4 research outputs found

    Sleep quality in infants with atopic dermatitis: a community-based, birth cohort study

    No full text
    Background: sleep disturbance has been reported in both pre-school and older children with atopic dermatitis (AD). There have been no studies examining whether sleep disturbance occurs at the onset of the AD, or develops later.Objective: to evaluate sleep characteristics in infants with AD.Methods: a cross-sectional survey based on interviews with parents of infants aged 1 year. AD was diagnosed by showing the parents 3 pictures of typical AD. AD was considered as mild if the rash was a single occurrence or there was only 1 lesion and severe if there were 2 or 3 recurrent or persistent lesions. The infant's sleep behavior was evaluated through information on sleep onset, sleep duration, number of night wakings and the caregivers' perception of problematic sleep behaviors.Results: of the total sample, 96.2% (4085 of 4245) provided complete AD information and 148 infants (3.6%) had at least one AD skin lesion. Sleep duration was significantly reduced in infants with severe AD when compared to no-AD infants (542+67 vs 569+62 minutes, p 0.02). The percentage of infants who had night waking with parent intervention required to calm them down "often or always" was significantly higher in mild AD infants than in normal infants (61.7 vs 49.8%, p 0.02). No significant differences were noted between infants with or without AD for other infant sleep behavior.Conclusion: in AD patients, sleep disturbances can occur early following the onset of the disease. We suggest that clinical assessment of AD infants should take these aspects into consideratio

    Infectious Causes of Encephalitis and Meningoencephalitis in Thailand, 2003–2005

    No full text
    Acute encephalitis is a severe neurologic syndrome. Determining etiology from among ≈100 possible agents is difficult. To identify infectious etiologies of encephalitis in Thailand, we conducted surveillance in 7 hospitals during July 2003–August 2005 and selected patients with acute onset of brain dysfunction with fever or hypothermia and with abnormalities seen on neuroimages or electroencephalograms or with cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis. Blood and cerebrospinal fluid were tested for >30 pathogens. Among 149 case-patients, median age was 12 (range 0–83) years, 84 (56%) were male, and 15 (10%) died. Etiology was confirmed or probable for 54 (36%) and possible or unknown for 95 (64%). Among confirmed or probable etiologies, the leading pathogens were Japanese encephalitis virus, enteroviruses, and Orientia tsutsugamushi. No samples were positive for chikungunya, Nipah, or West Nile viruses; Bartonella henselae; or malaria parasites. Although a broad range of infectious agents was identified, the etiology of most cases remains unknown
    corecore