One of the primary concerns is that the virus could quickly spread across countries as various birds follow their migration routes. In response, countries have begun planning in anticipation of an outbreak. While short-term strategies to deal with an outbreak focus on limiting travel and culling and vaccinating poultry, long-term strategies require substantial changes in the lifestyles of the most at-risk populations.
WHO announced on November, 16, 2005 that an outbreak is most likely to hit the Hong Kong Special Administrative issue by mid-December of this year. “If it were to hit in a highly residential area like Tin Hau, it would be sure to spread like wildfire.” Dr. N Column, Head of Epidemic Prevention announced.
The WHO divides a pandemic into six phases, ranging from minimal risk of an outbreak to full scale pandemic. Most health authorities categorize the situation as of 2005 at Phase 3, by which is meant that human infections of a new sub-type has occurred but there is little evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission.
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)
Avian influenza, or �bird flu�, is a contagious disease of animals caused by viruses that normally infect only birds and, less commonly, pigs. Avian influenza viruses are highly species-specific, but have, on rare occasions, crossed the species barrier to infect humans.
In domestic poultry, infection with avian influenza viruses causes two main forms of disease. The so-called �low pathogenic� form commonly causes only mild symptoms (ruffled feathers, a drop in egg production) and may easily go undetected. The highly pathogenic form is far more dramatic. It spreads very rapidly through poultry flocks, causes disease affecting multiple internal organs, and has a mortality that can approach 100%, often within 48 hours.
Influenza A viruses have 16 H subtypes and 9 N subtypes. Only viruses of the H5 and H7 subtypes are known to cause the highly pathogenic form of the disease. On present understanding, H5 and H7 viruses may circulate and infect poultry flocks in their low pathogenic form. The viruses can then mutate, usually within a few months, into the highly pathogenic form. This is why the presence of an H5 or H7 virus in poultry is always cause for concern, even when the initial signs of infection are mild. Read more »
Tags: ability, action, Adaptive, administrative issue, agent, air, Asia, attack, avian, bind, bird flu, Cambodia, capability, care, case, Causes, China, column head, commerce, concern, condition, Considerable, Control, culling, Current, date, death, Democratic Republic, destruction, disease, domestic poultry, duration, east Asia, egg production, environment, establishment, event, evidence, excrete, fact, form, half, health, health authorities, history, hospital, Human, human infections, human transmission, illness, immunity, Indonesia, influenza, influenza viruses, internal organs, isolation, Japan, Kazakhstan, Korea, Lao, loss, Malaysia, material, mechanism, mid, migration routes, migratory, mild symptoms, minimal risk, model, Mongolia, mutation, northern Vietnam, nosocomial, number, nurse, one, opportunity, outbreak, Pandemic, Pandemics, patient, pig, population, poultry, poultry flocks, probability, process, Projections, rare occasions, Reassortment, record, reservoir, risk, risk populations, role, Romania, Russia, severity, situation, South-east, species barrier, spread, start, strain, subtype, surge, term strategies, Thailand, time, timing, tin hau, transmissibility, transmission, treatment, Turkey, turn, Viet Nam, Vietnam, virulent, virus, waterfowl, Wild, world
Posted in medicalmatrix | February 13, 2010 |
Comments (0)
Background
Malaria, which predominantly occurs in tropical areas, is a potentially life-threatening disease caused by infection with Plasmodium protozoa transmitted by an infective female Anopheles mosquito vector. Individuals with malaria may present with fever and a wide range of symptoms.
The 4 Plasmodium species known to cause malaria include Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium ovale, and Plasmodium malariae. A fifth species, Plasmodium knowlesi, has recently been identified as a clinically significant pathogen in humans. Timely identification of the infecting species is extremely important, as P falciparum infection can be fatal and is often resistant to standard chloroquine treatment. In some cases, individuals with malaria are infected with multiple Plasmodium species. P falciparum and P vivax are responsible for most new infections. Each Plasmodium species has a defined area of endemicity, although geographic overlap is common. Species can usually be distinguished by morphology on a blood smear. P falciparum is distinguished from the rest of plasmodia by its high level of parasitemia and the banana shape of its gametocytes.
