6 research outputs found

    Challenges in the management of HIV-infected malnourished children in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Get PDF
    Infection with HIV, and oftentimes coinfection with TB, complicates the care of severely malnourished children in sub-Saharan Africa. These superimposed infections challenge clinicians faced with a population of malnourished children for whose care evidence-based guidelines have not kept up. Even as the care of HIV-uninfected malnourished children has improved dramatically with the advent of community-based care and even as there are hopeful signs that the HIV epidemic may be stabilizing or ameliorating, significant gaps remain in the care of malnourished children with HIV. Here we summarize what is currently known, what remains unknown, and what remains challenging about how to treat severely malnourished children with HIV and TB.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    MECP2 mutation in a boy with severe neonatal encephalopathy: clinical, neuropathological and molecular findings.

    No full text
    Item does not contain fulltextWe describe the clinical and neuropathological presentation of a male with an MECP2 mutation whose sister has Rett syndrome (RS). He presented with severe neonatal encephalopathy and died at the age of 13 months. Mutation analysis of the MECP2 gene demonstrated a 488 - 489 del mutation in his and his sister's copies of the gene. Post mortem examination revealed bilateral polymicrogyria in the perisylvian region. This malformation was visibly more severe than previously described in females with RS and another male with an MECP2 mutation. As bilateral polymicrogyria was described in congenital perisylvian syndrome, the presented patient could be regarded as having suffered from a severe form of this syndrome. We conclude that MECP2 screening should be considered in males with severe neonatal encephalopathy and in males and females with a bilateral polymicrogyria syndrome
    corecore