47 research outputs found

    Iodine status of pregnant women and children age 6 to 12 years feeding from the same food basket in Mopani district, Limpopo province, South Africa

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    Objectives: The aim of the study was to assess the iodine status of pregnant women and children age 6 to 12 years feeding from the same food basket in Mopani District. Design: A cross-sectional study was conducted. Setting: The setting was primary health care clinics and households from five municipalities of Mopani District in Limpopo province. Subjects: A total of 565 conveniently selected pregnant women and 116 children aged 6 to 12 years were recruited, of which 116 were mother–child pairs. Methods: The demographic information, iodine nutrition knowledge and salt consumption patterns were obtained using a validated questionnaire. Spot urine, household drinking water and salt samples were collected and analysed for iodine using standard procedures. A professional nurse, using filter paper to determine thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels, collected spot finger-stick blood samples from pregnant women. Results: The findings showed that only 52.5% of household salt had an iodine concentration level of more than and equal to 15 ppm. The median iodine concentration of household drinking water was 46.2 μg/l (interquartile range [IQR] 10.8–73.4 μg/l). The TSH levels of the majority of pregnant women were normal and the maternal overall median urinary iodine concentration (UIC) was 164 μg/l (IQR 92–291 μg/l), indicating maternal iodine sufficiency. However, median UIC in the first and third trimesters was below 150 μg/l, indicating iodine insufficiency. The UIC level of children in the study was 386 μg/l (IQR 200–525 μg/l), signifying iodine excess. Conclusion: Iodine status of pregnant women in this study was sufficient, with UIC for children excessively high, more than two times higher than the iodine status of pregnant women. The reasons for the excessive UIC in school-age children need to be elucidated

    Hypercholesterolaemia in a rural white population and its relationship with other coronary risk factors

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    The risk factor and dietary associations of hypercholesterolaemia were analysed. Twenty per cent of the 6332 respondents aged 20 - 64 years in the Coronary Risk Factor Study (CORIS) were considered hypercholesterolaemic (i.e. above the 80th percentile). In this sample only 13,4% of men and 6,7% of women were on treatment, and only 32,7% and 37,1% respectively had 'desirable' high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels. Hypercholesterolaemia was significantly associated with a personal or family history of coronary heart disease, hypertension, smoking, obesity and. hyperuricaemia. Analysis of the dietary intakes of a 15% subsample of the total population revealed no significant differences between high- and lowrisk subjects in intake of dietary fats and cholesterol. However, high-risk subjects consumed significantly more animal protein and significantly less dietary fibre than those with a low cholesterol level. These findings reflect a subpopulation at high risk of coronary heart disease. Their risk can be reduced to some extent by population strategies towards healthier lifestyles; ultimately the high-risk individuals have to be identified and appropriately treated. S Afr Med J 1990; 78: 85-8

    Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding iodine among patients with hyperthyroidism in the Free State, South Africa

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    Objectives: To gather baseline information on the knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding iodine and iodised salt among patients with hyperthyroidism in the Free State.Subjects and Setting: The study was part of a large cohort study that included the first 96 patients aged 13 years or older diagnosed with hyperthyroidism and referred to Universitas Academic Hospital in Bloemfontein, South Africa during 2005.Methods: The patients were interviewed in their language using a structured validated questionnaire. Descriptive statistics were used fordata analysis.Results: The majority of the patients (86.9%) did not know what iodine was. Similarly, a higher percentage of patients (76.7%) were unaware of the most important or main source of iodine in the food of South Africans. Regarding knowledge of the most important harmful effect on the health of children if they did not get enough iodine, almost all of the patients (89.1%) did not know what it was. Ninety-five per cent of salt was obtained from the local shops, and only 36.1% of the patients read the labelling on the package during purchase. A very small proportion of patients (1.6%) stored salt in closed containers and away from sunlight, while about half of them (49.2%) stored salt in open containers without lids, 36.1% stored it in rigid plastic containers with holes at the top, and 13.1% stored it in the open plastic bags in which the salt was bought.Conclusions: Patients with hyperthyroidism lacked knowledge of iodine, as well as of the storage of iodised salt, and this could have contributed to the persisting endemic goitre reported in previous studies. An aggressive awareness programme, targeting policy makers and the public, is recommended to ensure sustainable elimination of iodine deficiency disorders in South Africa.  Keywords: hyperthyroidism; iodine; iodised salt; knowledge-attitude-practice study; South Afric

    Risk factors for coronary heart disease in the black population of the Cape Peninsula The BRISK study

