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1.
Work ; 41 Suppl 1: 3404-11, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22317239

ABSTRACT

Subjective Visual Disturbances are silent adversaries that appear over a period of continued exposure and arise when the visual demands of the tasks exceed the visual abilities of the user. Jewellery manufacturing activity involves precision designs, setting the metal and stones, polishing and filing which requires higher visual demand. Therefore, it is expected that the jewellery manufacturing workers may experience subjective visual disturbances. This study was taken up with the following objectives 1) To study the presence of subjective visual disturbances among jewellery manufacturing workers and compare the same with VDT operators 2) To study the effect of work exposures on subjective visual disturbances and 3) to ascertain whether subjective visual disturbances have any permanent vision related problems. The study was carried out on jewellery manufacturing workers, VDT operators and on graduate students. The symptoms of subjective visual disturbances were identified using a questionnaire developed by Sheedy (2003). Viewing distances were measured and visual angles were calculated. The eye check--ups were also carried out. The subjective visual disturbances were higher in jewellery manufacturing workers. The findings suggest that work exposure has an impact on the causation of subjective visual disturbances. No pathological conditions of the eyes were observed.


Subject(s)
Eye Diseases/epidemiology , Jewelry , Occupational Diseases/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Computer Terminals , Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological , Eye Diseases/diagnosis , Humans , India/epidemiology , Male , Occupational Diseases/diagnosis , Prevalence , Young Adult
2.
Plant Cell Rep ; 21(10): 933-9, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12835901

ABSTRACT

This is the first report of a micropropagation protocol for Saussurea obvallata (DC.) Edgew. (Asteraceae), a rare, threatened and near-endemic medicinal herb of the Indian Himalayan region. Multiple shoots were formed from epicotyle explants on Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with 1.0 microM kinetin and 0.25 microM alpha-naphthaleneacetic acid. A maximum of five shoots were obtained from one explant in a 75-day culture period. The effect of subsequent subcultures on shoot formation was also studied. After 100% in vitro rooting was obtained in half-strength MS supplemented with 2.5 microM indole-3-butyric acid, the plantlets were transferred to ex vitro conditions. Following a 15-day in vitro rooting period and 12 days of ex vitro acclimatization, 66.7% of the plantlets had established in the field. Application of this protocol has the potential to substantially reduce the pressure on natural populations.


Subject(s)
Adenine/analogs & derivatives , Culture Techniques/methods , Ethnobotany , Plants, Medicinal/growth & development , Saussurea/growth & development , Conservation of Natural Resources , Culture Media/chemistry , India , Kinetin , Naphthaleneacetic Acids , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Religion , Reproduction
3.
Acta Paediatr ; 90(12): 1379-83, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11853332

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Studies in Bangladesh have shown that the mortality in shigellosis is significantly higher in hyponatraemic (HN) than in normo- (NN) or hypernatraemic children. The aim of this study was to describe the effect of shigellosis on renal haemodynamics and sodium and water homeostasis before treatment was started. Twenty-one moderately ill children infected with Shigella dysenteriae type I were studied. Eight of them had a serum sodium concentration below 130 mmol/L. Renal function was determined by glomerular filtration rate measured by clearances of inulin and iohexol. Effective renal plasma flow was estimated by clearance of para-aminohippuric acid. Plasma renin, aldosterone and anti-diuretic hormone were also studied. The HN children had significantly higher haemoglobin and haematocrit levels than the NN group. There was an inverse correlation between serum sodium and haemoglobin, and a direct correlation between serum sodium and urinary sodium and urinary chloride. Direct correlations were found between serum aldosterone and haemoglobin, plasma renin and systolic blood pressure and an inverse correlation between serum aldosterone and serum sodium. Clearances of inulin and iohexol were normal. Detectable levels of ADH were found in both groups, despite low serum osmolalities. CONCLUSION: The HN state seems to be triggered by multiple factors. The normal glomerular filtration rate excludes a volume expansion secondary to reduced renal function. Inappropriate or a physiological increase of anti-diuretic hormone secretion may be of importance. The higher sodium losses in stools of the HN children might also be a factor contributing to the HN.


