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1.
J Public Health (Oxf) ; 43(4): e645-e655, 2021 12 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33300580

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Ill health associated with household air pollution (HAP) is increasingly recognized as a public health problem in sub-Saharan Africa. To date, attempts to reduce HAP have focussed on smoke from cooking fires and have ignored traditional cultural practices which generate purposely produced smoke (PPS). This study aimed to investigate PPS prevalence, reasons for use and safety perceptions. METHODS: The study was conducted in Wollo, Ethiopia, and used a mixed methods approach of quantitative surveys (analysed descriptively) and qualitative interviews with householders and healthcare workers (analysed thematically). RESULTS: PPS use was reported by 99% of survey respondents and it was considered a fundamental part of life. Although reasons for use included housekeeping, culture/religion and well-being, coffee ceremony was most commonly cited (44% of respondents). Both householders and healthcare workers appeared to assume PPS is safe, except for people with certain underlying conditions. Healthcare workers felt the lack of evidence of harm from PPS meant there was no justification for intervention. CONCLUSION: This study, the first in-depth study of PPS, has shown its use to be widespread, with many perceived benefits and thus a very important part of local culture in this sample Ethiopian community. Consequently, any public health interventions aimed at reducing HAP in this setting need to consider PPS.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor , Air Pollution , Air Pollution/adverse effects , Air Pollution, Indoor/analysis , Cooking , Ethiopia , Humans , Smoke
2.
Public Health Action ; 9(3): 102-106, 2019 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31803581

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Providing medical care for non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in rural sub-Saharan Africa has proved to be difficult because of poor treatment adherence and frequent loss to follow-up (LTFU). The reasons for this are poorly understood. OBJECTIVE: To investigate LTFU among patients with two different but common NCDs who attended rural Ethiopian health centres. METHOD: The study was based in five health centres in southern Ethiopia with established NCD clinics run by nurses and health officers. Patients with epilepsy or hypertension who were lost to follow-up and non-LTFU comparison patients were identified and traced; a questionnaire was administered enquiring about the reasons for LTFU. RESULTS: Of the 147 LTFU patients successfully located, 62 had died, moved away or were attending other medical facilities. The remaining 85 patients were compared with 211 non-LFTU patients. The major factors associated with LTFU were distance from the clinic, associated costs and a preference for traditional treatments, together with a misunderstanding of the nature of NCD management. CONCLUSIONS: The delivery of affordable care closer to the patients' homes has the greatest potential to address the problem of LTFU. Also needed are increased levels of patient education and interaction with traditional healers to explain the nature of NCDs and the need for life-long management.

3.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 35(4): 534-40, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21304488

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Low-birth weight has been proposed to programme central adiposity in childhood. However, there is little information on associations between fetal weight gain and fat distribution within obese individuals. OBJECTIVES: To investigate associations between birth weight and postnatal weight gain with body composition in a sample of obese children and adolescents. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Body composition was measured using anthropometry, dual-emission X-ray absorptiometry and the 4-component model in 45 male and 76 female obese individuals aged 5-22 years. General linear models were used to investigate associations between birth weight standard deviation score (SDS), or change in weight SDS between birth and follow-up, and body composition, adjusting for age, pubertal status, height and gender. RESULTS: Birth weight SDS ranged from -1.86 to 3.46, and was inversely associated with current weight SDS after adjustment for height SDS. Birth weight SDS was weakly associated with waist and hip girths, but not waist-hip ratio or trunk fat, after adjusting for age, height, pubertal status and gender. Change in weight SDS was strongly associated with total and central adiposity. CONCLUSIONS: Despite incorporating substantial variability, birth weight SDS was only a weak predictor of tissue masses and their distribution in obese children. Variability in central adiposity was more strongly associated with the magnitude of postnatal growth, which in turn was weakly inversely associated with birth weight SDS. In a population uniformly characterised by excess body weight, postnatal weight gain exerted the dominant impact on adiposity and fat distribution.


