Browse publications by year: 1978

  1. Kam CA
    Singapore Med J, 1978 Jun;19(2):106-8.
    PMID: 751183
    A system of tutorials preparing students for the Primary F.F.A.R.A.C.S. examination is described. It is suggested that this system would be suitable for teaching students in a peripheral training hospital.
    MeSH terms: Education, Medical*; Educational Measurement; Hospitals, Teaching; Malaysia; Teaching/methods*
  2. Ong HC, Puraviappan AP, Sinnathuray TA, Chong CH, Sen DK
    Singapore Med J, 1978 Jun;19(2):93-7.
    PMID: 751193
    Pregnancy was associated with cardiac disease in 0.94% of pregnancies. 0.66% with rheumatic lesions and 0.25'\'0 with congenital lesions. The Malays had a higher incidence than the Chinese and Indians. Most of the cardiac pregnancies were in patients between 20-30 years of age and gravida 1 to 4. Nevertheless. still about 30% of cardiac pregnancies were in patients 30 years and over in age and 20% in patient gravida 5 and above. Rheumatic lesions predominated. involving mainly the mitral valve. of which the major lesion was mitral stenosis. PDA. ASD and VSD were the major congenital lesions. Major antepartum matemal complications included arrhythmias. heart failure, anemia and pre-eclampsia. Of the arrhythmias. atrial fibrillation and sinus tachycardia occurred most commonly. A high incidence of prophylactic forceps and vacuum deliveries
    was evident. There was one matemal death. The majority of infants were bom alive and well.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Atrial Fibrillation; Female; Heart Defects, Congenital/epidemiology*; Hospitals, University; Humans; Malaysia; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular/epidemiology*; Rheumatic Heart Disease/epidemiology*
  3. Kothare SN
    Singapore Med J, 1978 Jun;19(2):98-105.
    PMID: 751194
    This is an analysis of histologically proven neoplasms encountered in Sarawak in 1976 and 1977. There were 1447 benign and 1368 malignant tumours. The detailed breakdown of malignant neoplasms with their racial and sex distribution is reported, Lymph node involvement, with primary and metastatic lesions, constituted the largest single group with 22.3 per cent of all malignancies. The next in order of frequency was the Reproductive system with a marked preponderance of Cervical Carcinoma in females. The next in frequency were Skin cancers (8.85%) and Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (8.4%). Primary liver cell cancer and Breast cancer constituted 5.85 per cent and 5.79 per cent respectively of all malignant tumours. The high prevalence of malignant neoplasms in Chinese is suggestive of racial predisposition.
    MeSH terms: Adult; Aged; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/epidemiology; Female; Humans; Leukemia/epidemiology; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Neoplasms/epidemiology*; Skin Neoplasms/epidemiology; Time Factors; Asian Continental Ancestry Group
  4. Knutsen K
    PMID: 12338965
    MeSH terms: Asia; Asia, Southeastern; Consumer Participation*; Developing Countries; Economics; Education*; Employment*; Health Manpower; Health Planning; Information Services*; Malaysia; Organization and Administration; Social Change*; Social Planning*
  5. Kim JS
    Kisaengchunghak Chapchi, 1978 Jun;16(1):47-53.
    PMID: 12902783
    An ecologic study on Paragonimus in Malaysia was attempted from May to September 1967. Seven streams located in various directions and distances from Kuala Lumpur were surveyed for the study of intermediate hosts, snail and crab. One Malayan village and one aborigine village where infected crabs were found, and two tuberculosis hospitals in K.L. were surveyed for the study of human population. Intradermal tests along with sputum or stool examination to detect human infection by Paragonimus were employed. Wild animals, only a few, were shot in the vicinity of the aborigine village and several domestic cats from the Malayan village were bought. These animals were autopsied and examined for adult Paragonimus. Among five species of crab collected from the study areas, only two species, Potamon jahorenes and Parathelphusa maculata were found to be infected with Paragonimus. P. maculata seemed to be better crab host for the Paragonimus because this species had higher infection rate and metacercarial density than the other in the very same area. Three out of seven streams had infected crabs and the infection rate as well as the infection intensity varied from one stream to another. Only avilable snail in the streams was identified as Brotia costula. The infection rate of the snail was very low, six snails out of 11,898, which is about the same rate reported from other countries. Infected snail, however, had thousands of rediae uncountable containing about twelve microcercocercariae in each redia, sufficient enough to maintain the life cycle of the parasite even with only a few infected snail, the amplifier. This is the first confirmed report on the snail host of Paragonimus from Malaysia where the existence of Paragonimus had been reported in 1923. The first trial to study human population by means of intradermal test, sputum and/or stool examinations in Malaysia showed no evidence of human infection of Paragonimus. The number of animals, wild and domestic, examined for natural infection was too small to draw any statement. These examined animals were all negative for adult Paragonimus. Even though more extensive studies on wild animals and human population may be necessary for the definite conclusion, the facts that infected crabs from jungle stream where human contacts are extreamely rare, and also highly infected crabs from the area where none of humans or domestic animals were infected, strongly suggest the life cycle of Paragonimus in this area may be maintained by wild animal hosts rather than by human host. The morphology of all stages of the parasite, the pattern of penetrating glands, flame cells and excretroy bladder of cercaria, lancet shaped single cuticular spines and 6 branched ovary of adult worm obtained from experimentally infected cat, and the shape of egg including all measurements agree well with the characteristics of Paragonimus westermani.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Animals, Domestic; Animals, Wild; Urinary Bladder; Cats; Brachyura; Female; Helix (Snails); Hospitals, Chronic Disease; Humans; Intradermal Tests; Malaysia; Ovary; Parasites; Snails; Sputum; Felis; Paragonimus westermani; Cercaria; Metacercariae
  6. Callen E, Scadron M
    Science, 1978 Jun 2;200(4345):1018-22.
