Articles: disease.
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Clinics in chest medicine · Dec 1989
ReviewRespiratory infections and acute lung injury in systemic illness.
We have discussed the relationship between systemic illness, infection, and lung disease. As we have seen, patients with a wide variety of disease states, including advanced age, diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, collagen vascular disease, cancer, heart failure, and organ transplantation are potentially at increased risk for pneumonia because of disease-related impairments in host defenses. In addition, two virtually ubiquitous conditions in hospitalized patients, malnutrition and therapeutic interventions (especially with common medications), frequently add to the risk of airway invasion by bacterial pathogens. ⋯ Although it is frequently impossible to predict which specific patient with systemic sepsis will develop acute lung injury, the current state of knowledge does permit us to identify high-risk individuals. Surprisingly, clinical assessment rather than biochemical testing is the best predictor of the development of acute lung injury. Patients with severe injury, profound shock and multiple systemic insults are most prone to acute lung injury in the presence of systemic sepsis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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The relationship between the use of barrier contraception methods and the risk of cervical neoplasia was analyzed using data from a case-control study conducted in the greater Milan area, northern Italy. A total of 367 cases of invasive cancer under 60 years of age were compared with 323 subjects in hospital for acute conditions unrelated to any of the established or suspected risk factors for cervical cancer, and 316 cases of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia were compared with 258 outpatient controls. Ever-use of barrier methods (condom and diaphragm) was reported by 6% of the cases of invasive cancer and 12% of hospital controls. ⋯ Considering the total use of barrier methods, compared to never use, the relative risk of invasive cervical cancer was 0.4 (95% confidence interval 0.2-0.9) and decreased with duration of use (chi 2(1), trend = 5.18, p = 0.02). Likewise, use of barrier methods lowered the risk of intraepithelial neoplasia; the estimated relative risks were 0.9 in users for less than two years and 0.6 for two or more (chi 2(1), trend = 4.61, p = 0.03). Although the protection for invasive cancer appeared to be greater at older ages and in multiparous women, the relative risks were not significantly heterogeneous in various strata of parity, number of sexual partners, oral contraceptive use and history of Pap smears.
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A matched case-control study of retinoblastoma was conducted by the Children's Cancer Study Group (CCSG) to investigate the hypotheses that postconception exposures affect the risk of the nonheritable (post-zygotic origin) form of this disease and that preconception exposures affect the risk of the sporadic heritable (prezygotic origin) form. Eligible cases were those patients with retinoblastoma diagnosed in 1982-1985 at any of the CCSG member hospitals. Cases were classified as familial heritable, sporadic heritable, or nonheritable based on family history, tumor laterality, and cytogenetic analysis. ⋯ For the nonheritable group, gestational exposure to X-ray [odds ratio (OR) = 2.3, P = 0.08] and morning sickness medication (OR = 2.8, P = 0.02) and low maternal educational level (OR = 5.5, P = 0.03) were associated with increased risk; anemia (OR = 0.3, P = 0.02) and multivitamin use (OR = 0.4, P = 0.03) during pregnancy and periconceptional use of barrier contraceptive (OR = 0.1, P = 0.02) or spermicide (OR = 0.2, P = 0.02) were associated with decreased risk. In the sporadic heritable group, observations included a negative association with multivitamins during pregnancy (OR = 0.2, P = 0.02) and nonsignificant positive associations with preconception gonadal X-ray (maternal, OR = 2.0, P = 0.30; paternal, OR = 1.8, P = 0.42) and older parental age (case-control difference 1.0-1.2 years, P = 0.24-0.27). Many of the associations support study hypotheses, although the possibility of recall bias and chance findings suggest cautious interpretation.
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While AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome) certainly represents a worldwide health problem, the attention of many researchers and epidemiologists, besides the WHO itself, has recently focused on Africa for the following reasons: 1) The etiologic agent of AIDS, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) (previously named HTLV-III or LAV) is likely to have originated in Africa. Solid evidence has been accumulated that antibodies against HIV were present in African sera collected in the early 1960s. In the same period widespread infection by viruses strictly related to HIV has been documented in primates living in tropical Africa. ⋯ Insects and tribal rituals have been also suspected as vehicles of infection in Africa; widespread prostitution and inadequate health facilities certainly are. As a consequence, transplacental infection appear much more common than in the West. 4) Clinical aspects of AIDS progression in Africa appear linked to the different spectrum of opportunistic agents present on the continent and to the general hygienic and social conditions prevailing among its people. Rather than generalized lymphoadenopathies and Pneumocystes Carini pneumonia, diarrhoea and extreme weight loss ("Slim disease") represent the most common clinical pattern.
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Growth of rural Bangladeshi children aged 6-35 months was examined in relation to the history of diarrhoea in 1772 3-month intervals. Weight gain and linear growth were lower in intervals with a history of diarrhoea than in intervals without diarrhoea. However, comparison of weight and height gains in intervals during which diarrhoea occurred at the beginning or at the end showed that after non-bloody diarrhoeas children catch up and that deficits in weight gain and linear growth were no longer apparent a few weeks later. These findings suggest that the effect of diarrhoea on growth is transient and that efforts to control diarrhoea are unlikely to improve children's nutritional status in the long term.