Subject(s)
Adiposity/physiology , Birth Weight/physiology , Body Composition/physiology , Obesity/diagnostic imaging , Weight Gain/physiology , Absorptiometry, Photon , Adolescent , Anthropometry , Child , Child Development , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Obesity/epidemiology , Pregnancy , Radionuclide Imaging , Risk Factors , Young Adult
5.
Clin Cardiol ; 7(10): 563-4, 1984 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6488603

ABSTRACT

Amrinone, a new inotropic agent, has been used successfully in refractory chronic congestive heart failure. Intravenous and subsequently oral amrinone administered in a setting of acute myocardial infarction and dopamine dependence allowed the catecholamine to be successfully weaned after volume loading, digitalization and vasoconstrictors failed to terminate dopamine dependence. There was the expected fall in filling pressure and increase in cardiac index and ejection fraction. Intravenous amrinone may be tried in refractory catecholamine dependence after conventional weaning methods have failed.


Subject(s)
Aminopyridines/therapeutic use , Cardiotonic Agents/therapeutic use , Catecholamines , Substance-Related Disorders/drug therapy , Aged , Amrinone , Female , Humans , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Myocardial Infarction/drug therapy , Substance-Related Disorders/etiology
6.
Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) ; 289(6447): 720, 1984 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6434054

ABSTRACT

There have been few reports of vasodepressor carotid sinus syncope, as opposed to the cardioinhibitory type, and no definitive treatment has been described. A 58 year old man developed episodes of syncope after surgery and radiotherapy for a laryngeal tumour. The episodes were characterised by hypotension, sharp pain in the right neck, dizziness, and bradycardia. A temporary pacemaker failed to prevent the symptoms, but ephedrine and fludrocortisone produced substantial improvement. Of the four types of treatment used in carotid sinus syncope, irradiation was ruled out because the patient had had irradiation before developing syncope, surgery was inappropriate because of the laryngeal tumour, and pacing failed. Combined drug treatment with a vasoconstrictor and plasma volume expander produced an improvement in symptoms but did not eliminate them.


Subject(s)
Carotid Sinus , Syncope/drug therapy , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/therapy , Drug Therapy, Combination , Ephedrine/therapeutic use , Fludrocortisone/therapeutic use , Humans , Laryngeal Neoplasms/therapy , Male , Middle Aged , Syncope/etiology
8.
Acta Med Scand Suppl ; 644: 11-3, 1981.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6941634

ABSTRACT

A six month survey of 588 patients presenting with chest pain to our emergency room revealed some 85 different diagnoses. The most common ages were the sixties and there were more men than women. Myocardial infarction and reflux esophagitis were more common in men, esophageal spasm equally prevalent in both sexes and psychiatric disorders more common in women. Site, radiation, duration and description were helpful in presumptive diagnosis with a few surprises. The problem was common (3.7% of 15.716 visits to the Emergency Room) and frequently perplexing. Wrong diagnoses abound! An overview of the problem is presented including neural mechanisms in pain perception. Chest pain due to intrathoracic structures, the chest wall, nerve roots and extrathoracic structures are considered.


Subject(s)
Pain/etiology , Thorax , Aged , Anxiety/complications , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Gastroesophageal Reflux/complications , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Pain/epidemiology
9.
Acta Med Scand Suppl ; 644: 46-8, 1981.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6941643

ABSTRACT

This paper will discuss some of the effects that psychological factors have on chest pain during and following myocardial infarction: 1. Psychological factors and the development of a myocardial infarction; a) the relationships of personality and other high risk factors, b) the onset situation of hopelessness and helplessness, c) immediate psychological precipitants (fact and fantasy), d)denial and delay. 2. Psychological factors during recovery; a)problems associated with the Type A personality, b) critical periods, c)absence of angina and denial, d) the effect of post M.I. angina, e) co-existence of angina and psychogenic pain. 3. How reaction of the marital partner can affect the patient and his experience of pain. 4. Factors which tend to minimize psychogenic invalidism.


