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1.
Tunisie Medicale [La]. 2011; 89 (2): 142-146
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-146490

ABSTRACT

Compliance with medical treatment is a public health problem. It denotes the patient's perception of the disease and the treatment prescribed by doctors. It concerns one out of two patients. It may happen to any patient at one or another. It is secondary for reasons that are numerous and modifiable in time. It results from problems related to the patient as much as to the doctor. It represents an obstacle to paying for chronic diseases such as chronic open-angle glaucoma, hence the importance given to it in the recent years. To evaluate the compliance of adult patients suffering from early open-angle glaucoma and to determine the influential factors. We conducted a survey at the ophthalmology department of Ibn El Jazzar Hospital among 132 adults being treated for early open-angle glaucoma. The evaluation was done on the basis of patient's medical files and a questionnaire from January 2007 to June of the same year. It ranges between good, average or bad depending on the frequency of the patient's visits to doctors, regularity of treatment and compliance with the doctor's prescription. 40.15% of the patients have positively complied with the prescriptions. This improvement has mainly been due to the following factors: The patient's good knowledge of the disease and its treatment; use of antiseptic eye lotion with the utmost effectiveness for the least instillation and side effects; patient's mastery of drop usage; doctor's intensive care required for some particular cases. Our results need to be confirmed by other studies. It's very important to consider all the determining factors in order to improve patient's compliance


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Patient Compliance
2.
Tunisie Medicale [La]. 2010; 88 (2): 111-115
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-134746

ABSTRACT

Amoeba of the genus Acanthamoeba are ubiquitous free-living protozoa encountered in water and soil. They frequently cause sight-threatening keratitis. Report of the three first cases diagnosed at the laboratory of Parasitology of Sousse Hospital. [Tunisia]. Our study concerned three lens-wearing female patients. aged 17, 20 and 29 years respectively. The patients originate from central Tunisia and presented with unilateral [2 cases] or bilateral [one case] keratitis. Diagnosis was made by demonstrating Acanthamoeba trophozoites and/or cysts on direct examination and/or culture [in agar-Escherichia coli medium] of contact lenses and/or lenses' solution. Direct examination of corneal swabs was negative in three cases but culture was positive in one. The three patients were treated with hexamidine and neomycine eye-drops for three months. Treatment led to scarring of lesions with however sequellar opacities that was minor to moderate in two cases and consisted of a central leucoma with a poor visual outcome in the last case. The need for systematic research of amoeba in lenses wearing patients with keratitis is emphasized


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Acanthamoeba , Lenses , Benzamides , Neomycin
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