    PMID: 17740674
    The Physics Interviewing Project assists graduate physics departments in evaluating foreign applicants. Supported by some 20 universities, two interviewers, both working scientists, travel abroad and interview students individually for about 1 hour each. Prospective teaching assistants are rated on physics knowledge, problem-solving ability, and English language proficiency. Ratings on all interviewees are sent to all supporting schools and other schools as requested. The Project aids able students from countries that have no physics Ph.D. programs (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand) to obtain assistantships and Ph.D.'s abroad, assists in the technological development of those countries, and helps U.S. schools in selecting the most promising foreign candidates. A similar program should be beneficial in other sciences.
    MeSH terms: Indonesia; Language; Malaysia; Physics; Prospective Studies; Schools; Students; Thailand; Universities; Knowledge
  7. Grant IW
    Br Med J, 1978 Jun 10;1(6126):1549.
    PMID: 656792
    MeSH terms: Educational Measurement*; Great Britain; Malaysia; Singapore
  8. Cheok SS
    Trop Doct, 1978 Jul;8(3):99-101.
    PMID: 209589
    MeSH terms: Acute Disease; Child, Preschool; Female; Foodborne Diseases/diagnosis*; Foodborne Diseases/therapy; Humans; Hydrogen Cyanide/analysis; Infant; Malaysia; Male; Thiosulfates/therapeutic use
  9. Brown GW
    J R Soc Med, 1978 Jul;71(7):507-10.
    PMID: 359809
    MeSH terms: Humans; Malaysia; Scrub Typhus/diagnosis*; Scrub Typhus/epidemiology; Scrub Typhus/therapy
  10. Ramanathan K, Ganesan TJ, Raghavan KV
    Mod Med Asia, 1978 Jul;14(7):56-8.
    PMID: 683170
    MeSH terms: Adult; Aged; Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/etiology; Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/epidemiology*; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Sex Factors; Tongue Neoplasms/etiology; Tongue Neoplasms/epidemiology*
  11. Chisholm JS, Woodson RH, da Costa Woodson EM
    Early Hum Dev, 1978 Jul;2(2):171-8.
    PMID: 720272
    The neonatal period is being recognized as an important period for the development of patterns of interaction between mother and infant, and infant state has been shown to have a significant impact on mother--infant interactions. A major dimension of infant state, with implications for this interaction and for the development of later behaviour disorders, is the infant's irritability. Research with Navajo, Malay, Chinese and Tamil mothers and infants showed that normal variation in maternal blood pressure during pregnancy was related to newborn irritability as assessed with the Brazelton Scale. This relationship is discussed in terms of possible underlying mechanisms.
    MeSH terms: Blood Pressure*; Child Behavior*; Crying*; Female; Humans; Indians, North American; Infant, Newborn*; Labor, Obstetric; Malaysia; Mother-Child Relations; Pregnancy*; Pregnancy Trimester, Second; Stress, Psychological/complications
  12. Somasundaram K
    Aust N Z J Surg, 1978 Aug;48(4):356-9.
    PMID: 282864
    This 10-year review of surgical conditions in infants at the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, highlights some of the more common problems encountered and outlines their management. Anorectal agenesis and Hirschsprung's disease were seen relatively more frequently than other anomalies of the gastrointestinal tract. The management of these two conditions and the operation of colostomy and its complications are singled out and presented in some detail.
    MeSH terms: Anal Canal/abnormalities*; Anal Canal/surgery; Child; Colostomy; Digestive System Abnormalities; Humans; Infant; Malaysia; Megacolon/surgery*; Rectum/abnormalities*; Rectum/surgery; Digestive System Surgical Procedures*
  13. Alhady SM
    Aust N Z J Surg, 1978 Aug;48(4):352-6.