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    A cross-sectional study of risk factors for ischaemic heart disease (IHO) in a random sample of 986 black people aged 15 - 64 years living in the Cape Peninsula revealed a population at lower risk for IHO than other South Africans. Blood pressures of 140/95 mmHg or above were found in 14,4% of males and 13,7% of females. Fifty-two per cent of males and 8,4% of females smoked, while 16,5% of males and 25,8% of females had a total cholesterol (TC) level imparting risk for developing IHO. In this population the TC level is not a good surrogate measure for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol because of the high level of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HOLC) found in this population. A protective HOLC/TC ratio of 20% was found in 96% of males and 96,1% of females. When considering the three major reversible IHO risk factors at a high level of risk, 30,8% of males and 12,5% of females had at least one such a risk factor. The population was frequently exposed to the media, with 80% listening to the radio every day and 55% watching television at least once a week. This suggests that a healthy lifestyle could be promoted successfully by means of these media. In addition, schools should promote a healthy lifestyle and the prevention of chronic degenerative diseases should be incorporated into the evolving primary health care services in South Africa

    High-frequency, functional HIV-specific T-follicular helper and regulatory cells are present within germinal centers in children but not adults

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    Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) against HIV-1 are an effective means of preventing transmission. To better understand the mechanisms by which HIV-specific bnAbs naturally develop, we investigated blood and lymphoid tissue in pediatric infection, since potent bnAbs develop with greater frequency in children than adults. As in adults, the frequency of circulating effector T-follicular helper cells (TFH) in HIV infected, treatment naïve children correlates with neutralization breadth. However, major differences between children and adults were also observed both in circulation, and in a small number of tonsil samples. In children, TFH cells are significantly more abundant, both in blood and in lymphoid tissue germinal centers, than in adults. Second, HIV-specific TFH cells are more frequent in pediatric than in adult lymphoid tissue and secrete the signature cytokine IL-21, which HIV-infected adults do not. Third, the enrichment of IL-21-secreting HIV-specific TFH in pediatric lymphoid tissue is accompanied by increased TFH regulation via more abundant regulatory follicular T-cells and HIV-specific CXCR5+ CD8 T-cells compared to adults. The relationship between regulation and neutralization breadth is also observed in the pediatric PBMC samples and correlates with neutralization breadth. Matching neutralization data from lymphoid tissue samples is not available. However, the distinction between infected children and adults in the magnitude, quality and regulation of HIV-specific TFH responses is consistent with the superior ability of children to develop high-frequency, potent bnAbs. These findings suggest the possibility that the optimal timing for next generation vaccine strategies designed to induce high-frequency, potent bnAbs to prevent HIV infection in adults would be in childhood

    The food and meal pattern in the urban African population of the Cape Peninsula, South Africa: the BRISK Study

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    A cross sectional dietary study, utilising the 24 hour recall method, was conducted among 983 African adults aged 15 to 64 years resident in the Cape Peninsula during 1990. An evaluation of the dietary intake pattern revealed a diet confined to a relatively narrow range of foods, but little evidence of nutrient-empty food intake.In terms of recommendations, insufficient dairy products and vegetables and fruits were consumed, while requirements for intakes of cereals and components of the meat and fat groups were met. Supper emerged as the main meal of the day, contributing most of the energy and was consumed by 89 pc of respondents. Between meal eating made a valuable contribution to total nutrient intake. The low intakes of dairy products and vegetables and fruit and the apparent move away from the traditional diet present particularly great challenges

    Hypertension in a rural South African white population and the effect of antihypertensive treatment on the risk of coronary heart disease

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    The association between hypertension and coronary risk factors and the effect of antihypertensive treatment on coronary risk were investigated in rural South African whites aged 15 - 64 years. Almost 25% of men (range 1,9 - 46,6%) and almost 27% of women (2,1 - 56,2%) were hypertensive or being treated for hypertension; the prevalence increased with age, particularly among women. Only 25,8% of male and 43,4% of female hypertensives were being treated, and of these only 38% had controlled blood pressure. Hypertension was associated with a high serum total cholesterollevel, a low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level, a high body mass index, a high uric acid level, a high prevalence of coronary heart disease and, in men, high alcohol consumption. Treated hypertensives had a greater risk of coronary heart disease than untreated hypertensives. Men on, B-blockers had significantly lower high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels than men not on treatment, while uric acid levels in both men and women on diuretics were higher than those of untreated hypertensives. Hypertension in the study population appears to be inadequately treated, and antihypertensive medication may impact adversely on metabolic risk factors. The goal of antihypertensive therapy should be a net reduction of coronary heart disease risk.S Afr Med J 1990; 78: 89-9
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