Malaria in travelers typically manifests weeks after the individual leaves the endemic area. Presentation more than 4 weeks after returning from the endemic area is unusual. In some individuals, disease manifests months or years later, usually due to the presence of P vivax or P ovale hypnozoites, which can remain dormant in the liver and reactivate years after infection. Relapse with P vivax or P ovale infection is rare more than 5 years after initial infection. Because symptomatic delay is common, history of even a remote exposure to an endemic area should be elicited. Symptoms of malaria are nonspecific, and, because timely diagnosis and treatment are necessary, malaria should be considered in all patients from tropical areas who present with fever. Read more »
Tags: addition, Adherence, Africa, age, agent, airport, anemia, antimalarial, area, Asking, basis, blood, blood smear, burden, cell, chloroquine, Clinical, clue, CNS, coma, compliance, cycle, damage, death, die, disease, disease manifests, dysfunction, End-organ, endemic area, exposure, factor, falciparum, female anopheles, fever, fifth species, form, Frequency, gene, headache, history, host, hour, hypnozoite, hypoglycemia, hypoxia, illness, immunity, Importantly, incubation, India, infection, initial infection, International, latent, life, likelihood, liver, malaria, malariae, meal, mind, month, Morbidity, Mortality, mosquito, mosquito vector, multiorgan, New, none, organism, ovale, parasite, parasitemia, pathogen, patient, pattern, period, Physical, plane, plasmodia, Plasmodium, plasmodium malariae, plasmodium ovale, plasmodium species, population, Populations, posttravel, primaquine, primigravida, property, protection, protozoa, quartan, reason, recurrence, relapse, resident, return, Reviews, risk, Saharan, sequestration, severity, sickle, southern United States, stage, stream, sub, susceptibility, symptomatology, symptoms of malaria, system, temperate, Tertian, timely diagnosis, timely identification, TNF, travel, traveler, Travelers, tropical areas, tumor, United States, US, virulent, vivax, world, year, Young
Posted in medicalmatrix | |
Comments (0)
Background
Rabies is a viral disease that affects the CNS. The genus Lyssavirus contains more than 80 viruses. Classic rabies, the focus of this article, is the prototypical human Lyssavirus pathogen. Ten viruses are in the rabies serogroup, most of which only rarely cause human disease. The genus Lyssavirus, rabies serogroup, includes the classic rabies virus, Mokola virus, Duvenhage virus, Obodhiang virus, Kotonkan virus, Rochambeau virus, European bat Lyssavirus types 1 and 2, and Australian bat Lyssavirus. In 1997, an unusual bat Lyssavirus caused a brief outbreak of a rabieslike illness in Australia.
The fatal madness of rabies has been described throughout recorded history, and its association with rabid canines is well known. For centuries, dog bites were treated prophylactically with cautery, unfortunately, with predictable results. In the 19th century, Pasteur developed a vaccine that successfully prevented rabies after inoculation and launched a new era of hope in the management of this uniformly fatal disease. Rabies is recognized as a zoonosis worldwide. Animal-control and vaccination strategies currently supersede postexposure prophylaxis in preventing the spread of rabies. Through such programs, rabies has been eliminated in several nations and some areas in the US territories.