    PMID: 367350
    MeSH terms: Education, Medical, Graduate; Hospitals, Teaching/history; Malaysia; General Surgery/education; General Surgery/history*; History, 16th Century; History, 17th Century; History, 18th Century; History, 19th Century; History, 20th Century
  14. Armstrong HE, Tan EK
    J Soc Psychol, 1978 Aug;105(Second Half):165-73.
    PMID: 692090
    MeSH terms: Acculturation*; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Body Image*; Child Rearing; Cross-Cultural Comparison; Female; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Middle Aged; Rorschach Test; Social Values
  15. Nossal GJ
    Med J Aust, 1978 Aug 12;2(4):152-4.
    PMID: 723714
    MeSH terms: Developing Countries*; Malaysia; New Guinea; Research; Rural Health; Tropical Medicine*; World Health Organization
  16. Marchette NJ, Rudnick A, Garcia R, MacVean DW
    PMID: 34888
    A survey of the activity of three alphaviruses (Sindbis, getah and chikungunya) in Peninsular Malaysia was conducted between 1962 and 1970. Serum samples were examined from 3,917 vertebrates representing a wide variety of wild and domestic animals throughout the peninsula for hemagglutination-inhibiting and neutralizing antibodies. A total of 548,939 mosquitoes were collected from different habitats, including jungle, rural, suburban and urban areas, and the majority of the females taken were examined for the presence of virus. Two strains of Sindbis virus and one strain of getah virus were isolated from pools of Culex mosquitoes collected in and around domestic animal shelters. Analysis of the serological results indicated that, 1) getah virus is associated principally with large domestic animals, particularly swine, 2) Sindbis virus is associated with large domestic animals and birds, especially domestic ducks, and 3) chikungunya virus, which has not yet been isolated in Malaysia, appeared to be present at a very low level of activity, probably with wild monkeys as the vertebrate hosts.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Animal Population Groups/immunology*; Animals, Domestic/immunology*; Animals, Wild/immunology*; Antibodies, Viral/analysis*; Arboviruses/immunology; Arboviruses/isolation & purification*; Chikungunya virus/immunology; Female; Hemagglutination Inhibition Tests; Male; Culicidae/microbiology; Sindbis Virus/immunology
  17. Shirai A, Robinson DM, Lim BL, Dohany AL, Huxsoll DL
    PMID: 107596
    An epidemiological study in a mature oil palm estate in Peninsular Malaysia has demonstrated a low prevalence of R. tsutsugamushi infection in small mammals. The direct fluorescent antibody technique for assaying infections in chiggers proved more sensitive than mouse inoculation. Most infections in both chiggers and rodents were caused by the Karp strain.
    MeSH terms: Animals; Animals, Wild/immunology; Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis*; Disease Vectors; Fluorescent Antibody Technique; Malaysia; Mites/immunology*; Orientia tsutsugamushi/immunology; Orientia tsutsugamushi/isolation & purification*; Rodentia/immunology*; Scrub Typhus/immunology; Scrub Typhus/transmission*; Serotyping; Trombiculidae/immunology*
  18. Prathap K, Dissanaike AS
    PMID: 107599
    MeSH terms: Adult; Humans; Malaysia; Male; Neck Muscles/parasitology; Neck Muscles/pathology; Sarcocystis/ultrastructure; Sarcocystosis/pathology*
  19. Tan DS, Lam SK
    PMID: 219550
    Stool samples from healthy children mainly of the low income group aged 0 to 7 years of age from five Maternal and Child Health Centres in Kuala Lumpur were obtained for isolation of enteroviruses. The specimens were collected before and after the mass vaccination given in the face of polio type 1 epidemic which started in October, 1971. The prevelance rate of enteroviruses was 11.9% (3.0% polioviruses, 8.9% non-polio enteroviruses) before the vaccination and essentially the same after. Coxsackie A viruses predominated over the other enteroviruses in the pre- and post-vaccination phases. The highest isolation rate of enteroviruses was observed in children 0 to 2 years age. No significant differences in distribution by sex, race and month were noted. A sharp fall in the prevalence rates of total enteroviruses and polioviruses was noted shortly after the mass vaccination campaign However, the rates reverted to the pre-vaccination state during the next successive years.
    MeSH terms: Ambulatory Care Facilities; Child; Child, Preschool; Enterovirus/isolation & purification*; Feces/microbiology; Female; Humans; Infant; Malaysia; Male; Maternal-Child Health Centers; Poliomyelitis/immunology; Poliomyelitis/microbiology; Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/immunology*; Prospective Studies; Poliovirus/isolation & purification; Enterovirus B, Human/isolation & purification; Interrupted Time Series Analysis
  20. Cheong WH, Mahadevan S, Loong KP
    PMID: 373133
    MeSH terms: Animals; Anopheles/parasitology; Buffaloes; Female; Malaysia; Male; Wuchereria bancrofti/isolation & purification
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