306 research outputs found
Insecticide treated bednets: A review
The functioning and efficacy of Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) in controlling malaria are discussed in the present review. ITNs Insecticide Treated Nets (ITNs) have been shown to have a beneficial impact in reducing malaria mortality and morbidity in children. However, a few issues are still unresolved: for instance the short and long term effects of an artificially induced reduction in the intensity of malaria transmission on the immune system and the mortality of children is not entirely understood; further studies are needed on whether the spread of resistance to pyrethroids, which is the only class of insecticide currently recommended on nets, affects the effectiveness of ITNs so that resistance to these insecticides would constitutes a serious threat for the success of the malaria vector control programs. Lastly, the economic aspects are presented. The main problem is to find a way for a sustainable implementation of this methodology, that includes purchasing new bednets, delivery and the regular re-impregnation of the existing nets. Free delivery and retreatment in poor countries is not only more equitable but also more efficient than marketing methods
Could malaria reappear in Italy?
Because of concern about the possible reintroduction of malaria transmission in Italy, we analyzed the epidemiologic factors involved and determined the country's malariogenic potential. Some rural areas in central and southern Italy have high receptivity because of the presence of potential malaria vectors. Anopheles labranchiae is probably susceptible to infection with Plasmodium vivax strains, but less likely to be susceptible to infection with P. falciparum. Its vulnerability is low because of the low presence of gametocyte carriers (imported cases) during the season climatically favorable to transmission. The overall malariogenic potential of Italy appears to be low, and reintroduction of malaria is unlikely in most of the country. However, our investigations showed that the malaria situation merits ongoing epidemiologic surveillance
Prevalence of alcohol and drugs in urine of patients involved in road accidents
Objective. Road injuries are the leading injury-related cause of death among people aged 15-44. A clear dose-effect relationship has been demonstrated for drug and alcohol use and road traffic accidents. The objective of our study was to estimate the prevalence of drug and/or alcohol use in subjects admitted for road traffic accidents to an Emergency Department.
Methods. In this study, conducted between January and April
2006, 100 patients of both sexes (age 18-65) examined after
road traffic accidents were consecutively enrolled. A commercial
rapid urine test was used to detect drugs by the Emergency
Department staff. The alcohol concentration was determined
from a blood sample at the central laboratory.
Results. Most of the patients were drivers under 35 years of age.
67/100 road traffic accidents occurred at the weekend (Friday-
Sunday), nearly 60% between 24:00-09:00 hrs; on non-weekend
days about 80% of road traffic accidents were recorded between
14:00-24:00 hrs (p inf. 0.0001). With the alcoholemia test and
urine test for drugs detection 43/100 patients showed a single
or multiple positivity. Alcohol and drug presence is relevant
during the weekend (37/43 cases), in contrast with non weekend
(6/43 cases) [OR 3.04 (95% CI 1.43; 6.46)]. Alcohol was
the most frequently detected abuse substance (72%), followed
by benzodiazepines (42%), tetrahydrocannabinol (21%) and
cocaine (14%).
Discussion. 43% of patients examined were under the influence
of psychotropic substances (alcohol, drugs or both). The
greater part of road traffic accidents in positive test patients
occurred during the week-end, in particular during the late
night/early morning hours, probably after recreational time.
The high incidence of alcohol and/or drug abuse may have
caused physical and/or psychological problems, therefore the
high number of road traffic accidents, especially if taken in
combination.
Conclusion. The rapid urine test used cannot represent a diagnosis,
and requires a confirmation test. It can be used for medical
purposes as an easy and fast preliminary response which
enables a faster diagnostic and therapeutic guideline, but it
cannot be used for sanctions. Further studies are advisable with
an increase of number of patients, in a wider temporal range,
including control subjects, and using confirmation tests
The impact of acute intoxications in a toxicological unit care in North East Italy
Retrospective study in a Toxicological Unit Care (TUC) performed
to know the epidemiology of acute intoxication (AI) in
Verona (Italy) during years 2008-2009.
All data regarding patients with a diagnosis of certain/suspected
AI were collected and evaluated: some demographic information,
the characteristics of the agent involved, the pattern of exposure,
the triage at the admission to TUC and the outcome.
244 cases were analyzed: 45.9% males and 54.9% females, mean
age respectively 45.1 and 43.9 years. The monthly distribution of
admitted patients resulted fairly constant, except from a light rising
prevalence in autumn, with a majority of yellow (45.9%) and green
(43.4%) triage code. The pattern of exposure resulted: ingestion
(82.7% of cases; age peaks: 18-34 and 35-51 years old; mostly due
to food (as mushrooms), drinks, detergents, soap, pharmaceutical,
drugs of abuse, caustics substances), contact (10.2% of cases; age
peak 18-51) and inhalation (6.9% of cases). In 17.2% of cases the
poisoning exposure was intentional. In 63.5% the patients were
sent to their general practitioners (45.5% of the yellow and 81.1%
of the green coded patients) and in 22.1% of cases they were admitted
to clinical rooms (44.6% of the yellow coded patients).
