7 research outputs found

    Tetrodotoxic poisoning from ingestion of a porcupine fish (Diodon hystrix) in Papua New Guinea: nerve conduction studies.

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    Near Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea, three of four adult family members who ate a porcupine fish (Diodon hystrix) were severely poisoned. Within one hour of the meal, both the mother and her older daughter had developed paraesthesiae, ataxia, hypersalivation, sweating, and had collapsed and died. The younger daughter developed similar symptoms with progressive paralysis requiring mechanical ventilation for 24 hr, but she made a complete recovery 10 days after the poisoning. In this patient, nerve conduction studies showed reduced sensory and motor conduction velocities and evoked amplitudes with gradual improvement in parallel with the patient's clinical condition, consistent with the known action of tetrodotoxin on voltage-gated sodium channels

    Non-deletion haemoglobin H disease in Papua New Guinea.

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    Analysis of DNA from members of a Melanesian family from Papua New Guinea with haemoglobin (Hb) H disease revealed that all four alpha globin genes are intact in affected subjects. Study of restriction enzyme site and length polymorphisms and the use of oligonucleotide probes indicated that the molecular basis of this Papuan form of non-deletion Hb H disease differs from the previously described Middle Eastern and Mediterranean types

    Snake bites by the Papuan taipan (Oxyuranus scutellatus canni): paralysis, hemostatic and electrocardiographic abnormalities, and effects of antivenom.

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    One hundred sixty-six patients with enzyme immunoassay-proven bites by taipans (Oxyuranus scutellatus canni) were studied in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. One hundred thirty-nine (84%) showed clinical evidence of envenoming: local signs were trivial, but most developed hemostatic disorders and neurotoxicity. The blood of 77% of the patients was incoagulable and 35% bled spontaneously, usually from the gums. Fifty-one per cent had microscopic hematuria. Neurotoxic signs (ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, bulbar paralysis, and peripheral muscular weakness) developed in 85%. Endotracheal intubation was required in 42% and mechanical ventilation in 37%. Electrocardiographic abnormalities (sinus bradycardia and septal T wave inversion) were found in 52% of a group of 69 unselected patients. Specific antivenom raised against Australian taipan venom was effective in stopping spontaneous systemic bleeding and restoring blood coagulability but, in most cases, it neither reversed nor prevented the evolution of paralysis even when given within a few hours of the bite. However, early antivenom treatment was associated statistically with decreased incidence and severity of neurotoxic signs. The low case fatality rate of 4.3% is attributable mainly to the use of mechanical ventilation, a technique rarely available in Papua New Guinea. Earlier use of increased doses of antivenoms of improved specificity might prove more effective

    Meningitis caused by Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii and var. neoformans in Papua New Guinea.

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    Eleven cases of cryptococcal meningitis were diagnosed and biotyped from September 1991 to August 1992 in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Seven isolates were Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii from paediatric and adult patients, one with diabetes mellitus and 4 were C. neoformans var. neoformans from adults, of whom 2 had human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection, and one each had tuberculosis and Plasmodium vivax malaria. Significant clinical findings were headache, fever, meningism, vomiting, photophobia, papilloedema and cranial nerve lesions. Five patients (45.5%) died; 3 of these were adults with var. gattii and 2 were men with both var. neoformans and HIV-1 infections. This prospective tropical study documents the emergence of C. neoformans var. neoformans in patients with HIV-1 infection in a country where previously var. gattii had predominated in the immunocompetent. There has been no earlier report of cryptococcosis in an HIV-1 seropositive patient in PNG. Despite presumed exposure to both varieties of C. neoformans, var. gattii infections had been most frequent. As HIV-1 spreads, the proportion of hosts infected with var. neoformans may rise. The course of meningitis caused by the 2 varieties of C. neoformans may differ, with mortality in the tropics remaining particularly high. In PNG the environmental source of C. neoformans remains elusive

    Meningitis caused by Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii and var. neoformans in Papua New Guinea.

    No full text
    Eleven cases of cryptococcal meningitis were diagnosed and biotyped from September 1991 to August 1992 in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Seven isolates were Cryptococcus neoformans var. gattii from paediatric and adult patients, one with diabetes mellitus and 4 were C. neoformans var. neoformans from adults, of whom 2 had human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection, and one each had tuberculosis and Plasmodium vivax malaria. Significant clinical findings were headache, fever, meningism, vomiting, photophobia, papilloedema and cranial nerve lesions. Five patients (45.5%) died; 3 of these were adults with var. gattii and 2 were men with both var. neoformans and HIV-1 infections. This prospective tropical study documents the emergence of C. neoformans var. neoformans in patients with HIV-1 infection in a country where previously var. gattii had predominated in the immunocompetent. There has been no earlier report of cryptococcosis in an HIV-1 seropositive patient in PNG. Despite presumed exposure to both varieties of C. neoformans, var. gattii infections had been most frequent. As HIV-1 spreads, the proportion of hosts infected with var. neoformans may rise. The course of meningitis caused by the 2 varieties of C. neoformans may differ, with mortality in the tropics remaining particularly high. In PNG the environmental source of C. neoformans remains elusive
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