were related to Hepatitis A, fifteen to Hepatitis E while the remaining articles were on frequency of hepatitis B and C in different disease and healthy population groups. These included eight studies on healthy children, three on vertical transmission, nineteen on pregnant women, fifteen on healthy individuals, six on army recruits, thirty one on blood donors, thirteen on health care workers, five on unsafe injections, seventeen on high risk groups, five on patients with provisional diagnosis of hepatitis, thirty three on patients with chronic liver disease, four on genotypes of HBV and five on genotypes of HCV. This review highlights the lack of community-based epidemiological work as the number of subjects studied were predominantly patients, high risk groups and healthy blood donors. High level of Hepatitis A seroconversion was found in children and this viral infection accounts for almost 50%-60% of all cases of acute viral hepatitis in children in Pakistan. Hepatitis E is endemic in the country affecting mostly the adult population and epidemic situations have been reported from many parts of the country. The mean results of HBsAg and Anti-HCV prevalence on the basis of data aggregated from several studies was calculated which shows 2.3% and 2.5% prevalence of HBsAg and Anti-HCV in children, 2.5% and 5.2% among pregnant women, 2.6% and 5.3% in general population, 3.5% and 3.1% in army recruits, 2.4% and 3.6% in blood donors, 6.0% and 5.4% in health care workers, 13.0% and 10.3% in high risk groups, 12.3% and 12.0% in patients with provisional diagnosis of hepatitis and 25.7% and 54% in patients with chronic liver disease respectively. This review has illustrated the high endemicity of hepatitis viral infections in Pakistan where hepatitis B and C potentially account for a serious burden of the disease. This review has triggered the launching of a network intervention for the control of hepatitis viral infectious. This review was used as the basis for the launch of hepatitis programme, but putting it into a formal review took time and the hepatitis program was initiated


Subject(s)
Humans , Middle Aged , Male , Female , Adolescent , Adult , Infant , Child, Preschool , Child , Hepatitis, Viral, Animal/immunology , Prevalence , Age Distribution , Hepatitis, Viral, Human/transmission , Genotype
2.
JCPSP-Journal of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan. 2009; 19 (9): 591-594
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-102011

ABSTRACT

To characterize patients with suspected measles, determine the magnitude of the outbreak in selected areas, and perform laboratory testing on patients with suspected measles to confirm the etiology of the outbreak. Cross-sectional survey. Islamabad and Rawalpindi in June 2006. Survey and specimen collection from households was carried out in areas affected by rash and fever during the outbreak. Teams asked if household members had rash and fever and administered a detailed questionnaire of clinical signs and symptoms for measles for each person who reported a rash and fever episode. A sample of cases with fever, rash, and either cough, conjunctivitis, or coryza was laboratory tested for measles and rubella. Of 2,225 households visited, 284 individuals met the rash and fever case definition. Laboratory testing of eleven blood specimens revealed that the rash and fever outbreak was caused by rubella in 6 and measles in 2 with three equivocal results. Laboratory confirmation of suspected measles cases is essential during measles elimination activities in Pakistan and other countries with endemic rubella


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Cross-Sectional Studies , Disease Outbreaks , Measles Vaccine , Rubella
3.
Pakistan Journal of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. 1995; 11 (2): 128-131
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-39120

ABSTRACT

Noise is any unwanted sound that, by itself, may not be harmful unless its intensity is high. Noise has physical, physiologic, psychologic connotations, all of which differ. Physically, sound can be measured and defined in terms of duration, frequency [measured in Hz], and intensity measured in sound pressure levels SPL, expressed in decibels [dB]. Sound may be continuous, intermittent, impulsive, or explosive[1]


Subject(s)
Noise, Occupational , Sound
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