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1.
Asian Biomedicine (Research Reviews and News); 2010-02-11.
en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-129976

RESUMEN

George M. Baer died this year in Mexico City at the aged of 72 years old. He was our mentor when we started intensive research on rabies pathogenicity and control in Bangkok some time in the early 1980s. He introduced the young Thai scientists to the international rabies community. He then remained a friend and advisor to the “Mad Dog Gang” in Bangkok. Dr. Baer was born in London of German refugee parents and educated at Cornell University in the United States where he received his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree in 1959. This was followed by completion of the US-CDC Clinical Epidemiology Training Program where he eventually became the chief of the rabies division.

2.
Artículo en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-129795

RESUMEN

Objective: To study prospectively the prevalence, clinical presentations and laboratory findings of enterovirus (EV) infection in infants under 3 months of age who present as a sepsis-like syndrome. Method: All infants less than 3 month of age admitted as a sepsis-like syndrome to King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital between April 2003 and February 2004 were included. Patients who were immunocompromised or who had been admitted for longer than 14 days before developing symptoms were excluded. A detailed history, physical and laboratory findings were recorded and analyzed. Specimens of blood and cerebrospinal fluid were tested for enteroviruses using Nucleic Acid Sequence-Based Amplification (NASBA). Patients were followed to determine the clinical outcome and duration of hospitalization. Results: Of 56 infants, thirty-six were admitted to the pediatric wards and 20 had been hospitalized since birth in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) or nursery wards. Enterovirus infection was diagnosed in 13 (36.1 %) of the patients admitted to the pediatric wards and none in the group of NICU/nursery patients. The most common clinical presentations were high grade fever (92 %), rashes (77 %) and lethargy (54 %) as compared to fever (78.3 %), poor feeding (60.9 %) and lethargy (56.5 %) in the EV negative group. Ten (76.9 %) of the enterovirus positive infants had evidence of central nervous system (CNS) involvement as evidenced by the presence of EV RNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or CSF pleocytosis plus EV RNA in blood and/or CSF. Nevertheless, CSF pleocytosis was found in only 7 infants (53.8 %). Average duration of illness was 3.2 days as compared to 3.5 days in the nonenteroviral group with similar clinical features. All enterovirus positive patients had an uncomplicated recovery. Ten (76.9 %) received parenteral antibiotics for a mean of 5 days (versus 4.8 days in enterovirus negative group). The average length of stay was 8.1 days as compared to 15 days in enterovirus negative group. Conclusion: Enterovirus infections are important causes of a sepsis-like syndromes in infants under 3 months of age. Most enterovirus infected patients presented with fever without localizing signs and rashes. Detection of enterovirus RNA by NASBA in serum and/or CSF represents a rapid method for the diagnosis of enterovirus infection in infants presenting with a sepsis-like syndrome. Keywords: Enterovirus, infant, NASBA, sepsis.

3.
Infectious Diseases Journal of Pakistan. 2007; 16 (3): 69-74
en Inglés | IMEMR | ID: emr-82801

RESUMEN

Despite increases in our understanding of rabies pathogenesis, it remains an inevitably fatal disease. Lack of awareness, low level of political commitment to rabies control, and failure to recognize and correlate clinical, laboratory, and neuroimaging features contribute to continuing deaths. Clinical symptomatology, once believed to be unique, may be variable, even in patients associated with lyssaviruses of the same genotype. This article discusses virus transport, the role of virus and host response mechanisms in relation to protean clinical manifestations, and mechanisms responsible for relative intactness of consciousness in human rabies. Differential involvement of the anterior horn cell in furious rabies and the peripheral nerve in paralytic rabies is summarized. Escape mechanisms from host defenses explain why a fatal outcome is unavoidable regardless of therapy. Neuroprotective treatment, using a coma-induction regimen, proves not to be beneficial. Survival of patients with excellent recovery relies on early innate and adaptive immunity plus adequate intensive care support


Asunto(s)
Virus de la Rabia , Trasplante de Tejidos
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