In most cases the triage code assigned to the studied patients
resulted yellow and green. Considering that the seriousness of
the symptoms can appear after several hours from the exposure
to toxic substances, a quick and specific intervention to obtain the
best therapeutical effectiveness is suitable, in order to save lives
or to avoid irremediable health damages
Optimizing PD-L1 evaluation on cytological samples from advanced non-small-cell lung cancer
Aim: Programmed cell death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) predicts response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Most NSCLCs are diagnosed at an advanced stage and using minimally invasive diagnostic procedures that yield small biopsies or cytological samples. Methods: Cytological smears and paired histological samples from 52 advanced NSCLC patients were tested for PD-L1 expression by immunocyto/histochemistry (ICC/IHC) and for PD-L1 gene status by FISH. Results: PD-L1 was overexpressed in 9/52 (17%) cytological samples and in seven (13.5%) matched biopsies. The concordance between immunocytochemistry and IHC was 92.3% (48/52; p < 0.001). The concordance between PD-L1 gene status on cytology and histology was 69.2% (18/26; p < 0.001). No correlation between IHC and fluorescence in situ hybridization results was found. Conclusion: Our data support the feasibility and reliability of PD-L1 protein and PD-L1 gene assessment on direct cytological smears from NSCLC patients whenever histological sample are inadequate
Inflammatory cells and mediators in bronchial lavage of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Cigarette smoking is the most important cause of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Although the precise sequence of events that leads a smoker to experience airway obstruction is not completely clear, airway inflammation is a relevant factor. To investigate airway inflammation, 12 nonatopic smoking COPD patients with a forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1
Prevalence of Hepatitis B, C, HIV and syphilis markers among refugees in Bari, Italy
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) serological markers and the prevalence of VDRL positive subjects in a population of refugees of various nationalities, living in the Asylum Seeker Centre in Bari Palese, Southern Italy.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The study was carried out in the period May-July 2008 and recruited only voluntarily enrolled healthy refugees. HBsAg, anti-HBc, anti-HCV and anti-HIV virus antibodies were detected. VDRL syphilis screening was also carried out on the serum samples.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 529 refugees, 442 males and 87 females, aged between 7 and 52 years, were studied. Of these, 510 were from Africa and 19 from Asia.</p> <p>Forty-four individuals (8.3%) were HBsAg positive and 241 (45.6%) were anti-HBc positive. A total of 24 (4.5%) individuals were anti-HCV positive. Eight asylum seekers (1.5%) were HIV positive. VDRL tests were performed on 269 subjects and 4 (1.5%) were positive. 12.3% of the study population had serological markers of chronic and transmissible infections with potential blood-borne or sexual transmission.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>In Italy, a suitable protocol is necessary for the early diagnosis of infectious diseases on entering Asylum Centres, so allowing the adoption of prevention measures to safeguard the health of the individuals, the residents and workers in the Centres and the general population.</p
Serological survey on immunity status against polioviruses in children and adolescents living in a border region, Apulia (Southern Italy)
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In 1988 the World Health Assembly adopted the goal to eradicate poliomyelitis by routine immunization using Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV). On 21 June 2002 the WHO European Region was declared polio-free. In 2008 poliomyelitis is still endemic in 4 countries (Nigeria, India, Pakistan, and Afghanistan), where 1201 new cases were registered in 2007; 107 sporadic cases were also notified in countries where poliovirus is not endemic. The aim of this work was to verify the level of antipoliomyelitis immunity status in children and adolescents in the Apulia region (south of Italy), which may be considered a border region due to its position.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>704 blood specimens from a convenience sample were collected in six laboratories. The age of subjects enrolled was 0–15 years. The immunity against poliomyelitis was evaluated by neutralizing antibody titration in tissue culture microplates.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Seropositivity (neutralising antibodies titre ≥ 8) for polioviruses 1, 2 and 3 was detected in 100%, 99.8% and 99.4% of collected sera. Antibody titres were not lower in subjects who received either four doses of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) or a sequential schedule consisting of two doses of IPV and two of oral polio vaccine than in subjects who received four doses of OPV.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These results confirmed current data of vaccine coverage for poliomyelitis: during the last ten years in Apulia, the coverage in 24 months old children was more than 90%. The high level of immunization found confirms the effectiveness both of the sequential schedule IPV-OPV and of the schedule all-IPV. Apulia region has to face daily arrivals of refugees and remains subject to the risk of the importation of poliovirus from endemic areas. Surveys aimed at determining anti-polio immunity in subpopulations as well as in the general population should be carried out.</p
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