Subject(s)
Dysentery, Bacillary/complications , Dysentery, Bacillary/physiopathology , Hemodynamics/physiology , Kidney/physiopathology , Shigella dysenteriae/isolation & purification , Water-Electrolyte Imbalance/etiology , Water-Electrolyte Imbalance/physiopathology , Body Mass Index , Child , Child, Preschool , Dysentery, Bacillary/mortality , Female , Humans , Kidney/microbiology , Male , Shigella dysenteriae/pathogenicity , Sodium/blood , Sodium/urine , Water-Electrolyte Imbalance/mortality
4.
Am J Trop Med Hyg ; 63(1-2): 12-20, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11357989

ABSTRACT

Mortality and morbidity associated with cholera acquired in a modern endemic setting have not been well defined. In Dhaka, Bangladesh from 1986 to 1996, we found that causative agents of cholera shifted over time, varying by serogroup, biotype, and serotype. At the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research (ICDDR,B: Centre for Health and Population Research) in 1996, 19,100 cholera patients were treated, 887 (4.6%) were admitted, and 33 died (mortality rate = 3.7% of cholera inpatients, 0.14% of all cholera patients). When cholera inpatients who were discharged improved were compared with those who died, bacteremia (odds ratio [OR] = 10.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.9-37.9), radiographic evidence of pneumonia (OR = 3.1, 95% CI = 1.2-7.7), and acidosis as estimated by the serum bicarbonate value (OR = 0.893, 95% CI = 0.825-0.963) were independently associated with death by multivariate analysis. Pneumonia was the leading cause of death and accounted for two-thirds of all deaths among individuals with cholera in this study. Death in hospitalized patients with cholera acquired in a modern endemic setting is, therefore, extremely rare, and most frequently due to concomitant infection, especially pneumonia.


Subject(s)
Cholera/microbiology , Cholera/mortality , Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data , Pneumonia, Bacterial/microbiology , Pneumonia, Bacterial/mortality , Adolescent , Adult , Bangladesh/epidemiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Cholera/blood , Cholera/complications , Diarrhea/microbiology , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Pneumonia, Bacterial/complications
6.
Pediatrics ; 103(2): E18, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9925864