Human rabies reflects the prevalence of animal infection and the extent of contact this population has with humans. Less than 5% of cases in developed nations occur in domesticated dogs; however, unvaccinated dogs serve as the main reservoir worldwide. Undomesticated canines, such as coyotes, wolves, jackals, and foxes, are most prone to rabies and serve as reservoirs. These reservoirs allow rabies to remain an indefinite public health concern, and ongoing public health measures are critical to its control. Raccoons, skunks, and insect-eating bats remain the prime vectors in the United States, followed by cats and cattle. Increasingly in the United States, the source of exposures cannot be identified, but the risk of death from rabies is exceedingly low, with fewer than 5 cases documented per year. Opossums are rarely infected and are not considered a likely risk for exposure. Read more »
Tags: absence, Acute, addition, Adherence, aerophobia, age, agitation, air, airway, amantadine, animal control, anisocoria, anorexia, antibody, anxiety, aphasia, arrest, Attempting, attention, auditory, australian bat lyssavirus, Autonomic, awareness, bat, bite, calm, cardiorespiratory, care, case, cautery, CDC, cerebrospinal, Clinical, CNS, coma, confusion, Control, cranial, CSF, death, delirium, depression, developed nations, diarrhea, diplopia, disease, dog bites, domesticated dogs, drinking, duration, Episodes, exposure, face, fact, fever, form, Furious, girl, Hand, head, headache, health, history, human rabies, Hydrophobia, hyperactivity, hypertension, hyperventilation, hypotension, incubation, individual, infection, inoculation, inoculum, insomnia, instability, International, involvement, irritant, jackals, lacrimation, laryngeal, main reservoir, malaise, Morbidity, Mortality, Nausea, neck, need, nerve, Neurologic, neurovirulent, Nonspecific, objective, October, onset, Organization, outset, pain, palsy, paralysis, Paralytic, Paresthesia, patient, percent, period, person, perspiration, phase, Physical, postexposure, postural, predictable results, predilection, preexposure, prevention, Prodromal, public health concern, public health measures, rabid canines, Rabies, rabies virus, raccoons, Race, recovery, regimen, response, Ribavirin, risk, saliva, salivation, scratch, Seizures, sensation, Sex, sign, site, skunks, spasm, suggestion, survival, survivor, Symptoms, system, tachycardia, tactile, therapy, thrashing, tissue, treatment, US, vaccination, vaccination strategies, victim, viral disease, virus, Wisconsin, world, worldwide, year, zoonosis
Posted in medicalmatrix | |
Comments (0)
This article focuses on common bacterial infections in pregnancy and describes the manifestations of these infections and the therapies used to treat them.
Bacterial infections can affect pregnant women from implantation of the fertilized ovum through the time of delivery and peripartum period. They may also affect the fetus and newborn. Many women with these infections are asymptomatic, necessitating both a high degree of clinical awareness and adequate screening.
Grop B Streptococcus
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is the most common cause of life-threatening infections in newborns; thus, GBS is the primary focus of any discussion about infections and pregnancy. Infections caused by GBS affect both mother and child. Since the emergence of this pathogen in the 1970s, the increased use of intrapartum prophylaxis has decreased the infection rate by 70%.
Etiology
Streptococcus agalactiae, or GBS, is a facultative, beta-hemolytic, fastidious, gram-positive coccus. GBS can be found as part of normal vaginal, rectal, and oral flora. The virulence of the organism depends largely on the polysaccharide capsule.
Transmission
Twenty to 25% of pregnant women are asymptomatic carriers of vaginal or rectal GBS. Intrapartum transmission occurs via ascending spread or at the time of delivery.
Clinical spectrum
Because only 0.5-1% of mothers who carry GBS develop signs and symptoms of disease, clinical diagnosis of GBS infection can be problematic.
In pregnant women, GBS is a cause of cystitis, amnionitis, endometritis, and stillbirth. Occasionally, GBS has caused endocarditis and meningitis in pregnant women, while, in postpartum women, GBS has been identified as a cause of urinary tract infections (UTIs) and pelvic abscesses. Read more »
Tags: abscesses, absorption, addition, alternative, Ampicillin, antenatal, antibody, Antitreponemal, assay, asymptomatic carriers, Avoid, azithromycin, bacteremia, benzathine, blood, care, Ceftriaxone, cervix, Chlamydia, choice, Clinical, clinical diagnosis, clinical spectrum, CNS, common bacterial infections, congenital, Consume, context, course, CSF, culture, cystitis, death, delivery, diagnose, diagnosis, disease, dose, drug, endometritis, equivalent, Erythromycin, Etiology, examination, failure, fetus, fever, fluorescent, focus, food, FTA-ABS, gbs, gestation, group b streptococcus, Herxheimer, HIV, increase, infection, intramuscular, Jarisch, labor, laboratory, lack, latent, lesion, life, lumbar, lymphadenopathy, material, maternal, meat, MHA-TP, microhemagglutination, milk, Morbidity, mother, mother and child, motile, neonatal, Neurosyphilis, nonpregnant, nontreponemal, ovum, pain, pallidum, patient, penicillin, plasmin, polysaccharide capsule, postpartum women, pregnancy, prenatal, preparation, preterm, prevention, prophylaxis, puncture, Rash, rate, reaction, reagin, Research, risk, Screening, screening group, seafood, Serological, show, site, spectrum, spilling, spirochete, stage, stillbirth, stool, streptococcus agalactiae, streptococcus group b, sulfamethoxazole, surveillance, symptom onset, Syphilis, test, testing, therapy, third, treatment, Treponema, treponemal, trimester, Trimethoprim, ulcer, United States, Untreated, urinary tract infections, uterine, vagina, VDRL, Venereal, virulence, visit, vulva, Wash, week, Women
Posted in medicalmatrix | |
Comments (0)
Background
Acute rheumatic fever (ARF) is an autoimmune inflammatory process that develops as a sequela of streptococcal infection. ARF has extremely variable manifestations and remains a clinical syndrome for which no specific diagnostic test exists. Persons who have experienced an episode of ARF are predisposed to recurrence following subsequent (rheumatogenic) group A streptococcal infections. The most significant complication of ARF is rheumatic heart disease, which usually occurs after repeated bouts of acute illness.
