Médecine et maladies infectieuses
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People with asplenia are at risk for infections due to many causative agents, mainly Streptococcus pneumoniae. Among adults, splenectomy is the most frequent etiology of hyposplenism followed with chronic hematological and connective diseases. Physiopathology of the immunologic impairment due to hyposplenia is multifactorial. ⋯ Oral phenoxymethylpenicillin seems to be the simplest chemoprophylaxis (despite the global increase of pneumococcal strains with reduced susceptibility). Duration of treatment following splenectomy is discussed: The French medicine agency (AFSSAPS) recommends a 2-year treatment after surgery and for patients having functional hyposplenism (persistency of Howell-Jolly bodies) and/or associated immunodeficiency. Despite these prevention policies, the patient must be informed of the risk of very severe infection.
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Tuberculinic switch is defined as an increase of the intradermal reaction diameter in two tests carried out within three months of each other. The tuberculinic skin reaction proves the presence of a delayed hypersensitivity induced by mycobacterial antigens (Mycobacterium tuberculosis, BCG, some atypical mycobacteria). ⋯ The intradermal injection of a purified Purified Protein Derivative (PPD) resulting from a culture of M. tuberculosis is the only method validated for the diagnosis of tuberculosis infection (latent infection) and screening for hypersensitivity and post-vaccine BCG (Official French decree No 96-775 of September 5, 1996 and its decree relating to vaccination by BCG and tuberculin tests). The guidelines concerning tuberculin testing are: investigating on a case of tuberculosis; tracking or surveillance of people frequently exposed to tuberculosis (examination on recruitment and follow-up of exposed professionals); prevaccine testing in children over four weeks of age.
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The authors had for aim, to determine the frequency and the main clinical forms of severe malaria and to evaluate its management. ⋯ Severe malaria and its various clinical forms remain a major problem for our pediatric intensive care unit. Updated technical means and human resources could improve the management of severe pediatric malaria.