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Alterations in consciousness, including seizures, delirium, and coma, are known to occur during Shigella infection. Previous reports have suggested that febrile convulsions and altered consciousness are more common during shigellosis than with other childhood infections. Those reports, however, have been from locations where S dysenteriae type 1 was not common, thus making it difficult to assess the specific contribution that S dysenteriae type 1 infection, and Shiga toxin, might make to the pathogenesis of altered consciousness in children with shigellosis. In this study we seek to determine the prevalence, risk factors, and outcome of altered consciousness in children with shigellosis in Bangladesh, a country where infection with all four species of Shigella is common. We particularly focus on the importance of metabolic abnormalities, which we have previously shown to be a common feature of shigellosis in this population. METHODS: This study was conducted at the Diarrhea Treatment Centre of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh in Dhaka, Bangladesh, which provides care free of charge to persons with diarrhea. During 1 year, a study physician identified all inpatients infected with Shigella by checking the logs of the Clinical Microbiology Laboratory daily. Study physicians obtained demographic and historical information by reviewing the patient charts and by interviewing patients, or their parents or guardians, to confirm or complete the history of illness obtained on admission. Patients were categorized as being conscious or unconscious based on a clinical scale; having a seizure documented in the hospital; or having a seizure by history during the current illness that was not witnessed by medical personnel. Patient outcome was classified as discharged improved, discharged against medical advice, transferred to another health facility, or died in the Treatment Centre. Laboratory examinations were ordered at the discretion of the attending physician; all such information was recorded on the study form. Clinical management was by the attending physician. Factors independently predictive of a documented seizure, or of unconsciousness, were determined using a multiple logistic regression analysis. For this analysis variables associated with unconsciousness or a documented seizure in the analysis of variance or chi2 analyses were entered into the regression equation and eliminated in a backward stepwise fashion if the probability associated with the likelihood ratio statistic exceeded .10. RESULTS: During this 1-year study, 83 402 persons with diarrhea came to the Treatment Centre for care, and 6290 patients were admitted to the inpatient unit. Shigella was isolated from a stool or rectal swab sample of 863 (13.7%) of the inpatients. Seventy-one (8%) of the inpatients with shigellosis were >/=15 years old; 61 (86%) were conscious; 10 (14%) were unconscious; none had either a documented seizure or a seizure by history during this illness. Seven hundred ninety-two patients were <15 years old (92%); 654 (83%) were conscious; 73 (9%) were unconscious; 41 (5%) had a documented seizure (compared with >/=15-year age group); 24 (3%) had a seizure by history during this illness. Of the 41 patients with documented seizures, 19 (46.3%) had a seizure at the time of admission, and 22 (53.7%) had a seizure after admission. Twenty-five (61.0%) of the 41 patients with documented seizures were reported to have a seizure during this illness before coming to the Treatment Centre. Clinical features that are known to cause altered consciousness-fever, severe dehydration, hypoglycemia, hyponatremia, or meningitis-were present in 38 (92.7%) of the 41 patients in whom a seizure was witnessed and in 67 (91.8%) of the 73 patients who were unconscious. Nineteen (46. 3%) of the patients who had a seizure documented had two of these five features, 4 (9.8%) had three, and 1 (2. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)


Subject(s)
Dysentery, Bacillary/complications , Seizures/epidemiology , Shigella dysenteriae , Unconsciousness/epidemiology , Adolescent , Bacterial Toxins , Bangladesh/epidemiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Dysentery, Bacillary/mortality , Dysentery, Bacillary/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Infant , Logistic Models , Male , Prevalence , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Seizures/etiology , Seizures/mortality , Shigella dysenteriae/classification , Shigella dysenteriae/isolation & purification , Statistics, Nonparametric , Unconsciousness/etiology , Unconsciousness/mortality
7.
Lancet ; 352(9127): 522-7, 1998 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9716056

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Infections caused by multiply resistant Shigella species are a major cause of childhood morbidity and mortality in Third World countries. The fluoroquinolone agent ciprofloxacin is active in vitro against these strains of bacteria, but has not been routinely used to treat acute childhood infections because of concern that quinolones may cause arthropathy in children. We undertook a randomised double-blind study to test the effects of ciprofloxacin treatment in children with shigella dysentery. METHODS: We compared the efficacy and toxic effects of ciprofloxacin suspension (10 mg/kg every 12 h for 5 days, maximum individual dose 500 mg) with those of pivmecillinam tablets (15-20 mg/kg every 8 h for 5 days, maximum individual dose 300 mg). We enrolled 143 children aged 2-15 years with dysentery of 72 h or less duration. Patients stayed in hospital for 6 days, and were followed up 7, 30, and 180 days after hospital discharge. Joint symptoms and function were assessed daily for 6 days. Clinical success was defined as the absence of frank dysentery on day 3, and on day 5 no bloody-mucoid stools, one or no watery stool, six or fewer total stools, and no fever. If no shigella were isolated from faecal samples on day 3 or thereafter, treatment was judged bacteriologically successful. FINDINGS: 13 patients were excluded since they did not meet eligibility criteria; 10 withdrew before day 5. Thus 120 patients (60 in each group) completed the study. Treatment was clinically successful in 48 (80%) of 60 patients who received ciprofloxacin and in 39 (65%) of 60 patients who received pivmecillinam (p=0.10). Treatment was bacteriologically successful in all of the patients receiving ciprofloxacin, and in 54 (90%) of the patients receiving pivmecillinam (p=0.03). Joint pain after treatment began in 13 (18%) of 71 patients who received ciprofloxacin and 16 (22%) of 72 patients who received pivmecillinam (p>0.2), and no patient had signs of arthritis. INTERPRETATION: In our trial, ciprofloxacin suspension and pivmecillinam had the same clinical efficacy. Ciprofloxacin had greater bacteriological efficacy and was not associated with the development of arthropathy. We conclude that ciprofloxacin is an effective and safe drug for use in multiply resistant childhood shigellosis.