Pathophysiology
ARF is characterized by nonsuppurative inflammatory lesions of the joints, heart, subcutaneous tissue, and central nervous system. An extensive literature search has shown that, at least in developed countries, rheumatic fever follows pharyngeal infection with rheumatogenic group A streptococci. The risk of developing rheumatic fever after an episode of streptococcal pharyngitis has been estimated at 0.3-3%. More recent investigations of rheumatic fever occurring in the aboriginal populations of Australia suggest that streptococcal skin infections might also be associated with the development of rheumatic fever. In Oceania and Hawaii, streptococcal strains that are not typically associated with rheumatic fever have been found to cause the disease.
Molecular mimicry accounts for the tissue injury that occurs in rheumatic fever. Both the humoral and cellular host defenses of a genetically vulnerable host are involved. In this process, the patient’s immune responses (both B- and T-cell mediated) are unable to distinguish between the invading microbe and certain host tissues.The resultant inflammation may persist well beyond the acute infection and produces the protean manifestations of rheumatic fever.
Frequency
United States
The incidence of ARF has declined markedly in the past 50 years in both the United States and Western Europe. Most Western physicians see only the late sequelae of rheumatic heart disease; the diagnosis of an acute case is usually reason enough for a ground rounds presentation. This remarkable decline of rheumatic fever likely reflects improved socioeconomic conditions, as well the decline in prevalence of the classically described rheumatogenic strains of group A streptococci.
Following two decades of almost total absence, a resurgence of ARF occurred in the 1980s among middle-class white children in Salt Lake City, Utah. Clusters were also reported in US Army and Navy training camps during the same period. These limited outbreaks were associated with mucoid rheumatogenic strains that were rarely seen in the preceding 20 years. Today, ARF remains a rarity in most of the United States, although Hawaii and American Samoa continue to see a significant number of cases, many of which are caused by streptococcal strains not usually associated with rheumatic fever in persons of Polynesian descent. Read more »
Tags: abdominal, aboriginal populations, acute case, acute illness, acute infection, acute rheumatic fever, adolescence, age, and, appearance, area, ARF, arthralgia, arthritis, attention, auscultation, bout, brain, breath, Carditis, Carey, central nervous system, Characteristic, chest, CHF, chorea, Clinical, cohort, Coombs, cough, damage, death, decrescendo, development, diagnosis, disability, disease, due, dyspnea, echocardiography, effusion, endocardium, enlargement, eruption, Erythema, Europe, evidence, evolution, exertion, failure, fair, family, featu, fever, flow, form, friction, ganglioside, gonococcal, group a streptococci, Hand, heart, history, host defenses, host tissues, incidence, infection, inflammation, inflammatory lesions, inflammatory process, involvement, Isolated, Jaccoud, Joint, laboratory, likelihood, literature search, locale, malaise, manifestation, marginatum, migratory, mimicry, mitral, murmur, Murmurs, myocardium, New Zealand, nocturnal, orthopnea, pain, patient, pattern, periarticular, pericardial, pericardium, pharyngitis, Physical, Polyarthritis, poststreptococcal, potential, predilection, predisposition, prevention, problem, process, puberty, rate, recall, Recurrent, regurgitation, Rheumatic, rheumatic heart disease, risk, rub, sequela, Severe, Sex, Sore, spine, streptococcal, streptococcal infections, streptococcal skin infections, streptococcal strains, Subcutaneous, subside, Sydenham, syndrome, tenderness, Tenosynovitis, throat, trunk, United States, valvular, variable manifestations, warmth, week, western physicians
Posted in medicalmatrix | |
Comments (0)