A swine flu outbreak appears to have killed dozens of people in Mexico and caused mild illnesses in the United States.
The Atlanta-based federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the New York City Department of Health are recommending several steps to prevent the spread of the virus.
- If you have flu symptoms, stay home from work or school to avoid spreading the disease. Do not return until two days after your symptoms are gone.
- Cover your nose and mouth when you cough or sneeze, and wash your hands frequently.
- Go to the hospital if you have severe symptoms such as difficulty breathing, but if your symptoms are mild stay home to avoid spreading the virus to others at the hospital. Read more »
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Posted in medicalmatrix | February 13, 2010 |
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Background
Anemia, like a fever, is a symptom of disease that requires investigation to determine the underlying etiology. Often, practicing physicians overlook mild anemia. This is similar to failing to seek the etiology of a fever. The purpose of this article is to provide a method of determining the etiology of an anemia.
Anemia is strictly defined as a decrease in red blood cell (RBC) mass. Methods for measuring RBC mass are time consuming, are expensive, and usually require transfusion of radiolabeled erythrocytes. Thus, in practice, anemia is usually discovered and quantified by measurement of the RBC count, hemoglobin (Hb) concentration, and hematocrit (Hct). These values should be interpreted cautiously because they are concentrations affected by changes in plasma volume. For example, dehydration elevates these values, and increased plasma volume in pregnancy can diminish them without affecting the RBC mass.
Pathophysiology
Erythroid precursors develop in bone marrow at rates usually determined by the requirement for sufficient circulating Hb to oxygenate tissues adequately. Erythroid precursors differentiate sequentially from stem cells to progenitor cells to erythroblasts to normoblasts in a process requiring growth factors and cytokines. This process of differentiation requires several days. Normally, erythroid precursors are released into circulation as reticulocytes.
Reticulocytes remain in the circulation for approximately 1 day before reticulin is excised by reticuloendothelial cells with the delivery of the mature erythrocyte into circulation. The mature erythrocyte remains in circulation for about 120 days before being engulfed and destroyed by phagocytic cells of the reticuloendothelial system. Read more »
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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 »
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There has been a rising demand for salvage vehicles (i.e. repossessed cars, cheap motorcycles, and repo boats for that matter) in the recent past, and the popularity of the auto auction has been steadily on the rise. This is due to their affordable prices compared to the new ones. The question that has therefore been on many consumers’ minds is; where do I get the salvage vehicle that will cater for my transport needs at affordable prices? This article will therefore seek to take you through the best places that you will find the best salvage vehicles.
One of the places that you will find salvage vehicles is in the auctions. This is where you are bound to get a wide variety of cars from different backgrounds. It is advisable that you go with a buying agent. The agent will be of help to you in determining the best model that will fit your needs. They will also be able to asses the extent of the damage to the car. This will help you in making a good bargain. You would not want to buy a car that will eventually cost you a fortune in terms of maintenance costs.
Another secret of getting a used car is from friends and family. There may be a friend who got an accident and his/her vehicle was not damaged to a bad extent. These people are more likely to sell off the vehicle. You would be lucky if you got one since you will get it at a fair price. There are many other places though including junk yards, repair shops. You can as well get them from the classified ads.
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Posted in Others | September 22, 2007 |
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