Subject(s)
Amdinocillin Pivoxil/therapeutic use , Anti-Infective Agents/therapeutic use , Ciprofloxacin/therapeutic use , Dysentery, Bacillary/drug therapy , Penicillins/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Amdinocillin Pivoxil/administration & dosage , Amdinocillin Pivoxil/adverse effects , Anti-Infective Agents/administration & dosage , Anti-Infective Agents/adverse effects , Arthralgia/chemically induced , Child , Child, Preschool , Ciprofloxacin/administration & dosage , Ciprofloxacin/adverse effects , Double-Blind Method , Drug Resistance, Microbial , Feces/microbiology , Follow-Up Studies , Hospitalization , Humans , Joint Diseases/chemically induced , Patient Discharge , Penicillin Resistance , Penicillins/administration & dosage , Penicillins/adverse effects , Safety , Shigella/drug effects , Shigella/isolation & purification , Suspensions , Tablets , Treatment Outcome
8.
Ann Intern Med ; 126(9): 697-703, 1997 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9139555

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Treatment of shigellosis is currently limited by the high prevalence of multidrug-resistant strains of Shigella. OBJECTIVE: To determine the efficacy of azithromycin in the treatment of shigellosis. DESIGN: Randomized, double-blind clinical trial. SETTING: Diarrhea treatment center in Dhaka, Bangladesh. PATIENTS: 70 men with shigellosis that had lasted 72 hours or less. INTERVENTIONS: Patients stayed in the hospital for 6 days. Thirty-four patients were randomly assigned to receive 500 mg of azithromycin on study day 1, followed by 250 mg once daily for 4 days; 36 patients were assigned to receive 500 mg of ciprofloxacin every 12 hours for 5 days. MEASUREMENTS: Clinical treatment failure was considered to have occurred if frank dysentery persisted for 72 hours after therapy began or if on study day 5 a patient had more than six stools, had any bloody-mucoid stools, had more than one watery stool, or had an oral body temperature exceeding 37.8 degrees C. Bacteriologic treatment failure was considered to have occurred if Shigella strains could be isolated from a stool sample after study day 2. Therapy was considered either clinically or bacteriologically successful in patients who completed therapy and did not meet criteria for failure. RESULTS: Therapy was clinically successful in 28 (82%) patients who received azithromycin and 32 (89%) patients who received ciprofloxacin (difference, -7% [95% Cl, -23% to 10%]). Therapy was bacteriologically successful in 32 (94%) patients receiving azithromycin and 36 (100%) patients receiving ciprofloxacin (difference, -6% [Cl, -14% to 2%]). Peak serum concentrations of azithromycin were equal to the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the infecting Shigella strains, whereas serum concentrations of ciprofloxacin were 28 times the MIC. Stool concentrations of both drugs were more than 200 times the MIC. CONCLUSION: Azithromycin is effective in the treatment of moderate to severe shigellosis caused by multidrug-resistant Shigella strains.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Anti-Infective Agents/therapeutic use , Azithromycin/therapeutic use , Ciprofloxacin/therapeutic use , Dysentery, Bacillary/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Anti-Bacterial Agents/metabolism , Anti-Infective Agents/metabolism , Azithromycin/metabolism , Ciprofloxacin/metabolism , Double-Blind Method , Drug Resistance, Microbial , Dysentery, Bacillary/microbiology , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Shigella/drug effects
9.
Plant Cell Rep ; 16(9): 637-640, 1997 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30727610