Subject(s)
Myocardial Infarction/psychology , Pain/psychology , Adult , Attitude to Health , Female , Humans , Male , Marriage , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Pain/etiology
10.
Am Heart J ; 95(4): 457-62, 1978 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-636983

ABSTRACT

Ten patients, representing 1.34 per cent of those patients undergoing selective coronary arteriography, were found to have unequivocal evidence of coronary artery spasm. This involved the proximal right coronary artery in eight patients, the mid-left anterior descending branch in one, and the left main coronary artery in one. Eight of these 10 patients had otherwise normal coronary arteries. Of these 10 patients with coronary artery spasm, nine had evidence of mitral valve prolapse. This involved the posteromedial scallop in six patients; the anterolateral and posteromedial scallops in one; the middle and posteromedial scallops in one; and the anterolateral, middle, and posteromedial scallops in one. These data suggest an association between coronary artery spasm and mitral valve prolapse. Coronary artery spasm may thus be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the chest pain, arrhythmias, electrocardiographic abnormalities, and sudden death, that have already been described in some patients with mitral valve prolapse.


Subject(s)
Coronary Disease/complications , Heart Valve Diseases/complications , Mitral Valve , Adult , Coronary Angiography , Electrocardiography , Female , Heart Valve Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prolapse , Spasm
12.
Can Med Assoc J ; 117(12): 1413-4, 1977 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-589542

ABSTRACT

The anesthetic management of a woman with Eisenmenger's syndrome undergoing abdominal hysterectomy with general anesthesia is described. Proper anesthetic management of patients with this syndrome depends on a knowledge of the pathophysiologic process and associated complications. The potential problems of systemic hypotension, pulmonary embolism and infective endocarditis are outlined. Sudden death is a common and pregnancy is a major hazard.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, General , Eisenmenger Complex/complications , Hysterectomy , Abdomen , Adult , Eisenmenger Complex/physiopathology , Humans , Male , Postoperative Care , Postoperative Complications/prevention & control , Preoperative Care , Syndrome
14.
Can Psychiatr Assoc J ; 22(7): 401, 1977 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-589553
17.
JAMA ; 236(9): 1018-22, 1976 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9522

ABSTRACT

Selective coronary arteriography performed on a 41-year-old woman with angina pectoris demonstrated proximal stenosis of the right and left main coronary arteries that was unaffected by nitrate therapy. To exclude coronary artery spasm, the study was repeated, and a striking increase in the narrowing of the right coronary artery was observed. This 90% stenosis was virtually abolished by pretreatment with intravenously given phentolamine hydrochloride. Prolonged alpha-adrenoceptor blockade with phenoxybenzamine hydrochloride improved the patient's exercise tolerance and postexercise electrocardiographic abnormalities when compared to therapy in matched controls given placebo. These observations suggest that alpha-adrenoceptor-mediated coronary artery spasm may mimic organic lesions at coronary arteriography and may be a factor in the pathogenesis of angina pectoris in some patients.


Subject(s)
Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/therapeutic use , Angina Pectoris/etiology , Coronary Disease/drug therapy , Phenoxybenzamine/therapeutic use , Adrenergic beta-Antagonists/pharmacology , Adult , Clinical Trials as Topic , Coronary Disease/complications , Exercise Test , Female , Hemodynamics/drug effects , Humans , Spasm/complications
18.
Can Med Assoc J ; 112(10): 1217-9, 1975 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1125890

ABSTRACT

A 24-year-old woman with Marfan's syndrome and mitral regurgitation had clinical features suggestive of infective endocarditis. The causative organism was Streptococcus viridans. Initial therapy with penicillin G, in a dose that should have been bactericidal and hence curative according to the results of the initial quantitative antimicrobial studies, became inadequate. The strain of S. viridans displayed considerable variation in both growth properties and antimicrobial sensitivity during the course of therapy. In addition, a different strain of S. viridans was cultured 1 month after treatment had begun. It is therefore important to repeat cultures and antimicrobial sensitivity testing during treatment of infective endocarditis.


Subject(s)
Endocarditis, Bacterial/drug therapy , Genetic Variation , Streptococcal Infections/drug therapy , Streptococcus , Adult , Drug Therapy, Combination , Endocarditis, Bacterial/microbiology , Female , Gentamicins/therapeutic use , Humans , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Penicillin G/administration & dosage , Penicillin G/pharmacology , Penicillin G/therapeutic use , Streptococcal Infections/microbiology , Streptococcus/drug effects , Streptococcus/isolation & purification
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