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1.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 51(5): 578-583, Sept.-Oct. 2018. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-957468

ABSTRACT

Abstract INTRODUCTION: Here, we conducted an epidemiological study of hepatitis B virus (HBV) mono-infected and asymptomatic malaria/HBV coinfected immigrants and further discussed the possibility of malaria disease modifying the clinical presentation of HBV infection. METHODS: A total of 195 African immigrants were examined for HBV infection or coinfection with HBV and asymptomatic malaria. HBV infection was diagnosed using serological tests and confirmed by PCR; furthermore, we performed a pan-Plasmodium-specific-nucleic-acid-sequence-based-amplification (NASBA) assay to detect asymptomatic malaria infection. The stage/grade of the liver disease was determined using echotomography and elastometry. RESULTS: PCR-NASBA results confirmed that 62 of 195 subjects (31.8%) were positive for Plasmodium infection, whereas 41 of 195 subjects (21%) tested positive for HBV chronic hepatitis (HBV-DNA positive). Among the HBV-positive subjects, 26 (63.4%) of them were mono-infected patients (Group A), whereas 15 (36.6%) patients had HBV chronic hepatitis and asymptomatic malaria coinfections (Group B). The HBV-DNA median levels were 1.4×105IU/mL in HBV-mono-infected patients and 2.0×105IU/mL in coinfected patients. Echotomography and hepatic elastometry presented similar findings for both groups of patients. CONCLUSIONS: Coinfected patients seem to present with the same clinical symptoms of the liver disease as HBV mono-infected patients.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adolescent , Adult , Young Adult , Emigrants and Immigrants/statistics & numerical data , Asymptomatic Infections/epidemiology , Coinfection/epidemiology , Hepatitis B/epidemiology , Malaria/epidemiology , Cohort Studies , Africa South of the Sahara/ethnology , Hepatitis B/diagnosis , Italy/epidemiology , Malaria/diagnosis
2.
Saúde Soc ; 18(4): 590-608, out.-dez. 2009.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-534225

ABSTRACT

Este artigo foca o tema controverso das biopolíticas da depressão em imigrantes, em particular nos originários da África sub-sahariana. Os sintomas depressivos, ligados à ansiedade, são identificados também pela nova e mais importante patologia mental dos imigrantes: a Síndroma de Ulisses, de stress múltiplo e crónico, já definido como "o mal do século vinte e um", e que atinge principalmente os africanos. Não só entre estes imigrantes mas também em África, segundo um estudo conduzido pela OMS, a depressão tornou-se uma das principais patologias mentais. O tratamento farmacológico do sofrimento, entendido como fenómeno orgânico, é considerado o único caminho possível, silenciando os processos históricos, políticos e socioeconómicos que lhe estão na base. A atenção é portanto focada na saúde mental do indivíduo, desviando-a de problemas sociais de difícil resolução, que necessitariam de respostas económicas e políticas.


The following article focuses on the controversial issue of the biopolitics of depression in immigrants, especially those originating from Sub-Saharan Africa. Depressive symptoms connected with anxiety are predicted by the new and major mental pathology of the immigrants: the Ulysses Syndrome, a condition of multiple and chronic stress, already defined as the "twenty-first century's affliction", which affects mainly Africans. Depression has become one of the predominant mental disorders not only among African immigrants but in Africa itself, according to research conducted by the WHO. Pharmaceutical treatment of suffering, understood as an organic phenomenon, is considered the only possible route, suppressing the historical, political and socio-economic processes which remain at its foundation. So, the attention placed on the subject's mental health is being diverted from complicated social problems which would require economic and political responses.


Subject(s)
Humans , Anxiety Disorders , Stress, Psychological , Ethnicity , Mental Health , Depression , Emigrants and Immigrants
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