ABSTRACT

An in vitro propagation technique based on axillary bud proliferation has been developed for matureSapium sebiferum trees. Nodal segments cultured on Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with benzyl adenine (1-10 µM and α-naphthaleneacetic acid (0-0.5 µM showed axillary bud proliferation. Shoots proliferated in vitro were multiplied on Murashige and Skoog medium containing 2.5 µM benzyl adenine and 0.25 µM α-naphthaleneacetic acid. Seasonal changes affected the shoot proliferation potential of the initial explant. Shoots were rooted on a half-strength, growth-regulator-free, agar-gelled, MS medium after a 48-h treatment on half-strength MS liquid medium with 10 µM indole-3-butyric acid. Rooted plantlets were potted and acclimatized in a growth chamber and then moved to the greenhouse. Four-month-old plants were transplanted to the field.

10.
Lancet ; 348(9023): 296-300, 1996 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8709688

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Effective antimicrobial therapy can reduce the duration and volume of cholera diarrhoea by half. However, such treatment is currently limited by Vibrio cholerae resistance to the drugs commonly prescribed for cholera, and by the difficulties involved in the administration of multi-drug doses under field conditions. Because of its favourable pharmacokinetics we thought it likely that single-dose ciprofloxacin would be effective in the treatment of cholera. METHODS: In this double-blind study treatment was either a single 1 g oral dose of ciprofloxacin plus doxycycline placebo, or a single 300 mg oral dose of doxycycline plus ciprofloxacine placebo. 130 moderately or severely dehydrated men infected with V cholerae 01 and 130 infected with V cholerae 0139 were randomly assigned treatment. Patients stayed in hospital for 5 days. We measured fluid intake and stool volume every 6 h, and a sample of stool for culture was obtained daily. The primary outcome measures were clinical success--the cessation of watery stool within 48 h; and bacteriological success--absence of V cholerae from cultures of stool after study day 2. FINDINGS: Among patients infected with V cholerae 01, treatment was clinically successful in 62 (94%) of 66 patients who received ciprofloxacin and in 47 (73%) of 64 who receive doxycycline (difference 21% [95% Cl 8-33]); the corresponding proportions with bacteriological success were 63 (95%) and 44 (69%) (27% [14-39]). Among patients infected with V cholerae 0139, treatment was clinically successful in 54 (92%) of 59 patients who received ciprofloxacin and in 65 (92%) of 71 who received doxycycline (< 1% [-9 to 9]), and bacteriologically successful in 58 (98%) and 56 (79%), respectively (19% [9-30]). Total volume of watery stool did not differ significantly between ciprofloxacin-group and doxycycline-group patients infected with either V cholerae 01 or 0139. All but one of the V cholerae 01 and all of the 0139 isolates were susceptible in vitro to doxycycline, whereas 48 (37%) of the V cholerae 01 isolates and none of the 0139 isolates were resistant to tetracycline. Treatment clinically failed in 14 (52%) of 27 doxycycline-treated patients infected with a tetracycline-resistant V cholerae 01 strain, compared with three (8%) of 37 patients infected with a tetracycline-susceptible strain (44% [23-65]). INTERPRETATION: Single-dose ciprofloxacin is effective in the treatment of cholera caused by V cholerae 01 or 0139 and is better than single-dose doxycycline in the eradication of V cholerae from stool. Single-dose ciprofloxacin may also be the preferred treatment in areas where tetracycline-resistant V cholerae are common. In V cholerae, in-vitro doxycycline susceptibilities are not a useful indicator of the in-vivo efficacy of the drug.


