17 research outputs found
Detection Properties of Irradiated Ostrich Meat by DNA Comet Assay and Radiation-induced Hydrocarbons
Eomys/pyleecan: 1.5.2
<ul>
<li>Improve GMSH coupling #624</li>
<li>Converter and Losses in GUI #684</li>
<li>Rework MeshSolution objects #623</li>
<li>Class Generator GUI #659</li>
<li>LamSlotMagNS #657 (for uneven north south SIPMSM)</li>
<li>Adding keys in notches #658</li>
<li>Several new Hole and slot schematics</li>
</ul>
Rural tourism: a risk factor for schistosomiasis transmission in Brazil
This paper reports an outbreak of acute schistosomiasis among 38 tourists who rented a country house in the district of Igarapé, the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte, Brazil, during a holiday period in 2006. A total number of 32 individuals were positive for Schistosoma mansoni. Results of stool examinations revealed individual S. mansoni egg counts per gram of faeces (epg) ranging from 4-768 epg with a geometric mean egg count of 45. The most frequent clinical symptoms were abdominal pain (78.1%), headache (75%), fever (65.6%), dry cough (65.2%) and both diarrhoea and asthenia (59.4%). A malacological survey of the area, where 22 specimens of Biomphalaria glabrata were collected, revealed three (13.6%) specimens eliminating Schistosoma cercariae. This investigation re-confirms a recently described pattern of schistosomiasis infection, resulting in the acute form of the disease and connected to rural tourism, which contributes to the spread of the disease among the middle-class and into non-endemic areas. The lack of specific knowledge about acute schistosomiasis among health services causes an increased number of unnecessary diagnostic procedures and delays in accurate diagnosis and treatment, resulting in considerable discomfort for the patients
Prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV in resource-rich and -poor settings
Without prevention, a third of HIV-exposed infants acquire HIV in breastfeeding populations before, during, or after delivery through mother-to-child transmission (MTCT). Whereas MTCT is now a sentinel event in resource-rich countries with antiretroviral prophylaxis, caesarean section, and avoidance of breastfeeding, this is not yet the case in resource-poor settings because breastfeeding is crucial to infant survival. Recent advances in postpartum maternal and infant prophylaxis enables safer breastfeeding, and increasing numbers of women accessing treatment and prevention of MTCT services in sub-Saharan Africa is leading to optimism that MTCT could be eliminated here also, as reflected in the UNAIDS target of 2015