Subject(s)
Cholera/drug therapy , Ciprofloxacin/therapeutic use , Doxycycline/therapeutic use , Vibrio cholerae/drug effects , Administration, Oral , Adult , Cholera/microbiology , Ciprofloxacin/blood , Double-Blind Method , Doxycycline/blood , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome , Vibrio cholerae/classification , Vibrio cholerae/isolation & purification
11.
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg ; 90(4): 402-5, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8882188

ABSTRACT

We prospectively compared the clinical features of cholera due to Vibrio cholerae O1 and V. cholerae O139 in 242 men 18-60 years of age, with a history of diarrhoea of 24 h or less, and moderate or severe dehydration. The antimicrobial susceptibility of all of the V. cholerae strains isolated from these patients was determined, and in vitro cholera toxin production determined for 68 isolates. On admission, the 110 patients infected with V. cholerae O1 significantly more often had body temperature < 36 degrees C (85% vs. 66%, P < or = 0.05), faecal leucocyte count > 50/high power microscope field (40% vs. 12%), and lower mean faecal chloride content (94 vs. 103 mmol/L) than did the 132 patients infected with V. cholerae O139. Patients infected with V. cholerae O1 also initially had significantly higher median volumes of stool (13 vs. 11 mL per kg body weight per h), vomitus (1 mL/kg/h vs. nil), and intravenous fluid requirements (23 vs. 21 mL/kg/h). All V. cholerae O1 and O139 isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin, all but one were susceptible to doxycycline and erythromycin, and the majority of both serogroups were resistant to co-trimoxazole (95% and 97%, respectively). V. cholerae O1 and O139 susceptibilities differed for tetracycline (58% vs. 100%) and furazolidone (27% vs. 93%) (P < 0.001 in both cases). The amount of cholera toxin produced in vitro by strains of V. cholerae O1 and O139 was similar, and did not correlate with stool volume. The results demonstrated that V. cholerae O139 does not cause more severe, or more invasive, disease than V. cholerae O1, as had been previously suggested, but that clinically important differences in antimicrobial susceptibility do exist among strains isolated in Bangladesh.


Subject(s)
Cholera/microbiology , Drug Resistance, Microbial , Adolescent , Adult , Cholera/drug therapy , Cholera/metabolism , Cholera Toxin/metabolism , Dehydration/microbiology , Dehydration/therapy , Diarrhea/microbiology , Fluid Therapy , Humans , Male , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Tetracycline Resistance , Trimethoprim Resistance , Vibrio cholerae/drug effects , Vibrio cholerae/metabolism
12.
Bangladesh Med Res Counc Bull ; 22(1): 33-42, 1996 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9037843

ABSTRACT

In a prospective study conducted in the Institute of Postgraduate Medicine & Research (IPGMR), Dhaka, 212 patients with prolonged pyrexia were thoroughly evaluated clinically and with the help of laboratory investigations with a view to reaching the diagnosis. Their clinical and laboratory data were recorded. Clinical features pertaining to a particular organ gave appropriate clue in 52% cases. Imaging techniques were instrumental in 24%, microbiological or serological investigations in 35%, invasive procedures were diagnostic in 42%, laparotomy had to be resorted to in five cases. Infectious diseases were the commonest causes of prolonged pyrexia accounting for about 63.21% of cases followed by neoplasms (12.74%) and connective tissue disorders (10.85%). Tuberculosis was the most common infection (24.53% of all cases) followed by enteric fever (12.74%) and visceral leishmaniasis (9.43%). Pleura was the commonest seat for tuberculosis followed by lymph nodes and abdomen. Leukemias were the commonest neoplasm and SLE the commonest connective tissue disorder presenting with prolonged fever. Several fundamental observations were made in the study. Infections are the commonest cause of prolonged fever in our community, neoplasms and connective tissue disorders are also not rare. Secondly, patients with temperature between 100 to 101 degrees F should not be denied evaluation with the apprehension of unnecessarily investigating for habitual hyperthermia, as the condition was distinctly rare in the series. Thirdly, analysis of materials from organs or systems suspected to be abnormal clinically or by simple imaging techniques had high diagnostic yield. Finally, usual causes of prolonged fever are illnesses ordinarily encountered in clinical practice, pyrexia becomes protracted either because the presentation is atypical or incomplete, or because we fail to make proper use of available clinical or paraclinical information.


Subject(s)
Fever of Unknown Origin/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Bangladesh , Child , Connective Tissue Diseases/complications , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Infections/complications , Male , Middle Aged , Neoplasms/complications , Prospective Studies
13.
Plant Cell Rep ; 16(3-4): 250-4, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24177563

ABSTRACT

Anin vitro propagation protocol for a leguminous liana,Bauhinia vahlii, has been established. In the first experiment, cotyledonary nodes fromin-vitro-germinated seedlings were cultured on various basic media (Murashige and Skoog medium, Woody Plant medium, B5, and 1/2 Murashige and Skoog medium) containing 1.0µM thidiazuron. Shoot proliferation (96.20%) and multiplication (5.55 shoots/explant) was best when cultured on Murashige and Skoog medium. The second experiment compared responses to benzylaminopurine, kinetin, zeatin and thidiazuron. Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with 1.0µM thidiazuron proved most effective for both shoot proliferation and shoot multiplication. The effect of cytokinin type and concentration and their interaction was found to be significant (P<0.001) for explant proliferation, shoot number and length. Subsequent rooting (55.14%) of the regenerated shoots was achieved on half-strength Murashige and Skoog medium supplemented with IµM 1- naphthaleneacetic acid. Successful transfer of regenerants to soil has been accomplished, and efforts are being made to gradually transfer them to field conditions.

14.
Plant Cell Rep ; 16(1-2): 83-7, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24178661

ABSTRACT

A highly efficientin vitro regeneration methodology for mature chutese tallow tree (Sapium sebiferum Roxb.) has been developed. Shoot segments cultured on MS medium supplemented with 7.5 µM NAA produced light green callus. Optimum shoot differentiation resulted when callus was transferred to MS medium with 1 µM BA and 0.25 µM NAA. Shoot forming ability of callus was higher on MS medium compared to B5, half-MS or WPM. A continuous shoot harvest system at four-week intervals was established. Shoot yield continued for six months without loss of vigour. Regenerated shoots were rooted by culturing on half strength agar-gelled MS medium containing 1 µM IBA. Rooted plantlets were transferred to 1:1 soil vermiculite mixture and acclimatized with 67 % survival rate. Fully acclimatized plants were planted in the field, and performance is being evaluated.

17.
Indian J Gastroenterol ; 9(4): 287-8, 1990 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2258213

ABSTRACT

The clinical presentation of six cases with primary ascaridial perforations of the terminal ileum (4 cases) and Meckel's diverticulum (2 cases), without any associated underlying intestinal disease, is described. All the cases presented clinically as peritonitis and had worm masses in the intestinal lumen with maximal impaction in the terminal ileum. Ileal perforations were surgically closed in two layers after removal of the worms. Diverticulectomy after removal of the worms was performed for Meckelian diverticular perforations. Peritoneal toilet was done in all the cases. Pressure necrosis from the impacted worm masses probably resulted in these perforations.


Subject(s)
Ascariasis/surgery , Ileal Diseases/parasitology , Intestinal Perforation/parasitology , Meckel Diverticulum/parasitology , Child , Humans , Ileal Diseases/surgery , Intestinal Perforation/surgery , Meckel Diverticulum/surgery , Peritoneal Lavage
18.
Indian J Gastroenterol ; 8(4): 265-6, 1989 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2689329

ABSTRACT

The clinical presentation of 12 cases with biliary ascariasis is reported. Ultrasonography was employed to demonstrate worms in the gallbladder and common bile duct preoperatively. Ten cases were operated upon and operative findings were compared to assess the accuracy of sonography in biliary ascariasis. Our results show that ultrasonography can be relied upon for the demonstration of biliary tract ascariasis.


Subject(s)
Ascariasis , Biliary Tract Diseases , Adolescent , Ascariasis/diagnosis , Biliary Tract Diseases/diagnosis , Child , Child, Preschool , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Humans , Male , Ultrasonography
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